Monday, July 21, 2008

photos of the gang hanging out!

Hi there!


It's been ages since I last posted anything on our youth blog so you'll just have to forgive me, I've just been busy with school work and stuff! [ I got admitted into a polytechnic recently so I'm euphoric!].









Uloko and derin are moving away from our home church to their respective universities so maybe the hopes and fantasies I had for them to become a couple and do the highschool sweetheart thing may finally be done and dusted and they may just remain friends. Not that that's bad in any way, {who am I to judge anyone's romantic decisions when I've had so few of my own!}
I've decided to show some pictures we took fooling around after church. Uloko derin and a really graphic pic of mine,They're cool{except for mine, I look hideous!}

XOXO! EDWIN.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

WHERE IS THE NIGERIAN EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM HEADED TO!


In the Nigerian educational system today, it is a sad but true fact that there are double standards. This problem of double standards is like a hydra, humbly beginning in our innocent kindergarten classes and slowly but surely spreading its arms all the way up to the prestigious offices of our tertiary institutions. This double standard is not just academic but also moral and disciplinary.
To understand this seemingly unimportant problem, take a scrutinized look at our secondary schools. In recent years, most of the schools with the highest numbers of students who graduate with distinctions are mushroom private schools. This is hard to explain as these schools have no previous pedigree for outstanding performance among students. These schools born out of a need to make profit live solely for profit. They usually start small, until the pressure of the competition from cheaper pre-established public schools and the indifference of our ministry of education push them to go the extra mile and cross the line into illegitimacy to get the best results. They streamline their curriculum to include only core subjects and the easiest electives, dropping vocational subjects such as Public health education, home economics, metal work, French, computer studies. Some schools have even gone to the extent of limiting the choice in Nigerian languages to the most relevant, in the North, Hausa. After all, in Nigeria; all that really matters is the quality of your results not the quality of your education. Nigeria’s students no longer have the ‘luxury’ of choosing the subjects they’re interested in.
Public schools have become places where drudgery and slothfulness abide. The teachers are underpaid and sometimes overworked so there is only so much you can give. Apart from a few devoted and dedicated government employed teachers, most have turned their cars into makeshift offices where they transact business and entertain clients. They see no need to give their students their all. A product of the public system myself, I saw teachers who preferred to chat up female teachers on the corridors rather than educate their classes; I even experienced a teacher who saw us her students as a vent for her problems. When ever she had an argument with her husband the night before, our lesson with her would be full of misplaced frustration. The slightest mistake would result in a hiding. What ever happened to the days when teachers gave students their full and undivided attention, cared about their student’s extra curricular lives and bothered to commend students for good behaviour? What happened to dedication to service and trustworthiness?
Then there is the issue of discipline and morality. The new unspoken taboo in our secondary school system today is for a teacher to dare try to discipline a student without the parents consent. Parents have gone as far as getting police officers to arrest a teacher for punishing a student’s misdemeanor. The teacher seems to have lost all rights to correct and discipline a child put under his/her care. It is ironic that parents are willing to commit their child’s academic future into a teacher’s hand but they aren’t willing to let the teacher become a part of that student’s life. Parents become so self conscious and self righteous that they believe that only they can and should handle their children yet when a child goes bad they are so quick to blame the teacher. This is sad because eight of the sixteen hours of a child’s weekday is spent with the teacher. Parents who work may eventually spend only four hours a day with their wards and at the end of the six years at secondary school; a teacher will spend a minimum of 9360 hours with the child while the parent would have a minimum of only 4680 hours. Thus with the attitude of the parents, the teacher is made out to be the enemy and rendered powerless to effect any real change to the student’s life. The battle for the student’s heart is already lost even before it is begun.
Morally bankrupt and corrupt, our tertiary institutions have been transformed into multi-million naira businesses and every lecture hall is some lecturer’s empire. Every average student has to transverse the landmine that our universities have become. Our hallways have become corridors of power. Waves and waves of badly written books full of typographical errors and misused words are published everyday by lecturers who then coerce their students into buying them for the sole purpose of making profits. Those who don’t have the patience to write whole books just fabricate ‘Handouts’ for their courses which are sold to the students. Students ‘block’ tests they have flunked and pay for re-sits they needn’t. There is absolutely no freedom of speech and expression in our public universities and polytechnics by our so called guardians of tradition. It is a common saying in universities that anyone who gets into a lecturer’s bad books can be assured of failing his course. There are students who change courses just to escape a tyrannical lecturer’s grip and we haven’t even begun to scratch the surface of the politics that define tertiary education. We have cultism which the ministry of education says has made an ‘encore’. Little do they know that cultism never left our schools, it just laid low until the strobe lights shifted to some other cause and the pattern resumed. Then there are the incessant public strikes which transform a four year course into a six year course which is why everyone with a little money is sending their children to the posh private schools.
With everything that is going wrong, it would be so easy to spend so much time pointing fingers that we forget to provide solutions. This article is not a finger pointing article; it is a solution providing one. We need to return to the negotiation table, use our P.T.A meetings for more than just public shows of which parent is more articulate than the other. We need to get both parents and teachers to define what the punishment for misdemeanours will be and implement these disciplinary measures together. We parents need to take a step back from our busy careers and actually get involved in our children’s lives instead of the distant one we have developed. Interactive opportunities such as open days and student/teacher workshops need to be encouraged. Our teachers need to undergo re-orientation as to the main purpose of education and they need salary increases as well as a robust and functional retirement package so they can focus on the children who need their attention so badly. Our university system needs to be restructured and the curriculum and syllabi clearly defined so students know exactly what to expect. A standard for literature and paraphernalia should be introduced to the tertiary system and all literature that doesn’t meet up should be discarded with immediacy. With a level of structure and discipline and integrity, our quickly decaying education system may still attain salvation.




The Nigerian tattler.
June 2008

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

A fire at the farm house!

Today, I woke up early preparing to go do my chores when a friend came by my house with some disturbing news. My friend derin's house, was on fire. He said he didn't know to what extent but what he heard wasn't at all good. So I rushed there to see and help put out the fire. The fire had been put out but the damage was extensive. Most of the manor had gone down in flames. Will keep you posted.

Sunday, June 01, 2008

A picture of one of our friends!


Here's a picture of one of our friends from Ghana.His name is Theophilus Ni Okai and He's been one of our few friends over there that have really kept in touch. He doesn't frequent the blog much though!

Thursday, May 15, 2008

The Information you needed.



No. of bible study and cell group meetings active since 2007 to date:
1) Tuesday bible study and prayer meet, using a 45 minutes bible study and 30 minute prayer format. Studied Selwyn Hughes Every day with Jesus (The character of God and Tough sayings from a tender heart.
2) Cell meeting using a 1 hour bible study format studying Selwyn Hughes "A fresh look at the Church."

No of Baptisms.
Nil

New Ordinations
Mr. Kingsley Ojianelo was ordained a deacon on the 20th of August 2007 at the National convention in Ilorin.

Active Ministries.
1) Youth ministry. Better known as THE TREASURED VESSELS. The Kaduna congregation is majorly youth oriented so the treasured vessels play an active part in church ministry. the sub-ministries under the treasured vessels are:
a) The Choir. also called the the fountain of love choir. They are in charge of music in the church, ranging from praise/worship to special concerts.
b) The Basketball Team. They use their love for basketball as a Tool of Evangelism organising Basketball outreaches. Where they share the word of God with friends.
c) Dance and Drama Ministry: Uses dance and drama to spread the goodnews.
d) The Web ministry: Operates a Youth Blog where young people can read entertaining articles, get advice about life and get to meet with others. The blogsite address is : www.datreasuredvesssels.blogspot.com

2)Women's ministry: A prayer ministry where the women of the church come together for intercessory prayers as well as active discussions on Church management. The women also oversee welfare of visitors during feasts.

Children's Ministry.: Basically an interactive sunday school programme where the spiritual and academic progress of the children is encouraged. The children also liase with the youths and usually pariticipate in their music and drama ministrations.

No of children
Averaging 18 to 22 on normal services. the highest number of children recorded in a sunday service during the 2007/2008 year is 40.

No. of Youths
averaging 15 to 18 on normal services. The highest number of youths recorded in sunday service during 2007/2008 is 35

Baptised Members
12, 5 adults, 7 youths.

Total attendance
Averages 40 to 45 on normal services. The highest number recorded in a sunday service for 2007/2008 is 109.

Mr. Kingsley Ojianelo.

N.B the pictures added are of the youths at a get together on New year's day and the second is of the Chirstmas Basketball allstars Match where the youths invited a rival team to play them on the 24th of december.

Friday, May 02, 2008

What do we do when a loved one dies.


When a loved one dies, it signals the end of a life you once loved and cherished. A part of you dies too, the part of your life that you shared with that person ends abruptly and it is almost too devastating to bear especially if that person was a parent or a sibling. That is because with friends you can always meet and make more but with a family member----. I chose to speak on this because in the last six months I have had a more than healthty dose of deaths. First, I was involved in a near fatal accident where my mentor, the man I loved and respected the most Mr. Olufemi Adelana died in my arms, Literally. To this day I still haven't cried for him. Then a month later, my grandmother whom I hadn't spoken too in the last twelve to thirteen years died. I was kind of relieved that she would finally be at peace with herself but I was kind of sad that we didn't get a chance to sort out our differences. then a week ago, my friend at our church branch in Lagos met with tragedy. His Dad, Mr. Emele Kalu had been recovering from a stroke and all of a sudden his condition deteriorated and he died suddenly.
So, I've come to realise that many young people are unprepared for the possibility of their parents and loved ones dying so I've decided to give three small suggestions to help if one's loved ones kick the bucket.

1) Get a good gaggle of trustworthy and loyal friends. True friends will stick with you through anything and you won't have problems judging their trustworthiness.

2) Get reading. Reading wide and extensively on a whole lot of subjects most especially the bible will prepare you mentally for a whole lot of situations who knows what will pop up in your head, I remember when I had my accident, all I could think about was John 16:33.

3) Get a hobby. When tragedy strikes, Having something that will keep you from thinking too much won't be a bad thing. It could save you from some stupid decisions later on.

Life is short, Use it wisely!

Monday, February 11, 2008

A wedding was held!


Derin in her bride's maid gown, aint she lovely?

Groom's man Uloko showing a well tailored cut!

Me lookin all serious and proper.

Derin Just wasn't into taking this picture, the heat was finally getting to her.

Last month,on the 26th to be exact, The elder sister of our Youth leader Uloko got married to a pastor, Pastor Kola of the Dominion christian Ministry. It was a well organised event with good music and a solemn ceremony. It even gave our present resident pastor,Mr. Kingsley Ojianelo the chance to try his skills as a officiating minister at a wedding. I suspect that it was his first time, {He did well anyway..}
I know funny things happen at weddings but I was kind of amazed when the presiding minister "failed" to tell the bride and groom to kiss officially under the eyes of God and man. The bride was already beginning to heave a sigh of relief when the M.C commanded that they Kiss. The bride and groom began to drag their feet as if they had never kissed before and it was only after the whole congregation began to hoot and boo did they give a wishy-washy, watery kiss. Very,Very disappointing.
What took the cake for me though was when Uloko and his brothers decided to sing a rock song for their sister during the reception. They'd written the song themselves and a friend played the guitar. It was all about them wanting her to stay longer but it not beBefore long the whole audience was crying as if the song was meant for them. Women and men watered the hall with their tears which I assume is a good thing because, Love was in the air.
Can't wait for another Wedding.

Monday, January 21, 2008

The new year resolution?@!

The beginning of a new year easily equals to new resolutions. I won't drink this anymore, I won't wear that anymore, I won't go shopping, ger a new credit card, and the list goes on and on. The thing that gets neglected every year is the things that we have done right in the past year and should continue. No one ever says, I have been a fabulous dancer maybe I should continue that or, I read fifteen books last year maybe I should increase my quota to twenty. Most of the time we are all too concerned with the things we didn't do that we fail to appreciate the things we did do.
If we want our years to be fulfilling and profitable, we need to have a balanced blend of the things we have been able to successfully achieve and the things we hope to inculcate into our lifestyles. That way, our new year will be a really fulfilling one.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

dancing the waltz

Lesson1: The Basic Pattern
Let's Dance
To begin, it is important to be able to distinguish the unique 3/4 rhythm of the Waltz. If you happen to own the Do It At Home Ballroom for Beginners CD or cassette, turn it to track # 1, 2 or 3 to become familiar with this rhythm. Let’s look at some basic styling techniques. To create the graceful gliding appearance that distinguishes the Waltz from other dances, it is essential to stand upright with your weight directly centered over your feet. [See Waltz Lesson 2: Positioning, on the Ballroom for Beginners Video].
(Click here to look up a word in our glossary.)
Closed Position
The Waltz is danced in Closed Position. The man should place his right hand slightly beneath the woman’s left shoulder blade with his right arm held at a 90 degree angle to his body. His left arm should be raised so that the woman’s hand can rest lightly in it, and should be held at her eye level. The woman, in turn, should rest her left hand comfortably near the man’s right shoulder, providing pressure with her fingers and thumb to better “follow” her partner’s lead. For better balance, the woman should look over the man’s right shoulder. This also creates an elegant and poised dance position.

The Waltz Box Step
As you practice the following variation, begin practicing individually, and when you feel comfortable on your own, move into Closed Position and practice with your partner. Isolate the beat by counting the music off as “boom-tick-tick...boom-tick-tick-and lean,” beginning into the actual dance pattern. By preceding your forward motion with a lean, you will not “pop the clutch” on your dancing. In doing this, you will progress more quickly and be able to dance gracefully with your partner.
Count
Man's Part
Lead
Woman's Part
1
Left foot forward
Closed Position
Right foot back
2
Right foot side
Closed Position
Left foot side
3
Left foot close
Closed Position
Right foot close
4
Right foot back
Closed Position
Left foot forward
5
Left foot side
Closed Position
Right foot side
6
Right foot close
Closed Position
Left foot close


The Basic pattern resembles a box, and can be broken down into two half boxes - a forward half box and a backward half box. Each half box occupies three steps. Partners perform natural opposites. That is, when the man does the backward half box, the woman does the forward half box, and vice versa.Click here to proceed to the next Waltz lesson.
[ Learn Ballroom Steps Online Learn About Our Video and CD ] [ Ballroom Dance Tips Who Is The Ballroom Dance Group?][ Order the Video or CD ][ Home ]

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

A terrible accident!


On the 21st of August 2007, The youth and pastors of the chapel of redemption were returning from a national convention in the city of Ilorin in Kwara State, Nigeria when their automobile suffered a terrible accident. They fell headlong into the bushes by the roadside and all sustained different levels of injuries from basic scratches to broken bones. Only one person was spared any injuries- Their pastor, Mr. Adelana who sustained a heart attack and died on the spot. The collective faith of the church he pastored for over ten years was greatly shaken but by and by they, with the help of the Holy Spirit have managed to move on and carry the flame.

We love and miss Mr. Adelana but God loves him best! We will keep the flame burning and the vision alive.ADIEU! Till we meet again.

A terrible accident!

Saturday, July 07, 2007

WHAT'S IN A NAME?
In one beautiful country not very far from here, there existed a corporate body charged with the task of providing electric power for the nation. It's name used to be NATIONAL ELECTRIC POWER AUTHORITY or N.E.P.A for short. An appropriate and wonderful name you would think. However, due to the dismal performance of it's duty and it's failure to provide adequate electricity for the nation, some people transmuted the acronym N.E.P.A to mean:
1) Never Expect Power Always (N.E.P.A)
2) National Eccentric Punishment Authority (N.E.P.A)
Recently, the government owned corporate bodywas privatised, ostensibly to promote efficency andinject some sanity into it's operation. It was given anew name to reflect it's new status. There was greatexpectation that this giant the people love to hatewould be radically reformed. Pungent optimism filledthe air as people waited with bated breath for aglorious new dawn of electric utopia.
No sooner had N.E.P.A been given the newglorious name of POWER HOLDING COMPANY OF THE NATION than performance deterioriated sharply! Black-outs for days on end, low voltage and ultra-low stabiliser-resistant current became the norm. The consequence?The nation experienced tremendous business losses, untimely deaths in hosptials, unbearable hardships in the home, at school, in hotel facilities, on the farms, in offices, in factories and in many recreational centres.
Inevitably, some people in the nation felt bitter. In the bid to express their frustration and disappointment, they waxed eloquent. They turned onthe new, more glorious name and mutilated it. They needed to vent their spleen on something. There was nothing else they could turn on but the name. Nothing, just the name. Below is a short list ofthe mutilations that are making the rounds.
1) Power Has Collapsed Nationwide (P.H.C.N)
2) Privatise, Horrify, Crucify and Neutralise(P.H.C.N)
3) Proclaim it, Here Comes Nonsense!! (P.H.C.N)
4) Pray Hard for Commonsense Now (P.H.C.N)
5) Prepare to Harvest Calamity Next (P.H.C.N)
6) Please Hold the Candle Nearer (P.H.C.N)
7) Power Hoodwinks and Corrupts Naturally (P.H.C.N)
8) Pandemonium,Hooliganism & Catalysm Network(P.H.C.N)
9) Power that Hurts and Cripples the Nation (P.H.C.N)
10) Pure Hatred Cloaked as Noblilty (P.H.C.N)
11) Perpertual Half Current is Nice! (P.H.C.N)
12) Powerless, Heartless and Careless Nitwits(P.H.C.N)
13) Photo-trick has Confused the Nation (P.H.C.N)
14) Power Hoarding Company of the Nation (P.H.C.N)
There is no end to the permutation,combination and mutation of the elements that make up"P.H.C.N"; attesting to the fact that great wrath breeds caustic poetry. Come to think of it, what's really in a name?
If say you are unfortunate to have a beautiful name or worse still a really glorious name,could it ever be a burden too heavy to bear? Look at your name for a minute, Think about it for two minutes! Amazing isn't it! If friends, foes, neighbours, classmates, associates or some busybodies were to attempt to twist your name because they somewhat perceive a mismatch between your name and your character, could you live to make it impossible for them to do so?What would it take to make your name match your character? Check the following passages for the answer.
Ecclesiastes 12:13-14
Phillipians 4:12-13
Colossians 1:9-112
Thesselonians 3:3
Isaiah 40:29-31
Revelations 3:12.

Thursday, July 05, 2007

A Little post from a friend!


'I Hope You Dance...
This was written by an 83-year-old woman to her friend.
*The last line says it all. *Dear Bertha,I'm reading more and dusting less. I'm sitting in the yard and admiring the view without fussing about the weeds in the garden. I'm spending more time with my family and friends and less time working.Whenever possible, life should be a pattern of experiences to savor, not to endure. I'm trying to recognize these moments now and cherish them.I'm not "saving" anything; we use our good china and crystal for every special event such as losing a pound, getting the sink unstopped, or the first Amaryllis blossom.I wear my good blazer to the market. My theory is if I look prosperous, I can shell out $28.49 for one small bag of groceries. I'm not saving my good perfume for special parties, but wearing it for clerks in the hardware store and tellers at the bank."Someday" and "one of these days" are losing their grip on my vocabulary. If it's worth seeing or hearing or doing, I want to see and hear and do it nowI'm not sure what others would've done had they known they wouldn't be here for the tomorrow that we all take for granted. I think they would have called family members and a few close friends. They might have called a few former friends to apologize and mend fences for past squabbles. I like to think they would have gone out for a Chinese dinner or for whatever their favorite food was.I'm guessing; I'll never know.It's those little things left undone that would make me angry if I knew my hours were limited. Angry because I hadn't written certain letters that I intended to write one of these days. Angry and sorry that I didn't tell my husband and parents often enough how much I truly love them. I'm trying very hard not to put off, hold back, or save anything that would add laughter and luster to our lives. And every morning when I open my eyes, tell myself that it is special.Every day, every minute, every breath truly is a gift from God. If you received this, it is because someone cares for you. If you're too busy to take the few minutes that it takes right now to forward this, would it be the first time you didn't do the little thing that would make a difference in your relationships? I can tell you it certainly won't be the last.Take a few minutes to send this to a few people you care about, just to let them know that you're thinking of them."People say true friends must always hold hands, but true friends don't need to hold hands because they know the other hand will always be there."
Life may not be the party we hoped for, but while we are here we might as well dance

Saturday, June 30, 2007

The truth behind boy/girl relationships

THE TRUTH ABOUT TEENAGE RELATIONSHIPS!
When we hear about the drama that parents put up when they discover that their child has a girlfriend/boyfriend, we begin to get the impression that there is something evil about being interested in the opposite sex. That in turn, pushes young people to go under the radar and still engage in such relationships. The problems begin when as a result of the lack of guidance and surveillance by parents, these young people end up indulging in the less prettier areas of relationship (premarital sex and the like.
So what is really so bad about teenagers engaging in opposite sex relationships? Nothing! Actually, the odd thing would be if the teenager doesn't see anyone who catches his fancy. The way our bodies are designed actually trigger these sudden 'crushes'. Once a teenager approaches puberty, his body produces certain hormones that develop his physical extremities and mental orientation for procreation. Just imagine if no one felt the urge to procreate, or everyone developed the urge but didn't have the tools to go about it. In a century the whole of mankind would die out. s
God has given us this great priviledge, BUT he also expects one thing from us- RESPONSIBILITY! What we do with God's gifts is our choice but it is also our responsibility to accept the consequences of doing things wrongly. It's our choice.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

birthday blues!

There will be days when a lot of memories will be made like tomorrow which is my birthday. cheers! The one day which should be for my sole enjoyment i have to share with my twin brother, sometimes it just manages to take the wind out of my sails and i just feel, well defeated. It is really a wonder though that God made women's bodies capable of nuturing as many as six children comfortably, even on a malnourished diet. He really is da Bomb.

Friday, June 15, 2007

the teeenage drab!

Every teenager has days when he feels the whole world is against him/her. There is a huge pimple on his nose where it proudly parades itself, his clothes wont fit, he's having trouble with the girls and to top it off; he flunks an important english essay three pages long and has to repeat the whole stuff; 'HOW BAD CAN LIFE GET' i hear you say.
Well life can get (and it usually gets) very bad for a teenager probably because of one major thing; FOCUS! All teens (myself included) tend to see the world and themselves from the perspectives of their friends and their friends sorry to say have not seen enough of life to be able to judge another person, so a word of advice: LOOK WITHIN!

Thursday, June 07, 2007

the great divide

There has always been a great divide between christians and the rest of the world and it is not an unhealthy one, actually it is a very healthy one.
The bible experts have coined a word that aptly defines that divide, they call it "SEPERATENESS" . A state of being involved in day to day life without actually being a part of it. I know it sounds weird and all science fiction but actually; it is very real. People are living in seperateness from the world everyday.
Let me supply you with a few instances; A man goes to work in a regular office. He doesn't say that because he is a christian, he will only work as a missionary; he does regular work. BUT- when all his friends are at the coffee pot during the short break, enjoying cappucinos and exchanging racial jokes; he takes a little time to stop, pray and prepare for the task at hand.
Take another instance; a girl is in at a resort enjoying a drink with friends when all of a sudden all her friends start a dare or drink contest, as a sign of seperateness she choose not to join the 'fun' and takes another seat elsewhere.
Of course its hard to always be the odd one out but we need to do it for our Lord Christ, After all he did it for us.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

THE BEGINNING OF THE END PART 2


We all are aware that the present political and economic situation in the world today seems to hint that all is not well in the world. We hear of people hurting other people for money, the environment suffering nearly catastrophic violence, incestous homosexuality and racial bigotry all becoming common pace in our society, war and famine and starvation all killing our people. We need to pray that God helps us become beacons of light that will help change our universe to a better place.
Let's pray!

Monday, May 21, 2007

the beginning of the end!

When we see and hear about people talking about armageddon, what images come to our mind?
For one i know that it scares me to hear that the world will soon be at war with itself. I can only imagine what it does to other christians. but i do know that the days of armageddon are already here.
We hear of weapons stockpiling and of chemical nuclear and biological wars and our hearts cringe but we fail to recognise that all of this is just an indication of worse things to come.
We all need to pray.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

a little nigerian joke!!!

The Queen,Clinton & Obasanjo went straight to hell and met the devil.

Queen Elizabeth said "I miss England; Please I want to call England and see how everybody is doing there". She called and talked for about 5 minutes, and then she asked> > "Well, Devil, how much do I owe you????
The devil says "Five million pounds". She wrote him a cheque and went to sit back on her chair.

Bill Clinton was so jealous, he starts screaming, "My turn! I wanna call the States, I wanna see how every godamn guy is doing out there. He called and talked for about 2 minutes, and then he asked "Well, Devil, how much do I owe you????
The devil says "Ten million dollars".With a smug look on his face, he made a cheque and went to sit back on his chair

Obasanjo was even more jealous & starts screaming, me too go call Nigeria o jare, I go see how everybody is doing there too. If they don bring light. I go to talk to the ministers, to my special advisers, to the PDP, to> > INEC and EFCC, to everybody... ..> > He calls Nigeria and he talks for about twenty hours, he talked & talked> > & talked, then he asked,> > "Well, Devil, can I have my bill????> > The devil says "One thousand Naira".

Obasanjo is stunned & says; "Otio!! One thousand Naira??? Only one thousand Naira kpere??"
The Devil says "Well if you make a call from one hell to another hell

it's local !

Thursday, May 10, 2007

HEY YOU

SMILE!

IT DOES A LOT OF GOOD!

Sunday, February 18, 2007




Blessing, one of our younger members, she has a really cute smile if you can get her to smile you'll have a surprise!

Chris, all garbed up in his basketball wears, he plays really well and we all hope that he shoots for the N.B.A one day.







TA! DA! There's our little surprise, poor blessing has crooked baby teeth but that doesn't stop her from smiling all the time.

Our little dance was not very successful because we did not do our home work well and we let other things get in the way of we preparing our invitations before hand; thankfully, inspite of our many blunderous mistakes we still managed to overcome and host a fun dance with six new members and 16 old ones. We beat our expectations for our first dance. Well we are going to host another one this saturday, so please pray for us and we'll keep you posted.
Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

new pics for the site.

pi A bit of expressionism, nothing too fancy i must add but at least striking enough to attract attention. That's the treasured vessels jdea of art.

I dont know why we took this picture, but i do know the lady looks beautiful

A treasured vessels member, Chris takes a pose as i take him some shots. It was late and the light was bad so this was the clearest.


ME, awlsayntz taking amoment of thought while Chris takes an unexpected picture. Posted by Picasa

Sunday, January 28, 2007

a cool wedding

Whats up People. Its been quite a while since we last spoke. Im edwin, signing in for the treasured vessels just dropping in a short post!


A PICTURE OF HER WITH ME AND THE TREASURED VESSELS, THE GIRLS WEREN'T AWARE WHEN THE PICTURE WAS TAKEN SO THEY WERE NOT THERE!



This was a really cool wedding we attended. The bride was a member of our church and she married another member of our church. THE WEDDING WAS ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS EXCEPT FOR THE MEDDLESOME HARMATTAN DUST, BUT WE GOT OVER IT. Well the girl is from tennessee and her parents came all the way to Nigeria to support her big decision. What devotion. (sob! sob!) in a good way.




A picture of her with guests.




A picture of ther with church members!




A picture of her with more guests! Posted by Picasa

Saturday, January 27, 2007

a new picasa rendition from me

this is a new approach to blogging for us the treasured vessels all we need to do now is pick a piece of art and it becomes history on our blog. well this beauty is by ULOKO CHRIS ODEH and its titled looking ahead. enjoy Posted by Picasa

coolest stuff in life are free, wanna get some?

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mando, kaduna, Nigeria