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18/01/2026
22/12/2025

Jelani grounds eagle precision — bamboo talons dig and lift with control.

22/12/2025

THE EXPENDABLES 6 (2026) 💥🔥
👉Watch movie: https://imsb.info/102823/
⭐ Starring: Sylvester Stallone • Jason Statham • Cristiano Ronaldo • Dolph Lundgren • Randy Couture • 50 Cent • Tony Jaa

💬 Old soldiers. New war.

Barney Ross and his elite mercenary team return for what may be their final—and deadliest—mission. A shadowy, ultra-advanced terrorist syndicate known as The Iron Covenant has seized control of a decommissioned but still lethal orbital weapons platform.

🌍 Led by a ruthless former warlord who’s rewritten the rules of modern warfare, the group threatens to rain kinetic strikes on the world’s capitals unless their impossible demands are met.

⚠️ Global intelligence agencies are frozen.
🚫 Conventional military action is off the table.
💥 And the job falls to the Expendables.

But Ross knows brute force alone won’t stop a high-tech enemy like this.

🔥 To survive the future of war…
⚔️ they’ll need an equalizer.

22/12/2025

Which is the correct one? ❓

22/12/2025

The Wolf Who Crowned Himself King

In the deep green forest of Elderglen lived a grey wolf with sharp eyes and a sharper hunger for power. He was strong, swift, and feared, but he was not chosen by the forest to lead. One morning, standing upon a high rock, he lifted his head and howled so loudly that birds fell silent and leaves stopped trembling.

“From this day,” the wolf proclaimed, “I am your king. Bow when I pass. Bring me the best of your hunt. Disobey, and feel my fangs.”

The smaller animals—rabbits, antelopes, goats, and even the clever fox—trembled. The birds lowered their heads. The deer bent their knees. No one dared to challenge him, for the wolf punished disobedience swiftly. A hedgehog that refused to bow was flung into the river. A monkey that laughed at the decree lost his home. Fear spread through the forest like a cold shadow.

Life continued, but joy vanished. Animals no longer gathered to share food or stories. Each creature hid what little it had, whispering only in trusted corners. The wolf, satisfied with the silence he mistook for loyalty, grew proud and lazy, believing fear had secured his throne forever.
Then came the famine.

The rains failed. Rivers shrank into thin, muddy lines. Grass turned yellow, and fruits fell before ripening. Hunting became difficult; even the swiftest predators returned empty-pawed. The wolf roamed farther each day, ribs beginning to show beneath his fur.

At last, weak with hunger, the wolf approached the forest creatures.

“Bring me food,” he commanded, though his voice lacked its former thunder.

But the animals looked away. The rabbit clutched a hidden root. The birds flew off without a word. The deer remembered the punishments. The fox remembered the fear. Their hearts, once open, had hardened like stone.

“Why do you turn from me?” the wolf snarled. “Am I not your king?”

An old tortoise slowly lifted his head and spoke, “A true king feeds his people in times of plenty, so they may feed him in times of need. You ruled us with fear, not care. Fear does not grow generosity.”

The wolf had no answer. Days passed, and no one came to his aid. Alone on the same rock where he once crowned himself, the wolf grew weak and silent. Hunger consumed not only his body but his spirit.

When he finally slipped away into the forest’s shadows, the animals did not rejoice. They simply breathed easier. Slowly, they began to share again—food, warmth, and trust. And in time, the forest healed.

MORAL LESSON:

The wolf’s fate reveals a timeless truth: tyranny is a seed that grows into self-destruction. By ruling through fear, the wolf believed he was securing power, but in reality, he was slowly cutting away the very roots that sustained his reign. Every threat he made, every punishment he imposed, and every voice he silenced dug the pit into which he would eventually fall.

A tyrant mistakes silence for loyalty and trembling for respect. Yet fear does not build support—it drives it underground. People learn to hide their strength, their resources, and their compassion. When crisis arrives, the tyrant stands alone, surrounded not by enemies, but by the consequences of his own cruelty.

The wolf was not overthrown by rebellion; he was defeated by isolation. His downfall did not come from open resistance, but from quiet withdrawal. Those he oppressed did not need to fight him—his own actions had already ensured that no one would stand with him in his moment of need.

This lesson warns that oppression is a short road with a steep end. Power gained through intimidation carries within it the blueprint of collapse. A tyrant builds his throne on fear, but fear cannot hold weight forever. In the end, the tyrant does not fall because others destroy him; he falls because he has destroyed every reason for others to care.

In ruling without justice, the tyrant becomes the architect of his own ruin.

22/12/2025

THE MONKEY WHO CLIMBED THE RIPE TREE
There was once a monkey who wanted to please all the animals of the forest.
He believed that peace came from being useful to everyone.

One season, the animals gathered before a tall tree heavy with ripe fruits.
They tried to climb, but the trunk was smooth and high.
Only the monkey could reach the top.

“Help us,” they called.

The monkey climbed.

From above, he plucked fruits and dropped them to the ground.
The squirrel filled his basket.
The hare ran back and forth, gathering quickly.
The antelope stacked fruits into two large baskets.

At a point, the monkey paused.

He looked at the branches and thought,
“Let me leave some fruits here for myself.”

But another thought followed:
“No. Here, we are brethren. I should drop everything. When I come down, they will surely share with me.”

So he dropped the rest.

When the last fruit hit the ground, the monkey climbed down, tired but hopeful.

The ground was empty.

He went to the squirrel.
“Give me some fruit from your basket.”

The squirrel pulled his basket closer and said,
“I cannot. The hare has more than I do.”

The monkey turned to the hare, but the hare had already disappeared.

He then went to the antelope, who stood beside two full baskets and said: “Give me some fruit.”

The antelope, looking worried, calmly said,
“You did not tell me in time. I have been giving to others. These are what I have left.”

The monkey sat quietly beneath the tree.

Only then did he learn one things:
That favors given do not always return.

This is Ajambele

22/12/2025

Have you ever felt pressured to celebrate because you want to belong?
Have you ever felt like borrowing just to keep up?
Have you ever acted happy… while counting emptiness inside?

In a village where celebration became proof of worth,
one man chose silence over borrowed joy —
and another paid the price for noise.

This is not a story about harvest.
It is a story about pride, pressure, and the cost of pretending.

By 1:30 PM today, we share an Ajambele folktale that asks a quiet but dangerous question:
Is borrowed joy worth tomorrow’s hunger?

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Check the comment section.

20/12/2025

I am employed as a fashion designer

Tranceperency, and commitment. Cheating ❌❌Molests ❌❌Sincerely✅✅Modesty ✅✅✂✂📍📍✂✂📍📍☑☑
20/12/2025

Tranceperency, and commitment.
Cheating ❌❌
Molests ❌❌
Sincerely✅✅
Modesty ✅✅
✂✂📍📍✂✂📍📍☑☑

Hey good morning all
20/12/2025

Hey good morning all

Address

Rayfield

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