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Jamiebaby28

81,766 просмотров • 1 год назад •via X (Twitter)

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Standing before the graduating class of Clifford University today giving the commencement speech, I felt something bigger than music. I saw a generation ready to change everything. 🇳🇬✨ When I looked into their faces, I saw the same fire that built me, that hunger to be seen, to make something out of nothing, to turn pain into power. I told them that talent might open the door, but purpose gives it meaning. We live in a time where young people carry the future of Africa in their hands. It’s our time, but it’s also our test, to use our platforms, our influence, and our voices to build, not just for ourselves, but for the next ones coming after us. As artists, as dreamers, as believers, we must lead by example. We must show that true greatness is not measured only in numbers, but in impact. My mother, Dr. Veronica Adeleke, understood that long before I did. She was a teacher, a giver, a woman who believed that education and compassion could change lives. Everything I am, the music, the drive, the heart, came from her. Today, I had the honor of inaugurating a hostel at Clifford University named after her. Walking through that building, seeing the smiles of the students who will live there, I realized this was more than a tribute. It was a continuation of her purpose, turning love into legacy, one life at a time. This moment reminded me that even when our parents are gone, their lessons remain alive in what we build, in who we lift, and in how we love. This one’s for her, for every young African chasing their dream, and for everyone who believes we can rise higher, together. 💙 We Rise By Lifting Others

Davido

1,093,354 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

Tim Cook reveals a surprising truth about hiring at the world's biggest tech company: You don't need to know how to code to work at Apple. "We hire people from all walks of life and people that have college degrees, people that don't. People that code, people that don't." Tim is a vocal advocate for learning to code, but not because it's a prerequisite for getting hired. He sees it as something far broader: "I do recommend coding for everyone to learn because I think it's a form of expressing yourself and it's a global language and it's the only global language that we all share is coding." So if coding isn't the golden ticket, what is? Tim explains that the traits he values most have nothing to do with technical credentials. There are three that matter above all else. The first is collaboration. Not just the willingness to work with others, but a deep, genuine belief that teams produce better outcomes than individuals ever could: "Can they really collaborate? Do they deeply believe that one plus one equals three?" The second is curiosity. Tim Cook gravitates toward people who are relentless in their need to understand, people who never stop probing how the world works and why people think the way they do: "I think curiosity is a trait that I love about people, about people that ask questions that are so curious about how things work, how people think. All of the why and how questions." The third is creativity. This is where everything comes together. Apple's entire model depends on anticipating needs that consumers haven't even recognised yet: "We're looking for people that can see around the corner because ultimately we want to create products that people can't live without, but they didn't know they needed." Collaboration. Curiosity. Creativity. None of them show up on a résumé, and none of them require a degree. But according to Tim Cook, they're exactly what makes a great team player at Apple.

Big Brain Business

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“Eternity Is Long” – Erika Kirk Grace for My Children They will see how this world talked about their father, their mother, even themselves. ~ Erika Kirk At the Turning Point Women’s Summit, Erika Kirk reflected on the trying season her family is enduring and shared her hopes for how her young children will one day view it. “Eternity is long, but there will be a day 10 to 15 years from now when my children will look back on this season of life that us three are going through,” she said. “And they won’t remember it fully because they’re so young, but they will see everything. They will see how this world talked about their father, their mother, even themselves. They will be able to read every headline, every accusation, every lie.” Kirk explained that her deepest prayer is for her children to look past the noise. “And my prayer is their focus isn’t on all that noise, but rather on how their mother showed up and how she handled it,” she continued. “I pray God’s wisdom will prevail and they will be able to see the difference in how you can respond to situations that are completely out of your control.” Erika emphasized the character lessons she hopes will stand out. “I want them to see how you can remain gracious when people are deeply unkind. How you can remain composed and prioritize what matters most in the most chaotic situations. How you can still persevere carrying the cross that God has asked you to carry.”

Andrea Shaffer, Anti-Marxist Warrior

24,237 просмотров • 1 месяц назад