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How To Make SX Enjoyable At Night

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How To Make SX Enjoyable At Night 1. Take a cold bath and get into your bedroom. 2. Try and switch off the television and radio to stop you from noise... so you can feel the spirit. 3. Switch on the fan or A.C to ventilate the room. 4. Now sit/lay in your bed for a good position. 5. Be in your underwear and cover your legs to your chest with only cloth or blanket. 6. Take your Bible and read from John chapter 3:3 7. After that, close your Bible, meditate, pray and sleep. 8. Do that daily because Jesus is coming very soon,๐Ÿคฃ

A man needs a little madness, or else… he never dares cut the rope and be free.

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A man needs a little madness, or else… he never dares cut the rope and be free. Nikos Kazantzakis A man stands on the edge of a familiar street, the kind of street he has walked a thousand times, each step measured, each corner predictable. The rope is there too, not a rope of wood or fiber, but the invisible cord of habit, of obligation, of things done the same way because they are safe. To cut it is to leave behind the comfort of routine, to walk into the uncharted. It is frightening, yes, but thrilling in a way that only a hint of madness can make possible. Madness here is not shouting or chaos. It is the sudden urge to take a different turn, to knock on an unknown door, to speak a truth that trembles on the edge of reason. Without it, the man stays where he is, moving through the days like a well-oiled machine, polite, predictable, unnoticed. The rope keeps him steady, yes, but it also keeps him small, his dreams coiled and dimmed like unlit lamps in a narrow hallway. And then, per...

The poet offends the brainwashed millions who are the majority in any country

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The poet offends the brainwashed millions who are the majority in any country. His words, his free manner of living are a constant irritation to the repressed, the fearful, the self satisfied, and the incurious. Irving Layton There is always, in the poet’s silhouette, something of the heretic’s halo and the criminal’s shadow. He appears not as a polite guest in the banquet hall of society but as the insolent apparition who overturns the tablecloth, scattering the silver cutlery and the bread crumbs of convention. Layton’s remark is not simply a protest but a diagnosis: the poet is an irritant, like a grain of sand lodged in the smooth mollusk of mass complacency. And, from such abrasions, pearls of beauty are sometimes born. Picture, if you will, the great majority, the “brainwashed millions,” as Layton calls them, like shoppers in a crowded market, moving from stall to stall, their eyes fixed on the goods, hands busy with coins, heads bowed in routine. They barely notice one another, ...

The history of the eunuchs in the Ottoman Empire's harem is as fascinating as it is heartbreaking ๐Ÿ˜”.

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The history of the eunuchs in the Ottoman Empire's harem is as fascinating as it is heartbreaking ๐Ÿ˜”. Here's some surprising info on where they were brought from and how they were castrated:๐Ÿ˜ฑ Where were the eunuchs brought from? There were mainly two types of eunuchs in the Ottoman palace, sourced from different regions:⭐ White Eunuchs: Mostly from the Balkans (Hungary, Greece, Slavic countries) and the Caucasus region (Georgia, Circassia). Often, they were either young boys captured in wars or slaves given as gifts. Black Eunuchs: Primarily from East Africa (present-day Ethiopia, Sudan, and the Nile basin). They'd be brought via the Red Sea to Cairo, Egypt, and then sent to Istanbul's palace.๐ŸŒŸ The Castration Process Castration was prohibited under Islamic law, so the Ottomans usually had it done outside their territory, often by non-Muslims. The process was brutal:⭐ Surgical method: Some had only their testicles removed (castration), while others had their entire gen...

4 Little known facts about Adi Amin

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4 Little known facts about Adi Amin 1. His long title His title was, “His Excellency, President for life, Field Marshal Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin Dada, VC, DSO, MC, Lord of all Beasts of the Earth and the Fishes of the Sea and the Conqueror of the British Empire in Africa in General and Uganda in particular”. 2. King of Scotland The Scottish National Liberation Army, a paramilitary group, was fighting to acquire independence from Britain. The group approached Idi Amin for assistance. idi Amin responded with a conditional offer. If he assist and they become free, he must be made King of Scotland. 3. Ordered by God to expel Indians from Uganda 90% of Indians who controlled 90% of Uganda's economy were expelled from the Uganda. One of the main justification for this expulsion was that God had visited him in a dream and ordered him to expel Indians from Uganda. 4. Interview with Conqueror of British Empire He once asked western journalists if they weren’t nervous and scared to interview...

Before Europe came to Africa with chains, someone else had already been there.

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Before Europe came to Africa with chains, someone else had already been there. Let me tell you about the Arab slave trade. The one nobody talks about. It started around 650 AD. Long before Christopher Columbus. Long before the first European slave ship crossed the Atlantic. Arab traders had already established extensive networks across East Africa, West Africa and the Sahara, capturing, buying and selling African people for over a thousand years. Between 650 AD and 1900 AD historians estimate that between 17 and 20 million Africans were taken through the networks of the Arab slave trade. That number is difficult to pin down precisely because unlike the transatlantic trade which was heavily documented for commercial reasons the Arab trade was less systematically recorded. But here is what we know. Arabs preferred female slaves over male slaves. Women were taken as concubines and domestic servants. Many were used for sexual exploitation in Arab households. Many male slaves destined for c...

Polyandry (one woman with many husbands) Among the Irigwe of Plateau State,Nigeria.

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Polyandry (one woman with many husbands) Among the Irigwe of Plateau State,Nigeria. Among the Irigwe people of present-day Plateau State, a unique marital tradition once existed in which women could have multiple husbands. This form of marriage, known as polyandry, was practised for many decades and formed part of the community’s social structure before it was officially outlawed in 1968. Under the system, a woman could move freely between the homes of her husbands. Although she had more than one spouse, the paternity of her children was traditionally assigned to the husband with whom she was living at the time of birth. Historians and anthropologists have noted several reasons behind the practice. In some cases, it helped families pool labour and resources for farming and survival. It also served as a social solution to infertility, allowing childbearing responsibilities to be shared within the marriage structure. Questions of inheritance and family continuity were also tied to the cu...

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