Vivalavida99's Posts
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What about those that don't live in Nigeria but have an account back home, how do we go about it? |
People always looking for the minuscule of fault, that's the social media for you. So many idle people without job, abeg Buhari should make haste and create employment for our teeming youth. |
Dorrobucci:You no well at all at all oh! You this boy ![]() You 're not far from the truth sha, he nearly pushed him from the red carpet, see the VP walking on the edge of the red carpet. Lol ![]() |
Pls somebody tell me this us joke, or it's a blatant lie. How convient... |
Dangote opening inroad of investment through out Africa. More grace to you. |
Thank God for the law that was passed recently, life jail time awaits rapist. |
SambisaaForest:Hey Charley!! Tone it down a lil bit, what's with the insult here and there? A lil bit if respect to the dead. |
Op, No man is worth losing your life over. All women should give a cheating and jealous men a wide berth because they end up destroying the lives of everyone around them. |
This guys are on a roll And one claim not to understand English, i guess he lodged his ill gotten millions with a Yoruba teller. |
Hilarious.... ![]() Op is suffering from undiagnosed manic depressive psychosis, he should sick help. |
What does it matter now if the guy is already dead? Are you sure it's not b'cuz of those recorded convo that sent him to his early grave. Hmmm...orishirishi |
How will they (the Kardashian)top this for next seasons episodes? Kris will become a man and remarry Caitlin? Nothing would surprise me with this family. When people live their life like a soap opera and it's considered news then society is lost. I just find this entire family weird and fame hungry!! |
You guys should leave Igbo people alone, your obsession with everything Igbo is becoming a worrying trend. Every time one comes on nairaland, you will see more than 60 to 70% of topic is about Igbo. I'm just wondering, if you folks don't talk about igbo's will you die? |
Teempakguy:...and yet, he couldn't do it properly. |
BBC picked up this story, now that is interesting. ***grabs popcorn *** |
donphilopus:Seconded! Op do the needful, this is too graphic. |
Tufiakwa!!! Ndi ojor |
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MLK once said"Nothin in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity". |
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I'm a lady and love nice things, but this very particular lady is greedy and senseless. She is a disgrace to the womanhood. |
From all she wore, this is what got me wowed. I love me her shoes
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darnley16:*slaps darnley16 and runs away* ![]() |
More pics. Cc lalasticlala , Seun , Ishilove ,
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The son of the Sultan of Brunei, one of the world's richest men, has wed bride Dayangku Raabi'atul 'Adawiyyah Pengiran Haji Bolkiah in a spectacular ceremony at the monarch's 1,788-room palace in Brunei's capital, Bandar Seri Begawan. Prince Abdul Malik, 31, exchanged vows with Dayangku Raabi'atul 'Adawiyyah Pengiran Haji Bolkiah, 22, in front of crowds of friends and family, nobility and foreign dignitaries amid mind-boggling splendour. The newlyweds' matching gold outfits were both embellished with diamonds, while blushing bride Raabi'atul carried a bouquet made of dazzling gems, rather than flowers. The Prince is the youngest child of the Sultan, Hassanal Bolkiah, and his wife, Queen Saleha, and is second in the line of succession to become the next Sultan of Brunei. Today's 'bersanding' or enthronement ceremony is usually the highlight of the wedding festivities, and saw the bride and groom seated next to each other, dressed in opulent traditional attire on gilded thrones in the Throne Chamber of the Istana Nural Iman palace. According to The Brunei Times, also in attendance were seven Malaysian state rulers and the governor of Saudi Arabia, and this is the first time that the couple have appeared together since the festivities started on 5 April. The couple wore matching traditional Malay dress, with the bride's veil constructed of swathes of intricate lace. The 22-year-old bride, who worked as a systems data analyst and IT instructor, sported a breathtaking diamond tiara studded with six teardrop-shaped emeralds. A diamond necklace with a central pendant of three emeralds the size of grapes, glittered around her neck, while a matching brooch of two egg-shaped emeralds dangled from a diamond setting. The celebration will end on 15 April, with a ceremony of thanksgiving prayers. The location of the wedding, the dazzling Istana Nural Iman palace is situated in Brunei's capital, Bandar Seri Begawan. It is considered the largest residential palace in the world, with 1,788 rooms, five grand swimming pools, 257 bathrooms, and a 110-car garage. Later Brunei's newlywed royal couple, changed into more opulent evening outfits for the wedding banquet. Prince Abdul swapped his gold wedding suit for ceremonial military dress, embellished with diamond epaulettes and collar. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3035550/Sultan-Brunei-s-son-celebrates-wedding-mind-boggling-splendour.html#article-3035550
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Biological anthropologist Helen Fisher has a pretty perfect description of what it's like to be in love with someone: Simply put, she says, that person becomes the center of the world. You have an intense craving to be with that person, not just sexually, but emotionally. You can list the things you don't like about them, but all that gets pushed aside and you focus only on what you do like about them. "It's an obsession," Fisher said in TED Talk called "Why we love, why we cheat." What's going on biologically, though, is far less romantic, and it explains why we sometimes cheat on those we love. Romantic love is essentially just elevated activity of the reward hormone dopamine in the brain. In the TED talk Fisher explains an experiment where she and a team of scientists scanned the brains of people who were in love. The team showed the smitten person a neutral photo and then a photo of their beloved. They recorded which regions of the brain were active while the person gazed at the photo of their partner. The researchers found that one of the most important brain regions that became active when each person looked at a photo of their partner is the reward system — the same brain area that lights up when a person takes cocaine or has an orgasm. That means that "romantic love is not an emotion, it's a drive," Fisher said. "And in fact, I think it's more powerful than the sex drive." Many other studies have found the same thing: love operates as a motivation and reward system in the brain. So, if love is rewarding, what drives us to cheat on people we fall in love with? The problem is that romantic love isn't the only brain system that is activated when we fall for someone. There are actually three brain systems related to love, Fisher explained. There's the sex drive, which is like an "intolerable neural itch," to get us out searching for a range of partners to help pass on our genes. There's romantic love, which helps us focus our mating energy on one person. And then there's attachment, the calm and security we feel with a long-term partner so we can raise children with them as a team. However, those three brain systems, sex drive, romantic love, and attachment, aren't always connected to each other. So it's possible to feel deep attachment to a long-term partner at the same time you feel intense romantic love toward someone else and even also feel sexual attraction toward another person, Fisher said. "In short, we're capable of loving more than one person at a time," Fisher said. And that's why, Fisher says, some people may cheat on their partner. It's why someone can lay in bed at night thinking about deep feelings of attachment to one person and swing to thoughts of romantic love for another person. "It's as if there's a committee meeting going on inside your head as you try to decide what to do," Fisher said. "I don't think honestly that we're an animal that was built to be happy — we're an animal that was built to reproduce. I think the happiness we find, we make." This all sounds like a cynical take on love, but Fisher says that, despite all these straightforward and unavoidable biological processes, there's still mystery and "magic to it." https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/anthropologist-explains-why-cheat-people-193149709.html |
koolet:Libyans wanted change when they toppled Ghadaffi Syrians wanted change... Egyptians wanted change... Today we are witness to change in these countries... Wise up Nigerian youth. A word is enough for the wise. |
Pls Assist her make a good decision ![]()
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AKMoney1:No sir, I'm not... |
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