Joined February 2011
1,639 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
17 Nov 2023
Replying to @ekibyleo
I sew for men and women I sell fabrics Instagram: @house_of_samurira
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My sister got 4.9 GPA in her Mphil in logistics and supply chain super proud of her, her head dey catch fire
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This economy has made me discover my D.I.Y skills I will not buy what I can learn from watching videos on TikTok and YouTube for free. β€οΈπŸ’‘
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Reason why we pray but don't find peace.
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Hani retweeted
Nearly everyone in Nigeria is battling what we call functional depression. You work, joke, take care of your home and the people around you, hang out with your friends and have fun, but mentally you’re drowning in your own thoughts and nobody knows πŸ’”
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REMINDER : Don't trust anyone at your work place.
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Hani retweeted
BREAKING: Bandits are currently in Bagari area of Funtua town, Funtua LGA, Katsina State. Security assistance is needed in the area and surrounding communities. Please, retweet massively to pass the message to the authorities. May our effort save lives.
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Hani retweeted
Keep showing up.
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Even Saturday no rest Independent woman about to pass out 😭
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Watching Animal animation and Napoleon be looking like Nigerian politicians All our Napopo are back again for us to vote them
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Hani retweeted
Imagine if you're a family member to these ones. Imagine if these were your mum, your wife, your kids. Imagine that toddler tied to the back of this helpless mother. Just imagine. Before you cast your next vote, IMAGINE! #BringBackOurChildren
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Ya Allah grant us ease in all our affairs
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Hani retweeted
It won't cost you zero Naira, please retweet massively.πŸ’”πŸ’”
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Hani retweeted
Labbaik Allahumma Labbaik πŸ’“ #hajj2026
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May 19
Supported
a motion to include pads in toilets in all offices in Africa for women.
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Hani retweeted
Public Alert No. 024/2026. Alert on counterfeit Augmentin 625mg Tablets (Batch No. AC3N) in Nigeria #NAFDACAlerts bit.ly/42Uakzq

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May 12
The next phase is to find something that works permanently
PCOS is being renamed to PMOS. (Polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome) The change comes from experts that say the old name was misleading, stating that it inaccurately suggested ovarian cysts as a defining feature.
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Hani retweeted
PCOS will now be called Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome (PMOS). Dear Women, What If PCOS Was Never Really About β€œCysts”? READ. REPOST. SHARE TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW. Medicine, sometimes, behaves like an old relative who has known you for years and yet keeps calling you by the wrong name. And because the family has repeated it for so long, the name begins to sound true. Familiar. Permanent. And so for decades, we have called this condition Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, PCOS. We have said it in clinics and lecture halls and whispered it into frightened consultations. We have printed it on blood request forms and ultrasound reports and fertility referrals. And yet, perhaps, the name has always been telling only half the story. Because many women diagnosed with PCOS do not actually have cysts. And the condition, as many gynaecologists know too well, is not merely an ovarian affair. It does not politely sit inside the pelvis and mind its business. No. It spills. Quietly. Persistently. Into the entire body. Into hormones. Into metabolism. Into insulin resistance and weight regulation and ovulation and fertility. Into the skin that suddenly erupts with acne at twenty-eight. Into the chin that grows hair where softness once lived. Into exhaustion. Into mental health. Into long-term cardiovascular risk. And so experts have begun asking a difficult but necessary question: What if we have been naming the condition incorrectly all along? Which is why there has been growing discussion around renaming PCOS to: Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome, PMOS. And at first glance, it sounds like one of those intimidating medical names that make patients blink twice before pronouncing it. But if you lean closer, if you listen carefully, the name is actually trying to confess something medicine should perhaps have admitted earlier. That this condition is bigger than the ovaries. That multiple hormonal systems are involved. That metabolism matters. That insulin resistance is not a side note but often part of the central plot. That the ovaries are affected, yes, but they are not the entire story. And perhaps most importantly, that this syndrome wears different faces in different women. Because one woman may struggle with irregular periods and infertility. Another may battle acne so stubborn it chips away at confidence one mirror at a time. Another gains weight despite trying, despite dieting, despite walking past bakery aisles with the discipline of a saint. And another may look slim, the kind people casually call β€œhealthy”, and yet carry profound insulin abnormalities quietly beneath the skin. That is the thing about this condition. It refuses simplicity. And names matter more than we sometimes realize. Because when a patient hears the words polycystic ovary, she may understandably think: β€œSo… I just have cysts?” And language, once planted wrongly, can narrow understanding. It can delay diagnosis. It can create stigma. It can make a woman feel her symptoms are disconnected accidents instead of chapters from the same book. But a more accurate name can widen the lens. And widened lenses save people. Now, to be clear, PCOS remains the globally recognized medical term today. PMOS is still part of ongoing scientific discussion and evolving understanding. So this is not a β€œnew disease.” Nobody woke up with a fresh diagnosis because medicine decided to rearrange some words. It is the same condition. The same women. The same struggles. Only that medicine, perhaps, is finally trying to describe them more honestly. And honesty matters in healthcare. Because sometimes the difference between suffering silently and seeking help early begins with something as deceptively simple as a name.And perhaps that is the deeper lesson here: That women’s bodies have too often been simplified. Reduced. Misunderstood. And when science finally learns to name a condition more completely, what it is really doing is learning to see women more completely too.
new update on PCOS. very important tweet dropping in a bit.
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Hani retweeted
We have spent years being told it is β€œjust a period problem” while our skin, our weight, our mood, and our energy were all falling apart. Today, the medical world finally admitted you were right. PCOS is now PMOS.
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The cure for sickle cell disorder is now available at sickle cell foundation Nigeria, LUTH. Please retweet for others to see.
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Hani retweeted
An AMERICAN FRAUD SCHEME scamming its own citizens To my fellow Nigerians, As you make money, Please invest in MEDIA. We Need to change how we are perceived globally. This so called fraud scheme has 4 Americans in it πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Aruan Drake, 37, Atlanta, Georgia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Peter Reed, 35, Oak Forest, Illinois πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Shaquille I. Jackson, 33, Chicago, Illinois πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Lon Goodman, Chicago area, owner of New Dolton Currency Exchange, laundered ~$50M​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ The rest are also American citizens with Nigerian parents. πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Ayobami Osas Christopher, aka β€œLovely Man”, 30, Lawrenceville, Georgia πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Ayorinde Emmanuel Adebayo, 35, Olympia Fields, Illinois πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Olabode Bankole, 37, Loganville, Georgia πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Chukwuemeka Evulukwu, 35, Atlanta, Georgia πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Kingsley Owusu, 37, Chicago, Illinois πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Oluwafemi Michael Awoyemi, 40, Romeoville, Illinois​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ 11 on that list were not named probably because of their nationality and the backlash. The only core Nigerians on that list are 4 people, Which I refuse to mention. So technically. This is an AMERICAN FRAUD SCHEME targeting its own citizens You see how they use the media to always push narratives. Nigeria does not have the financial infrastructure to move 215 million dollar. Don’t let anyone gaslight you. THIS IS AN AMERICAN THING.
May 2
WILD: πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡ΈπŸ‡³πŸ‡¬ FBI says 25 people have been convicted in a $215 million Nigerian fraud scheme targeting over 1,000 victims across 47 U.S. states.
Community note
This is a blatant misrepresentation of the actual facts in Order to paint a particular country in a bad light. The scam was orchestrated by Americans to dupe Americans. Out of the 11 names mentioned, only 4 have Nigerian parents but they are still American citizens. x.com/i/status/20506…
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