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Poem of the Week: Love By Numbers

I'm thinking of only one, For every quarter past Two, You look too beautiful to be true, For every quarter past Three,I miss the beauty between you and me, For every quarter past Four, I'll be loving you more and

Poem of the Week: Broken Arrow

An Artist if I were, a Portrait of you I will make Mixing colours like Native Indians Making no mistake Painting it perfect, my time I will take Like a story yet untold Strips of faint sketches mild but bold

Even More Ways to Flavour Your Meals

Without a bit of salt to season our food we may end up with a bland, empty-tasting meal. Salt can be certainly referred to as the soul of many meals, it brings out the flavour of food, and you would

Poem of the Week: Borrowed Heaven

My reflection appears broken in the mirror for so long My soul left my body for a place so cold Shattered promises, to be with you till am gray and old Alone with a pen, a scroll and a slate

Picture of the Week: Winner

  SUBMITTED BY: UGO UZOWURU If you want to be a winner too, visit the Rules Page for more information   PREVIOUS WINNER: AKINLOYE JULIUS  

The Man in The Mirror

By Ebuoe Nwadiugwu. A moment captured with a camera or with a brush and a canvas, though precious, still retains some probability of being biased. Considering that this is an artiste’s idea of a certain moment or subject, it might

Does Age Really Matter?

By Missy O Everybody in Nigeria always wants to know your age. When you are identified with how old or young you are it determines the way you would be treated. In business, education, relationship, and so on, age is

Poem of the Week: BOKO HARAM: A MENACE (PART 1)

By Michael Olaore.                 I heard many had died Was it a plane crash A mysterious body rash A new pandemic That killed many like the Titanic Wake up from your slumber, here’s

Picture of the Week: Winner

  SUBMITTED BY: AKINLOYE JULIUS If you want to be a winner too, visit the Rules Page for more information   PREVIOUS WINNER: UGO UZOWURU

Poem of the Week: Jewel of Africa

By Eru Kobe Godwin She’s boarded with the Atlantic from the South Mother of a Black Nation, from Creation She held arrays of generation Her skin is painted green and white But her soul is in colours Her offspring’s were

This Maga Can’t Pay

The first time I heard the word “maga” I thought David, my aunt’s brother-in-law, had wanted to say mugu or, rather, that he intentionally mispronounced the word to indicate variations of stupidity. I have always thought mugu to mean a

Picture of the Week: Winner

  SUBMITTED BY: UGO UZOWURU If you want to be a winner too, visit the Rules Page for more information

Poem of the week: CHILDREN OF A FADING SONG

By Eru Kobe Godwin Through scars we came A lost Origin In tears we reign A tale with no beginning In dreams we find solace The darkness came with hope Tributaries of pain We ran from the beacon of worries

Healthy Communication with Your Children

Words are weapons, words are balm for our comfort, words sharpen the spirit and strengthen the soul, words fill the empty spaces of our lives where actions are far beyond reach, words keep us connected like the strings of an

James Ibori and the ‘somebodys’ and ‘nobodys’ of Nigeria

By Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani The most corrupt officials are often the most generous, but letting this system continue only preserves the giver’s power. This week, former Nigerian state governor James Ibori was sentenced by a British judge to 13 years

Monday Laughs: Testimony Time!

  Hmmm! It’s not a small something. Well, actually, it all started a two day ago, which I’m in my house, so a small hungry is catching me, so I look in the house nothing much to chop only small

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