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Showing posts from September, 2016

"I am a Survivor"- Ijeoma Sorochi-Okorie

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Coming from an incredibly odious background with little or no hope of survival, Ijeoma Sorochi-Okorie is one amazing woman that waded through numerous hurdles but has today assumed a Star-Status both nationally and internationally. She is today the Founder of Teenz Global Foundation and Co-founder of Open Community Schools and Network. She is also a Media and Development Specialist with over five years’ experience of working directly with children and young people. Her astonishing journey started weeks before she was born due to the fact that her parents had an unstable relationship and were separated before her arrival. Her words, “Growing up was not fun for me. It was a very turbulent experience that I wish no child should go through. The fact that my parents had issues and were separated before I was born left me in an unstable state with little or no care.” “I experienced verbal, emotional and psychological abuse as a child. Child maltreatment and battering was norm for me.

A Mighty Girl

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A Strong Woman

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This Is Why I Didn’t Tell You He Was Beating Me- 3

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Trust your instincts, though. You know your friend. And from that encounter in the store, you know that something is definitely wrong. So please, don’t be afraid to follow up with her. Start with a phone call. But ease into it: Don’t immediately launch into how you think she’s being abused, or anything like that. If her abuser’s at home when you call, she won’t say anything of substance, anyway. You simply want to convey the message that you’re concerned and want to help. Keep your words loving and gentle—and pressure-free. Say something like, “I know you’re busy now. But when you have a few minutes to yourself, give me a call. I’m worried about you and want to help. I love you.”  Keep the call brief, but be clear: You’re worried, you want to help, and you love her. If she doesn’t call back right away, call her again. Keep reaching out to her. Try to reach her when you know she’s alone or at least away from him. Remember, your goal is to help, not endanger her any furthe

This Is Why I Didn’t Tell You He Was Beating Me- 2

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Here’s what you don’t know: Your friend would love nothing more than to fall into your arms and ask for help. But she won’t. She can’t. She’s too ashamed. As awful as you think she looks, she believes she looks even worse. In a relatively short period of time, her boyfriend has gotten into her head and convinced her that she’s ugly, stupid, and worthless. Your friend no longer puts any effort into her looks because he’ll either accuse her of dressing up for some “other man,” or he’ll just tell her she looks like crap anyway—so there’s no point in trying anymore.   Sweatpants are her new best friend. She doesn’t call anymore because she’s embarrassed by her life. That wonderful guy she bragged about in the beginning has turned into a monster. And she knows that if her friends knew how bad things were, they’d think she was just as stupid as he says she is—and maybe she is. After all, she still loves him. So maybe she’s getting exactly what she deserves. At least that’s what

This Is Why I Didn’t Tell You He Was Beating Me

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When I fled my abusive relationship for the last time (yes, I left and went back), one of the first things my well-meaning friends and family asked was why I never told them what was happening to me. “Why didn’t you say something,” they’d ask, looking concerned and confused.  “I could have helped you. I could have done something!” And I believe them. Had they known how horrible my life had become, I have no doubt that they would have done their best to help me. But all this happened more than twenty years ago. Today, I’m healed, emotionally healthy, and over it—and have the clarity of hindsight to see that my friends and family would have helped me. But back then, not so much. Because when you’re in the thick of things, in the middle of a Hell that you’re convinced is of your own making, you can’t see anything clearly. Fear and shame consume you—they’re your constant companions. And when you look at your family and friends, you often can only see judgment and derision. You k

Why Women Cry!

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"A little boy asked his mother, "Why are you crying?" "Because I'm a woman," she told him. "I don't understand, "he said. His Mom just hugged him and said, "And you never will." Later the little boy asked his father, "Why does mother seem to cry for no reason?" "All women cry for no reason, "was all his dad could say. The little boy grew up and became a man, still wondering why women cry... Finally he put in a call to God. When God got on the phone, he asked, "God , why do women cry so easily ?" God said "When I made the woman she had to be special. I made her shoulders strong enough to carry the weight of the world, yet gentle enough to give comfort. I gave her an inner strength to endure childbirth and the rejection that many times comes from her children. I gave her a hardness that allows her to keep going when everyone else gives up and take care of her family through sickness and f

When You Stoop to Conquer…

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Now that you have probably come to terms with the fact that jealousy is a major problem and that it can wreck your relationship, what do you do with it? How do you fight it? How do you conquer it? 1.      Acknowledge it: Don’t shy away from it, don’t excuse it, and don’t pass the bulk either; just acknowledge it. Take it for what it is – a poisonous spit that can rupture a wholesome, healthy and promising relationship, a keg of gunpowder that will, if untamed, explode and severe even the best of friends. See it as your own problem, not another’s, and be resolved to get rid of it. 2.      Ask yourself where it is coming from: When your jealous emotions come out, all you know is that you are feeling that way. Fine. But you need to figure out where this is coming from. You need to discover why it makes you feel jealous. For instance, if you figured out that you get upset when your husband or wife talks with the opposite sex, then you will need to discover why you feel so. Is it

Jealousy: A Fang Too Deadly To Ignore

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Jealousy? Its one simple word that sounds so harmless; but you can bet that it does not have such a simple, innocent definition as you suppose. Talking about the magnitude of havoc jealousy has caused is another thing. How countless they are? Is it the homes that have been broken, the blood ties that have loosened, the soul mates that have been separated or the numerous lives lost to the deal? The list is endless, even as its reality remains timeless. For very many reasons, we feel jealous. It is well taken as a normal human emotion to feel. If untamed however, jealousy is one emotional upsurge that has the potency of getting so over bloated as to cause a catastrophic crush to any relationship. It does not matter for how long the union has existed, how strong the tie is or what things are at stake. The more reason why there should be ways of controlling this temper. Ask yourself the question: “Why do I feel jealous?” Does it have something to do with your self-esteem, or doe

Black Female Physicist Pioneers Technology that Kills Cancer Cells with Lasers

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Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green is one of fewer than 100 black female physicists in the country, and the recent winner of $1.1 million grant to further develop a technology she’s pioneered that uses laser-activated nanoparticles to treat cancer. Green, who lost her parents young, was raised by her aunt and uncle. While still at school, her aunt died from cancer, and three months later her uncle was diagnosed with cancer, too. Green went on to earn her degree in physics at Alabama A&M University, being crowned Homecoming Queen while she was at it, before going on full scholarship to University of Alabama in Birmingham to earn her Masters and Ph.D. There Green would become the first to work out how to deliver nanoparticles into cancer cells exclusively, so that a laser could be used to remove them, and then successfully carry out her treatment on living animals. As she takes on her growing responsibilities, Green still makes time to speak at schools, Boys & Girls Clubs and other

The Best Tool For Development

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'There is no tool for development, more effective than the empowerment of women'‎- Kofi Annan