Education › Re: Oau Postgraduate Harmattan Semester Form Sale Is Out by K08(m): 6:43pm On May 08, 2015 |
Has anyone been able to pay his or her fees for 2014/2015 harmmattan semester? I discovered the portal is now activated. |
Education › Re: Oau Postgraduate Harmattan Semester Form Sale Is Out by K08(m): 6:29pm On May 08, 2015 |
Has anyone been able to pay his or her fees for 2014/2015 harmmattan? I discovered the portal is now activated. |
Education › Re: Oau Postgraduate Harmattan Semester Form Sale Is Out by K08(m): 2:22pm On Apr 23, 2015 |
[quote author=exclusiveoloori post=33024389]Through mail! Pls wen did u get it cos d Dept rejected my document and faculty approved. Dnt kno wot 2 do[/quote]@ exclusiveoloori: Yes, through mail. I got it on monday. Why don't you visit the school for clarifications. |
Education › Re: Oau Postgraduate Harmattan Semester Form Sale Is Out by K08(m): 1:14pm On Apr 23, 2015 |
exclusiveoloori: Has anyone from philosophy Dept gotten admission letter? Yes. I have been sent my admission letter. |
Computers › Re: Over 100 Computer Keyboard Shortcuts!!! by K08(m): 6:47pm On Jan 15, 2015 |
Educative. Nice one. |
Poems For Review › Re: Poetry Classes For Beginners - NPC (Signup Thread) by K08(m): 7:13am On Dec 16, 2014 |
I'm signing in as a student. |
Education › Re: What Is The Importance Of Mathematics To Arts Students ??? by K08(m): 11:45am On Sep 22, 2014 |
I strongly believe Music has a lot to do with Mathematics. Without the knowledge of Mathematics, it would be very difficult to read and play music notes. |
Health › Re: Ebola: Lagos Govt Identifies 59 Contacts With dead Liberian Victim by K08(m): 5:12am On Jul 29, 2014 |
Succor on the way soon. No worries. |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: SSS Cadet Course 28 2014 Recruitment!!! by K08(m): 6:10pm On Jul 18, 2014*. Modified: 5:18pm On Aug 30, 2017 |
Any invite yet? |
Celebrities › Re: TRAGEDY: Father 'U' Turn Is Dead by K08(m): 8:01pm On Nov 17, 2013 |
R I P Father U Turn. |
Education › Re: Boy,9, Becomes Nigeria’s Youngest Microsoft Certified Professional by K08(m): 8:50am On Oct 11, 2013 |
Kudos to this young man! |
Education › Re: Boy,9, Becomes Nigeria’s Youngest microsoft Certified Professional by K08(m): 8:48am On Oct 11, 2013 |
Kudos to this young man! |
Education › Re: Boy,9, Becomes Nigeria’s Youngest Microsoft Certified Professional by K08(m): 8:44am On Oct 11, 2013 |
Kudos to this young man! |
Career › Re: Do You Believe In Luck? by K08(m): 5:12pm On Jun 10, 2013 |
[quote author=Jarus]Michael Taiwo, PhD
Many people deride the role luck has played in their success. They even deny having any! Some are embarrassed by the idea that they are lucky and others are annoyed if an attempt is ever made to show how luck has factored into their achievement. The leadership literature has not made matters any easier. Leadership gurus flood the market with clichés like ‘Luck is when preparation meets opportunity’, or ‘I have found out that the harder I work the luckier I become’, or ‘Luck is the residue of design.’ It is against this tide of conventional wisdom that I wish to swim. And this article is the first I will write in a three-part series to take a shot at this misguided popular opinion. I am going to argue here, and in the two articles coming after this one, that all successful endeavors have luck to thank. No one – whether an individual, a team or a nation – would be successful without luck and if you disagree with this statement then I have you right where I want you: the other side.
Some religious folks have strongly objected to the use of the word “luck”. They believe it is a sacrilegious attempt at giving credit to an unknown. They prefer to use “favor,” “blessed,” “God’s mercies,” or any other term that ascribes their success to an “Other.” This “Other” is usually a know-all, be-all Deity. His omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent powers order the universe and assign men their fates. I have no problem with that. In fact, with respect to my argument, we are on the same page. Why? Because we both agree that whatever goodies we have were not all purchased by our sweat but by something outside of ourselves that we have absolutely no control over. After all, can you control God? So to my religious friends, I will say you should please humor me and let me carry on with the word “luck” knowing full well that we are both saying the same thing. Don’t let us get caught up with the semantics. Isn’t it Shakespeare that said “What’s in a name? that which we call a rose By any other name will smell as sweet?”
I look at my own life and gladly acknowledge the role luck has played. I got into the University a year ahead of my high school friends not because I was smarter or more far-sighted but simply because of Serendipity. My elder sister was about to write JAMB (the entrance exam into Nigeria’s colleges and universities) and when she got to where she would purchase the exam application forms realized she had enough money for two forms and thought “What the heck? I can buy one for my kid brother too. There’s no harm in letting him try early.” I seized that opportunity and worked my butt off to score just enough to be offered an admission into my dream department at my dream school. You could say I got into college when I did because I “worked my butt off” but what if my sister didn’t have enough money for two forms? What if she had but didn’t think of me when buying hers? I never said hard work wasn’t part of the success equation; my point is that luck is very much a part too.
I also think of how I got my current job. I had applied for the same job online with no luck and I got the classic “Sorry, after looking at your resume, we regret to inform you that you have not been considered for the job” response. A few months later, at a Geoscientists’ conference, I ran into a recruiter from the same company that rejected my online application; she took one look at my resume and said “I have a job for you!” Nothing had changed in those intervening months: I was still the same me, doing the same research, having the same GPA and working at the same rate. The only difference now was that I happened to be at the right place at the right time talking to the right person. I was lucky to be at the conference. I am not a Geoscientist but I have friends who thought it okay to invite me. I was lucky to meet a recruiter who knew exactly what the company was looking for and quickly saw a fit. (I have since found out not all recruiters are that competent.) I got a Chemical Engineering job at a Geoscientist conference. Yes, I am lucky.
Look, my point is that in trying to extol the virtues of hardwork, resilience and planning we have swung too far to the other side. We have become extremists in expressing those views and we have almost made luck a vice. Whereas, in the daily grind of life, we over and again find that it ain’t just so! You need to be at least a little lucky to survive in this world and you definitely need a large dose of it to thrive, to have your place among the very best. It is about time you came off your high horse and humbly accept: yes, I was lucky.
P.S. In my next article, I will write on “The many faces of Luck” and in the last article of this Luck series I will go a bit more philosophical and touch on “Our Struggle with Luck.” I am really excited to share these with you and can’t wait to hear |
Politics › Re: Wole Soyinka's Interview About Chinua Achebe by K08(m): 11:19pm On May 27, 2013 |
nolongtin: Also: Why He Wished Achebe Had Not Written His Last Book; What He Told Ojukwu Before The War; Genocide, And Other Issues
.Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka has described Africa’s most well known novelist, Chinua Achebe, as a storyteller who earned global celebration, adding, however, that those describing Achebe as “the father of African literature” were ignorant.
In a wide-ranging interview with SaharaReporters, Soyinka paid tribute to the late novelist who died on March 21, 2013 at 82. Soyinka, who won the 1986 Nobel Prize for literature, also spoke on his personal relationship with Achebe and other Nigerian writers; his regrets about Achebe’s last book, There Was A Country: A Personal History of Biafra; and his attempt to talk the late Biafran leader, Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, out of fighting a war. Soyinka also answered questions about Heinemann’s African Writers Series and scolded “clannish” and “opportunistic hagiographers” fixated on the fact that Achebe never won the Nobel Prize. |
Career › Re: What If You Were In "Oga At The Top's" Shoe? by K08(m): 5:58pm On Mar 16, 2013 |
This needless joke should end here. I tell you, facing live cameras isn't easy. I remember the 1st time I participated in a live programme in that same Channels' studio (Rubbing Minds - the maiden edition), I was totally overwhelmed and nervous despite the fact that I knew what I wanted to say (impromptul though). So, this man could also be nervous, knowning that whatever remarks he made would be used against him. He had possibly had the premonition of what would become of him afterwards - what he most feared has happened to him, it's simple psychology. By the way, my Oga at the top has ordered me to stop you all from overflogging the joke. DAZ ALL! |
Politics › Re: Breaking News: Taraba State Governor Die In Plane Crash by K08(m): 8:38pm On Oct 25, 2012 |
Front page pls! |
TV/Movies › Re: Green Family Wins Maltina Dancehall Season 6 by K08(m): 9:58pm On Sep 23, 2012 |
Clemzy16: What are you saying? Did you watched the live show yesterday? Well, i did. And i was ever-ready to watched that part today, but unfortunately it was edited by Maltina. You need to see the way the crowd shouted yesterday. Infact, she also said.. "Ladies and gentleman." that woman is more than a joke. @ Clemzy16, perhaps the lady was very nervous when she was called upon to do the presentation. No one is above mistake. Now, look at your last comment, you equally commited blunder. |
Events › Re: Where Were You On September 11th 2001? by K08(m): 11:37pm On Sep 13, 2012 |
I was at home watching a programme anchored by Levi Ajunima (blessed memory), then he was a presenter with NTA 10, Lagos. He was the one that analized the incident as it came as breaking news. |
Literature › Re: An Insightful View Of The Nigerian Psyche by K08(m): 8:18pm On Aug 26, 2012 |
1supremo: We are Nigerians; we live on the sky in the shadows of the earth. We are good people; after all we are very religious, only our attitudes let us down sometimes. Our heads are nicely capped with Italian shoes and our gloved feet are elegantly shod with bowler hats. Now, aren’t we perfect ladies and gentlemen?
We spend significant years of our lives struggling to outdo one another in a bid to get university education (my struggles paid off after four JAMB UMEs). Our universities have a record of successfully educating us till we attain imbecility; then we are churned out. Decades after graduation, we aren’t gainfully employed and we ask “Why?” the insensitive employers retort with the trite “We need no imbeciles in our establishments.” Trust us, we yell back at them: who are they to slight what we paid for? We are yet to understand the rationale behind some of our government’s actions, although we know overall, our government is populace-centric. We always wonder why our policemen down south are armed with guns that only accidentally discharge when law-abiding citizens disagree with them over money issues: our unanimous inference is that our government must have inadvertently equipped them with bellicose guns that have vampirical proclivities. We don’t blame either party; after all, “Police is Your Friend” is a universal truth. Will our friends kill us over trivias? No! Won't they be lonely upon our demise? Now, we all know that nobody enjoys loneliness, or are they reclusive? Very unlikely. We just have to blame the guns.
A terrorist group up north is perpetrating wanton decimation of our Police Force: they have made them an endangered species. Recent activities reveal that some policemen down south who have been posted up north to protect us from these terrorists are scheming to effect rescissions of their transfer. Is this not a cue for the civilian population to take up the challenge of protecting the police? Our police force needs to tell us first.
Our good government teaches us timeless values. Frequent power outage is the way of reminding us that God created night and day; a balance that must never be upset as a slight imbalance could be calamitous; although most times the lesson we learn is that, “Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining” (our power outage most times attain an uninterrupted status, briefly truncated for minutes per day). Our not-portable roads are meant to teach us that “The Road to Greatness is Not Smooth”. We are good people in this great nation. The hoarding of the nation’s resources is how our security is ensured- we don’t entertain fears of armed robbery attacks. Who will rob a poor person? By looting the resources of our nation, our good leaders make themselves susceptible to muggers in their bid to keep the populace secure. We appreciate their sacrifice and I recommend them for deification: they bear our sins for us. Don't you agree with me?
We do not check our population growth conventionally; we believe it is unethical to deny babies the privileges of taking some whiff of space into their lungs- we are a people with scruples. However, our humanitarian government compensates whoever takes the initiative to send some of us to “The Land Where We Never Grow Old”: MEND militants are on a Salary-For-Life and scholarship scheme; Boko Haram is soon to follow. Here’s a simple question for the unemployed, baccalaureate-waving fraction of the populace who are always taking on our good government; what have you done for your country? We challenge you to take a cue from the afore-mentioned groups and your efforts will not be unrewarded. Hasn’t our government been silently screaming this message all along?
Anomaly is our way of life here; however, we become aberrant when our “thinking shoes” malfunction or when we impulsively unshod our heads, uncap our feet and swap our shoes’ positions with our cap’s; then, we become perverted and see things in a new light, and only then do we agree with Chinua Achebe’s book title, “Things Fall Apart”- that’s our modus operandi. Nice one! |
Literature › Re: An Insightful View Of The Nigerian Psyche by K08(m): 8:04pm On Aug 26, 2012 |
1supremo: We are Nigerians; we live on the sky in the shadows of the earth. We are good people; after all we are very religious, only our attitudes let us down sometimes. Our heads are nicely capped with Italian shoes and our gloved feet are elegantly shod with bowler hats. Now, aren’t we perfect ladies and gentlemen?
We spend significant years of our lives struggling to outdo one another in a bid to get university education (my struggles paid off after four JAMB UMEs). Our universities have a record of successfully educating us till we attain imbecility; then we are churned out. Decades after graduation, we aren’t gainfully employed and we ask “Why?” the insensitive employers retort with the trite “We need no imbeciles in our establishments.” Trust us, we yell back at them: who are they to slight what we paid for? We are yet to understand the rationale behind some of our government’s actions, although we know overall, our government is populace-centric. We always wonder why our policemen down south are armed with guns that only accidentally discharge when law-abiding citizens disagree with them over money issues: our unanimous inference is that our government must have inadvertently equipped them with bellicose guns that have vampirical proclivities. We don’t blame either party; after all, “Police is Your Friend” is a universal truth. Will our friends kill us over trivias? No! Won't they be lonely upon our demise? Now, we all know that nobody enjoys loneliness, or are they reclusive? Very unlikely. We just have to blame the guns.
A terrorist group up north is perpetrating wanton decimation of our Police Force: they have made them an endangered species. Recent activities reveal that some policemen down south who have been posted up north to protect us from these terrorists are scheming to effect rescissions of their transfer. Is this not a cue for the civilian population to take up the challenge of protecting the police? Our police force needs to tell us first.
Our good government teaches us timeless values. Frequent power outage is the way of reminding us that God created night and day; a balance that must never be upset as a slight imbalance could be calamitous; although most times the lesson we learn is that, “Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining” (our power outage most times attain an uninterrupted status, briefly truncated for minutes per day). Our not-portable roads are meant to teach us that “The Road to Greatness is Not Smooth”. We are good people in this great nation. The hoarding of the nation’s resources is how our security is ensured- we don’t entertain fears of armed robbery attacks. Who will rob a poor person? By looting the resources of our nation, our good leaders make themselves susceptible to muggers in their bid to keep the populace secure. We appreciate their sacrifice and I recommend them for deification: they bear our sins for us. Don't you agree with me?
We do not check our population growth conventionally; we believe it is unethical to deny babies the privileges of taking some whiff of space into their lungs- we are a people with scruples. However, our humanitarian government compensates whoever takes the initiative to send some of us to “The Land Where We Never Grow Old”: MEND militants are on a Salary-For-Life and scholarship scheme; Boko Haram is soon to follow. Here’s a simple question for the unemployed, baccalaureate-waving fraction of the populace who are always taking on our good government; what have you done for your country? We challenge you to take a cue from the afore-mentioned groups and your efforts will not be unrewarded. Hasn’t our government been silently screaming this message all along?
Anomaly is our way of life here; however, we become aberrant when our “thinking shoes” malfunction or when we impulsively unshod our heads, uncap our feet and swap our shoes’ positions with our cap’s; then, we become perverted and see things in a new light, and only then do we agree with Chinua Achebe’s book title, “Things Fall Apart”- that’s our modus operandi. |
Politics › Re: Quotes From Parents Of Cynthia Osokogu by K08(m): 8:47am On Aug 26, 2012 |
ebamma: if you see a woman who loves facebook,there are two things involved,its either she is looking for a husband or looking for a for a mugu,if she is looking for a husband she is safe,but if she is looking for a mugu there are two things involved,its either mugu go pay or mugu go kill am,if mugu pay she is safe,but if mugu kill am there are two things involved,its either she goes to heaven or goes to hell,if she goes to heaven she is safe,but if she goes to hell,there is only one thing involved,she is doomed Yes, the argument is VALID. Could you pls simbolize it? |
Education › Re: What Can You Remember In Your Primary Comprehension Reader? by K08(m): 4:53pm On Jul 11, 2012 |
[quote author=K.08]Mr Bako is a shop keeper. I think this should be in N.O.E.C book 2. Ah Nostalgia!![/quote]sorry, Mr Giwa is a shop keeper... |
Education › Re: What Can You Remember In Your Primary Comprehension Reader? by K08(m): 4:47pm On Jul 11, 2012 |
Mr Bako is a shop keeper. I think this should be in N.O.E.C book 2. Ah Nostalgia!! |
Politics › Re: The Gospel According To ‘Saint’ Farouk by K08(m): 7:39pm On Jun 15, 2012 |
LOL Nice Satire. |
Travel › Re: Dana Air Pilot’s Last Conversations With Air Traffic Controller by K08(m): 1:12pm On Jun 12, 2012 |
hardleyC: May their departed souls rest in perfect peace.
***thinking aloud**** like a poster rightly said, i can only imagine what went on in their minds: the commotion,mother clinging tightly to her children,husband holding wife and saying their last prayers,atheist wishing he had believed GOD,chics & babes forgetting their "tushness" and crying,screaming! OMG! Lord have mercy! what a horible terrible way to die!
God knows best.  hardleyC: May their departed souls rest in perfect peace.
***thinking aloud**** like a poster rightly said, i can only imagine what went on in their minds: the commotion,mother clinging tightly to her children,husband holding wife and saying their last prayers,atheist wishing he had believed GOD,chics & babes forgetting their "tushness" and crying,screaming! OMG! Lord have mercy! what a horible terrible way to die!
God knows best. hmmmm philosophical! May God rest their souls. |
Education › Re: I Almost Died When Jonathan Renamed Unilag – Former Unilag Vc Ibidapo-obe by K08(m): 10:21am On Jun 08, 2012 |
I think Prof. is right. |
Politics › Re: GEJ Seeks Senate Approval To Rename UNILAG And 2 Other Federal Universities. by K08(m): 3:06pm On Jun 06, 2012 |
Now I know that GEJ truly deserves all the ill-talks against him. Clueless indeed.  Now I know that GEJ truly deserves all the ill-talks against him. Clueless indeed. |
Education › Re: Occupy UNILAG: Students Protest MAU Renaming by K08(m): 11:20am On May 29, 2012 |
Imagine, MKO Abiola University! SMH |
Education › Re: UNILAG Renamed 'Moshood Abiola University' by K08(m): 10:09am On May 29, 2012 |
It's a ploy to reduce great Unilag to a regional school. We won't take this, there must be Aluta. But wait a minute, Unilag SUG has been castrated. What a pity! O ma se o... |
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Romance › Re: How Long Can You Stay Single & What Is Your Record So Far? by K08(m): 2:23pm On May 23, 2012 |
@michellin89. Are u now engaged? |