Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸

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Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸

Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸

@SexEdWithSugar

PhDing📖 // Talk Sex with Sugar 💞// Certified Holistic Sexuality Educator// Pleasure Coach// Pro-Choice Feminist (Today & Forever) 👩🏾‍💻

USA เข้าร่วม Ekim 2012
835 กำลังติดตาม3.1K ผู้ติดตาม
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Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸
Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸@SexEdWithSugar·
Here’s something for my women. 💕💕💕 I’ve created this Women’s Pleasure Workbook for you. Yunno your pleasure is my pleasure 😇. This pleasure workbook will guide you through important questions pertaining to orgasms and pleasure. 1/2
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Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸 รีทวีตแล้ว
AFTER HOW MANY CHILDREN
AFTER HOW MANY CHILDREN@tomisin_ms·
I don’t even have a problem with people sending their children back to Nigeria for whatever reason their circumstances require. What I have a problem with is how some people gloss over corporal punishment that would be melted on them in Nigeria and the deliberate breaking of a child’s spirit. What’s that?? Some of you should be ashamed, there are exceptions though…..You failed at one of your primary responsibilities as parents, then took it a step further at negligence and outsourcing your responsibility and expecting someone else to raise and discipline your child for you. That’s lazy parenting!!! Some people complain that they can’t hit their children in the UK. Have you actually tried other forms of discipline? Sending your child back to Nigeria while you remain here is not the flex some of you think it is.
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Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸 รีทวีตแล้ว
Olúwáférànmi Adéyemo, PhD
One lesson from the ongoing conversations around women’s academic achievements led by @mydearenomfon is that women deserve far more respect, recognition, support and rewards than they often receive. While men historically held an advantage, a significant reverse gender gap has emerged over the last two decades. Across many parts of the world, women are now outperforming men in educational attainment at both secondary and tertiary levels. For instance: 🔺In the UK, approximately 54–55% of young women progress to higher education by age 19, compared to just 40–43% of young men. 🔺Across OECD countries, 52% of women aged 25–34 hold a tertiary qualification, compared to 39% of men, a substantial 13-percentage-point gap. 🔺Research also shows that men are now more likely to drop out of higher education, while women are more likely to successfully complete their studies. 🔺The Institute for Fiscal Studies further notes that around 85% of women experience positive net lifetime returns from their degrees, compared to 75% of men. These statistics indicates how women continue to excel despite facing structural barriers, family responsibilities, workplace discrimination, and societal expectations. We need to continue to support women by creating a safe space for them to achieve their academic, professional, or personal goals. In particular, we need to recognise and reward their efforts by advocating for “Equal Pay for Equal Work” to close the global wage gap, which sits at roughly 12% across major economies.
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Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸 รีทวีตแล้ว
The Angel of Consistent Doings 🦋
Ladies, beware of men who start toasting you just when you are about to go abroad for school or have a big career break. The men who even pressure you to bring them abroad if you do go. Only to start beating you. Beware of these men. They are often abusive. #16DaysofActivism.
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NAO TEIMASU🦂 🐺
NAO TEIMASU🦂 🐺@WolfCouer·
@Zioraife I don’t quite agree wit u. 1. We’re talking parents working their ass off, less time 2 supervise kids 2. Even if they were not lazy, you can not control peer pressure from kids who are seeing other kids misbehave plus you’re in system that if you touch them, they take them away.
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Kili Kili Star ✨
Kili Kili Star ✨@Zioraife·
Do people not realise that the testimonies of Nigerians abroad sending their children back to Nigeria for school so they could be disciplined is a sign of lazy, detached parenting? What hands-on parent looks at Nigeria and thinks the country is worthy of educating their child?
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Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸 รีทวีตแล้ว
victoria|| political saviour (una)
Very much pro-not-using-social-media till you’re 16. We must consistently find ways to protect the innocence of our children.
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Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸 รีทวีตแล้ว
co-creator with God. 🥼🩺
I think women are the best of God’s creation/
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the pressure
the pressure@larabillionaire·
My sister said my daughter’s headband bow looks like auto gele 💔
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Sai Ishaya
Sai Ishaya@Sai_Ishaya_·
Many parents who choose this route are essentially looking for schools to "parent" their children, especially those showing early signs of antisocial behaviour. They feel hamstrung by Western legal systems that limit traditional discipline, & are constantly exhausted by the inflexible immigrant work schedules they met in the West It becomes almost impossible t to "Karate Kid" their kids into compliance. So, they outsource the heavy lifting to Nigerian institutions. Clinging to memories of the "good old days," they romanticise an era of absolute teacher authority, where any flicker of rebellion or wayward curiosity was swiftly beaten out with a cane or suffocated beneath a pillown of strict conformity. To them, a Nigerian boarding school is like a cultural boot camp. They ship their Westernised teens across the Atlantic, expecting unrelenting routines & uncompromising authority to "exorcise" Western entitlement & factory-reset the child's cultural hard drive. They want a hybrid: a child with a Western passport's opportunities, but the submissive obedience of a traditional upbringing, while conveniently ignoring the profound psychological whiplash this exile will inflict. This highlights the great, unspoken paradox of the diaspora. Parents have endure immense hardships to escape their homeland for Western freedom, yet outsource their parenting back to the abandoned system the moment Western liberties they once dreamed about threaten their control. It's why some first-generation Nigerian immigrants send their children back, they want their kids to inherit Western triumphs, but demand it with the rigid compliance of the motherland.
only 1 uzama@KaiUzama

I used to think I’d want my kids to school in Nigeria, but after seeing what kids here are able to do even in high school (STEM wise) I’ll take Canada any day All Nigeria does is try to make every child docile & malleable, these are not skills the world will need in 20 years.

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Kim Temi- Mrs Corn Salad ⁷, MPH
BSc: Community Health Sciences Master of Public Health; Epidemiology Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.)- in view Almost 8 years of work experience as a 25 year old 😂 I’ll be back in a few years!!!
Kim Temi- Mrs Corn Salad ⁷, MPH tweet mediaKim Temi- Mrs Corn Salad ⁷, MPH tweet media
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Nonso this, Nonso that 👍
Nonso this, Nonso that 👍@Chinonso0for1·
My friends started hiding from me because I couldn’t read like them, I have to talk or do something else in 20 minutes or else I will fall asleep, I fought sleep in every class and it has been so since undergraduate days. I somehow always escape 🙇
Ọmọọba Adébimpé 👸@SexEdWithSugar

I only got diagnosed with ADHD in the yr 3 of my PhD. I spent 28yrs struggling academically & wondering why I couldn’t remember what I read in the exam, or why I couldn’t sit still or stay awake in class. My ability to Hyper focus has contributed to my academic success.

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