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Important information about Hallelujah challenge (dress and act like your miracle). — There would be 12hrs fast on Tuesd...
21/10/2025

Important information about Hallelujah challenge (dress and act like your miracle).

— There would be 12hrs fast on Tuesday, 21st Oct 2025. The 12hrs fast would start from 12pm till the prayer and praise time. You can eat before 12pm, but once it’s 12pm, nothing should enter your mouth except WATER.

No coffee, no smoothie, no green tea, no ACV, no tasting of food, no chewing gum. Just water.

— You must not dress like your miracle. You can act like it.

For instance; if you are waiting on God for a baby, you mustn’t wear a baby bump. You can buy baby clothes, shoes, bed, and speak faith into it.

If you are asking God for a job, you mustn’t wear your outfit. You can wear an ID card, use card board to write the things you are praying for.

— To avoid backlash and sub from unbelievers, desist from posting about it online. However; if you don’t mind the mockery, do your thing regardless.

— The fasting is very important, extremely important. Reason the 24hrs fast was cancelled is because they need us to dance well. Eat anything you want to eat, You can wake up tomorrow and eat from 6am to 11am. However; stop immediately it’s 12pm tomorrow. Nothing, aside water should enter your mouth afterwards.

May our heart desires be granted in Jesus name, Amen.

Congratulations to us my darlings.



I saw the post below. It touched the core of my soul. With people like Chiemelie Kyrian Offor, I am again hopeful for my...
18/06/2025

I saw the post below. It touched the core of my soul. With people like Chiemelie Kyrian Offor, I am again hopeful for my country. God bless him🙏

***Let me share this here.***

Of this incident that happened a few hours ago.

I wasn’t supposed to stop.

But I did.

There was chaos just ahead of the supermarket gate somewhere in Surulere.

A black Toyota Corolla was surrounded by three LASTMA officials.

The driver, mid-40s, shirt soaked in sweat, kept pacing between them.

And something in his voice stopped me.

"Please. Please just look inside the car. He is not even moving anymore. That’s my son. He is sick, he is very sick. We were going to the hospital. I only stepped in to grab his medication. I was gone for just five minutes."

One of the officials shook his head like he’d heard it a thousand times.

"You people always have stories. Why park where you're not supposed to? You want us to lose our job?"

Another officer barked.

"Oga, if you don’t bring ₦70,000 now, this car is going to the yard. And from there? You’ll need close to ₦400,000 to bail it."

The man reached out. Not to touch them. Just to plead.
They stepped back like he carried something contagious.

"I swear I’m not lying. Please. He has severe asthma. I forgot the nebulizer at home. I was rushing to the hospital, Faithview, just ten minutes from here. Look at him! You have a child, right? Please, have sympathy."

That was when I looked.

The boy,maybe ten, was in the backseat, his small frame slumped against the door, eyes half-closed. His chest heaved in rapid spasms, every breath sounding like gravel grinding in a pipe.

His fingers trembled. His lips were turning dark.

So I stepped forward.

"What’s wrong with him?"

The father looked at me, disoriented.

"Asthma. It started an hour ago. He had a mild attack in the morning, but it’s worsening fast. I was going to get him treated and just stopped for a refill. Please, sir… help me talk to them."

I tried to talk to the LASTMA officers but they ignored me so I turned back to the man.

"Try and sort this with them, let me take him to the hospital."

His eyes widened.

"You…?”

"We don't have another option and there is no time. He needs oxygen. Now.”

He hesitated.

"You’re a stranger."

"I am. But your son is dying.”

He looked back at the boy.

Then at me.

He obviously saw that there was no other option left.

His lips trembled.

"Give me your number. Please.”

I gave him mine.

And he gave me his.

I opened the door and gently lifted the boy from the backseat.

He was warm. Burning. His eyes barely focused on mine.

As I placed him in my car, the father shouted behind me.

"Please, call me the moment you get there. Please don’t let anything happen to him!"

I nodded once. Then I got into the car and quickly drove off.

The hospital wasn’t crowded, I guess because it was a private one.

I rushed in carrying the boy in both arms.

"Emergency! Severe asthma attack. Ten-year-old boy!"

The receptionist stood up so fast her chair hit the wall.

She shouted.

"Treatment Room Two! Get Doctor Okafor!"

While I tried to fill the form I was given, two nurses rushed and took the boy, placed him on the oxygen tank, connected a nebulizer, and began checking vitals.

One of the nurses murmured.

"He’s tachypneic. Respiration over 40. Oxygen saturation 82%."

The doctor said as he rushed in still zipping his scrubs.

"Get the hydrocortisone ready. Nebulize him every 20 minutes. Keep him on oxygen. If he doesn’t stabilize, we’re moving to adrenaline injection.”

I stood there.

My heart pounding.

This wasn’t my child.

But it felt like my fight.

Minutes passed.

Then the doctor came out.

“He is stable."

He said, wiping his forehead.

"That was close. He’ll be okay, but he needs to stay a few hours for monitoring.”

I thanked him so much.

The bill came.

₦89,000.

I paid with my debit card.

I stepped outside and called the boy’s father.

He picked on the first ring.

“Hello! Sir, please, is he?"

"He is stable. He is getting oxygen and treatment.”

A pause.

Then I heard the man begin to cry. Softly.

I didn’t speak. I let him.

But he wasn’t done.

“They’ve taken the car. They refused to wait. I was still begging when the towing truck came. They said the 70K grace was over. I’m at their yard in Iponri now. Sir… they’re asking for ₦385,000 to release my car.”

I looked at the hospital door behind me.

Then at the sky.

Then back to my car.

I didn't know what to say to him.

But all I found myself saying was.

"I’m coming.”

And I meant it.

He couldn't believe his ears.

I arrived at the LASTMA office just before 3PM.

The weather was warm, no sun, but the heat stuck to my skin like wet cloth.

I found him standing by a corner fence, head down, fingers digging into his scalp.

He was tired and confused.

So I said to him gently.

"Sir."

He looked up like someone coming out of a bad dream. His eyes were red, his face streaked with dry sweat and tears.

He approached me nervously.

His voice was hoarse.

"My car… they have impounded it. Said I’ll pay ₦385,000. They even threatened to keep increasing the fine by day. That car is my only source of income. That's my office from where I make money to take care of my son and my wife. God, please, help me."

I told him.

"Stay calm. Nothing will happen to your car, you'll get it back, I believe."

He nodded slowly.

"They have been laughing at me. One said, ‘Your son is sick? Na why you go break law? You think say we be Red Cross?’"

I felt something cold stir in my chest.

Not rage.

Just sadness.

I said to him.

"Please, come with me."

We walked into the building.

Inside, it smelled of engine oil, sweat, and indifference.

I approached the counter.

“Good afternoon. I’d like to speak with your superior officer. It’s regarding a car that was impounded a few hours ago, black Toyota Corolla.”

A thickset officer with bloodshot eyes looked up at me. "Eeyyaa who you be? Police or Army? Abeg everything you want to say, say it here. We don’t have time.”

I responded calmly but firm.

"I was the one who rushed the sick boy to the hospital, I have the hospital card and bill here. He was in the back seat of that vehicle. That child would have died today if I didn’t act."

He scoffed.

"And so? Good for him. E mean say we no go do our job?”

"No one said that but this man was in an emergency. All he asked was a few more minutes. Instead, you people want to extort him. Now you’re billing him almost ₦400,000. This isn’t traffic enforcement. It’s cruelty."

Another officer chimed in.

"Oga, the car don enter system. Na only Oga inside go override am. And e no dey see everybody."

"Then let him see me."

"As governor of Lagos State or as who?"

Silence.

I stood my ground.

"Get your superior. I’ll wait.”

The minutes crawled.

The father stood beside me like a child awaiting judgment.

Fortunately, a senior officer emerged.

Bald, tall, stern. I saw his name tag.

He sized me up before he said.

"What’s the problem?”

I stepped forward and told the story. From the moment I saw the boy wheezing in the back seat, to carrying him into the hospital, to paying the ₦89,000 hospital bill, to returning only to find the car had been towed.

The Commander listened without interruption. Then he asked a single question:

“Do you have proof the boy was sick?”

I handed him the hospital bill and the case card. He studied them for a long moment.

Then something shifted in his eyes.

He looked at the officers behind the desk.

"You towed the vehicle knowing a child was dying in it?"

"Sir, the man parked in a no-parking."

"I didn’t ask that. I asked if you knew a child was in distress in the car."

No one answered.

He sighed.

"Release the car. Immediately. Remove the fine. No man should suffer for saving his own son’s life. And you."

He turned to the father.

"You’re lucky someone still has a conscience in this country. Thank this guy for stepping in."

The man fell to his knees.

"Thank you. Thank you, sir… I swear, thank you…"

When the superior left, he turned to me.

And his voice broke.

"You didn’t know me. Yet you rushed my son to the hospital. You paid for his treatment. And now, you’re standing here fighting for me when I couldn’t even fight for myself."

I helped him to his feet.

He opened his wallet and tried to hand me some money.

"I don’t have much. Please… even if it’s part of what you spent..."

I shook my head.

"Your son is breathing. That’s enough. Please, pick your car and go and see him. God bless you."

He looked at me, eyes trembling.

"Why? Why would you do this for me?"

I didn’t know how to answer that.

So I said the only thing I truly believed.

"Because someone should."

As we walked out into the fading light, I handed him a folded note.

It was the hospital’s follow-up card. His son had to return in two days for further tests.

"I already booked the appointment. He’ll need more care. Don’t miss it."

He opened it slowly, then looked back at me, his lips parted, but no words came.

Only tears.

Only silence.

And behind us, the LASTMA officers watched.

They were quiet now. Maybe even ashamed.

But I left there happy and fulfilled.

You could do the same.

And the world will be a better place.


Chiemelie Kyrian Offor
June 17, 2025

"I Am Enough":   Nse Ikpe-Etim’s Journey Through Marriage, Infertility, and Finding WholenessThere are things you never ...
02/05/2025

"I Am Enough":
Nse Ikpe-Etim’s Journey Through Marriage, Infertility, and Finding Wholeness

There are things you never plan for.
You grow up with dreams — you dream of a career, a family, children... the laughter of little ones running through the house.
You think it’s natural. That it will happen. Until life — in its unpredictable way — rewrites your story.

I met my husband, Clifford, years ago. We were just kids when we first crossed paths. Life separated us for a while, but fate has a way of bringing the right people back into your orbit.
We reconnected, fell in love — real love — the kind that holds you together when everything else falls apart.

We got married on Valentine's Day in 2013.
It was simple, beautiful, and filled with genuine hope for a future we would build side by side.
I remember standing there, looking at him, thinking, _“This is home.”_

After our wedding, we tried to merge two very different worlds — my life in Nigeria as an actress and his career as a lecturer in the United Kingdom. It wasn’t easy, but love makes things possible. We found our rhythm.

And then, life decided to test me.

---

I was diagnosed with **adenomyosis**.
It’s a condition where the tissue that normally lines the uterus grows into the muscle wall.
It explained the years of unbearable pain I had often dismissed. The swelling. The bleeding. The discomfort I had normalized.

When the doctors said,
_"We will need to take out your womb,"_
the world around me collapsed.

I sat there, frozen.
_"What do you mean... no children?"_

I broke.
I went home, called Clifford, and through tears I said:
_"I’m so sorry. I can’t have children."_

There was a long silence.
You know how in movies they make it dramatic with music? In real life, it’s just quiet. Deafening.

And then, he said something that pieced me back together:
_"Nse, you are enough. You are all that I need."_

---

It’s hard to explain the kind of healing that comes from being seen. From being loved without conditions.
It didn’t erase the pain immediately. I still grieved.
I grieved the children I would never carry. The tiny faces I would never kiss.
There were days I didn’t even want to get out of bed. Days I avoided baby showers, children’s birthday parties, anything that would remind me of what I had lost.

But slowly, slowly, I began to understand:
I had lost a womb, but I had not lost my essence.
I was still Nse.
I was still whole.

The world often measures womanhood by motherhood.
It’s unfair. It’s heavy.
And it’s wrong.

There are women whose hearts are bigger than nations, whose arms have cradled friends, siblings, nieces, nephews, entire communities.
Motherhood is beautiful — but it is not the only measure of a woman’s worth.

---

Today, I speak out because I know there are many women who suffer in silence.
Women who feel broken.
Women who feel like their bodies have betrayed them.
I want you to hear me: **You are not broken. You are not less. You are enough.**

I still have moments of sadness, of course. Healing is not a straight line.
But I live fully now — acting, traveling, loving my husband, laughing with friends, savoring every breath.

And maybe — just maybe — I was meant to mother differently.
Not with my body, but with my art, my voice, my spirit.

I am Nse Ikpe-Etim.
I am a woman.
I am enough.
And so are you.

New week, new challenge! Facebook has lined up like ten challenges for me to complete to gain new followers and grow my ...
28/04/2025

New week, new challenge! Facebook has lined up like ten challenges for me to complete to gain new followers and grow my page.
Please, ejoor, support me by following my page so l can smash this week's target.
Thank you so much🙏🤣

31/01/2025

Commercial high speed blender

Rugged blenderCommercial blender5.5 litresAustralia👌95k
23/04/2024

Rugged blender
Commercial blender
5.5 litres
Australia👌
95k

Moi-moi pouch available
28/03/2023

Moi-moi pouch available

Reusable Moi-moi cooking pouch.Reduce cooking time.Use severally.Moimoi made easy!50 pieces in a pack 5500.
19/01/2023

Reusable Moi-moi cooking pouch.
Reduce cooking time.
Use severally.
Moimoi made easy!

50 pieces in a pack 5500.

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+2347062222981

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