Electrical Engineer | Educator | Optimist | Conqueror |☆Let Go & Let God☆

Joined March 2013
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#October 🥰🗿🚴🏽‍♀️🍁
#September 🤩… settling in as a visiting researcher at Aalen University of Applied Sciences #HochschuleAalen 🇩🇪📑🟢⚡️
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We are always focused on what is missing that we end up forgetting how much we really have. Count your blessings and be grateful for them.
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Not quite sure about the locks retouch as I am not familiar with those prices but everything else is quite precise. Folks focusing on the bus ticket; even the Oasis bus (WHK - north) is N$450 now, imagine Intercape that fluctuates. Well, except I’d put the 2-yr old on the laps.
Osho ngoo?
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
We overlook simple things such as going home kowambo especially our owambo kids. Omuntu gumwe nkene ayile kowindhoek. Its always aaye the fuel is expensive to drive home. Kaayeni?? Nopakuluntu inatu hala po. This simple things.
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What a brave boy 😇. May he be blessed 🙏🏾
A 16-year-old boy has been commended for his swift actions after rescuing twin babies who were thrown into a pond by their mother in Omutundungu village, located in the Omusati Region. Cornelius Shimwaafeni, a learner at Nicodemus Primary School, was herding livestock near the pond when he witnessed the incident. Shimwaafeni said he could not stand by and watch the 9-month-old twins drown. He narrated that he rushed to the pond and pulled both children from the water, and administered CPR before rushing them to the elders at nearby cuca shops for help. Shimwaafeni’s actions have garnered admiration from both family and community members, with many hailing him as a hero for intervening to save the lives of the twins. The twins have been discharged from the hospital and are now in the care of their 47-year-old father, while their mother remains in custody facing two counts of attempted murder. Shimwaafeni expressed his eagerness to recount his heroic actions when school resumes, and his classmates inquire about their holiday experiences. Ndapanda Shuuya #NBCNews #nbcdigitalnews #nbcDSTV282 #nbcGOtv20 #nbcPlusApp
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You leave the TL for a day & find it all on 🔥💀 We stress ourselves so much with other people’s views/ preferences, some of whom we may not even know, when we could just prioritize living our lives the best way we can/ are managing to. NB: different strokes for different folks.
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Spot on!
I'm unconcerned how this tweet will make you feel by the time you finish reading it. I hope young people copy one example from Job other than just studying further. If you just continue collecting qualifications blindly, you'll end up with many qualifications you can't use at once because they don't compliment each other, looking like a mad man who goes from one dustbin to another, collecting all sorts of cana and plastics just to carry. Job studied one course up to PHD level, then added a complementary PGD for a lawmaker that he is. We have people in this country with hundreds of qualifications: 3 Honours, 2 Masters, a PHD, 3 PGD, 5 certificates, all in 6 different fields. That's not education but an academically lost person. The concept of making things work with few resources is constant everywhere - resourcefulness. If you aren't useful with a few qualifications, you won't be useful with many. It's a sign you are not resourceful and haven't figured out your purpose. We have been fooled to believe those with the most qualifications are the most intelligent. That's a lie. Many are not convinced they're intelligent enough so they study to hide that shallowness behind qualifications. As we study further, let's choose complimentary qualifications/fields. After all, qualifications in 1 or 2 fields never just cover 1 or 2 fields. They overlap with many other fields. You'd always find an Accounting module in non-Accounting programmes, or a Commercial Law or Economics course in other programmes. If you need to study every course to understand everything, you're that mad man, and you'd realize many with qualification poitjies can't do much productive with them; even just to write a book. NB: The most useful people in this country have 1 or 2-field qualifications, complimented maybe by a people/project/business (etc.) management qualification.
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
I'm unconcerned how this tweet will make you feel by the time you finish reading it. I hope young people copy one example from Job other than just studying further. If you just continue collecting qualifications blindly, you'll end up with many qualifications you can't use at once because they don't compliment each other, looking like a mad man who goes from one dustbin to another, collecting all sorts of cana and plastics just to carry. Job studied one course up to PHD level, then added a complementary PGD for a lawmaker that he is. We have people in this country with hundreds of qualifications: 3 Honours, 2 Masters, a PHD, 3 PGD, 5 certificates, all in 6 different fields. That's not education but an academically lost person. The concept of making things work with few resources is constant everywhere - resourcefulness. If you aren't useful with a few qualifications, you won't be useful with many. It's a sign you are not resourceful and haven't figured out your purpose. We have been fooled to believe those with the most qualifications are the most intelligent. That's a lie. Many are not convinced they're intelligent enough so they study to hide that shallowness behind qualifications. As we study further, let's choose complimentary qualifications/fields. After all, qualifications in 1 or 2 fields never just cover 1 or 2 fields. They overlap with many other fields. You'd always find an Accounting module in non-Accounting programmes, or a Commercial Law or Economics course in other programmes. If you need to study every course to understand everything, you're that mad man, and you'd realize many with qualification poitjies can't do much productive with them; even just to write a book. NB: The most useful people in this country have 1 or 2-field qualifications, complimented maybe by a people/project/business (etc.) management qualification.
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
The most unseen privilege in life: a supportive family.
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
Was just overtaken by a Land Rover on a double white line and with oncoming traffic near Avis, and as we got into town, without reducing speed, he went straight through a red light. Don’t talk to me about our roads. Talk about our drivers.
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Apply for things, brethren. Just apply.
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
To the woman still holding on to her child’s father… I understand it. Wanting your family together. Wanting your child to grow up with both parents under one roof. Wanting that feeling of “we created this life together.” That attachment is real. But if you’re constantly drained — mentally, emotionally, physically — questioning your worth, wondering who he’s entertaining, being belittled, disrespected, or torn down (especially in front of your child)… that’s not love. That’s damage. And it doesn’t just hurt you. Children see everything. They absorb everything. The way he speaks to you. The way you’re treated. The tension. The tears. What they witness becomes what they normalize. And that’s not a cycle you want repeated in their future. Staying in something unhealthy for the sake of “family” doesn’t create stability. Peace does. You deserve to feel safe. You deserve to feel valued. You deserve to feel loved — fully and respectfully. Leaving doesn’t mean you failed. It means you chose better for yourself and your child. There are good men out there who will love you and your baby without tearing you down. But even before that — loving yourself enough to walk away sets the standard. Give it time. Give yourself grace. Give it to God. It does get better.
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
The most underrated, yet one of the most important traits to look out for in choosing a life partner, is Contentment
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
Replying to @KentonCFC
I won’t fight a country whose flag already in itself it’s ready for war💀💀💀🔥🔥🔥🙅🏽‍♀️🙅🏽‍♀️
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🤣🤣💀🤭
South Africans cooked us. Ghanaians added seasoning. Namibians? These ones went to hell, borrowed spices, and came back possessed.
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
Idk but I think people who can keep helpers/nannies for many years are kind people. When you're an unkind person, you can't keep people in your home for long.
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Ester Hamatwi, PhD retweeted
University of Melbourne Scholarships 2026 in Australia (Fully Funded) Degree level: Masters, PhD Eligible nationality: All Nationalities Last date: 31 October 2026 Apply Link: brightscholarship.com/univer… #BrightScholarship #FullyFunded #Scholarship #Australia #Students
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