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Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu - Education (2) - Nairaland

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Monday Okpebholo's Interview With BBC That Got Aisha Yesufu Laughing (Video) / Second-class Upper Is Overrated In Nigeria By Deji Yesufu / Is A 2.2 A Bad Grade For A Graduate? (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by holuwajobar(m): 9:38pm On Aug 08, 2020
pocohantas:
All those uncles that told us to bring our CVs...

How far?

Scam scam scam
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by CsRockefeller(m): 9:38pm On Aug 08, 2020
Tired of this job palava. I've decided to go into ICT sales.

All those Economics and Accounting theories have been kept one side for now.
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by tensazangetsu20(m): 9:38pm On Aug 08, 2020
Volunteering is bullshit. No one should work for free. Have some self respect. The company you are working for free is using you and making money and making huge profits and you are giving them your time for free.

Guys have some self respect please.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by youngrhosy(m): 9:39pm On Aug 08, 2020
ok
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by okoloemmalex(m): 9:41pm On Aug 08, 2020
them nor teach you summary for skool fah? we re lazy youths
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by jericco1(m): 9:41pm On Aug 08, 2020
pocohantas:
All those uncles that told us to bring our CVs...

How far?

I'm still waiting for my own uncle
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Joshmanuel10(m): 9:43pm On Aug 08, 2020
A really great advice smiley
But things not as easy as it seems undecided
But we just have to push [color=#000000][/color]

1 Like

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Rilwayne001: 9:44pm On Aug 08, 2020
Most youth are less productive in this age of technology and social media is far making everyone lose focus of reality. Making us less productive and in the long run affects our ability of securing a job and even maintaining if eventually secured.

i believe social media, even though with its disadvantages, has quite a lot of advantage to offer teeming youths that's really concerned and focused on his/her future career prospects. I believe it's all depend on how we utilize social media to better ourselves. That way, it doesn't just prepare us for the labor market but always prepare our minds to have a well grounded channeling of creativity even away from working as an employee to establishing one owns business and maintaining it. But youths of today, rather than follow on social media, people that have something tangible to offer our career prospect, contribute on topics that open our minds to entrepreneurship, most youths prefer to engage in frivolities. You see most of them on Twitter acting like a primary kids. Most even don't have a LinkedIn profile to position themselves for opportunities, but of course, it's better fun than work while thinking something good comes easy.

Until we youths change our mindset of seeing life being rosy post graduation and understanding the fact the labour market is really competitive and nothing good comes easy, and also that you can become and employer of labor too provided you prepare yourself hard for the task—we may continue to struggle as a graduate.

7 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Itscashkid: 9:45pm On Aug 08, 2020
tensazangetsu20:
Volunteering is bullshit. No one should work for free. Have some self respect. The company you are working for free is using you and making money and making huge profits and you are giving them your time for free.

Guys have some self respect please.

Real matters cry
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by pocohantas(f): 9:48pm On Aug 08, 2020
CsRockefeller:


More like "you said you are the Son of God and you can't save yourself".

They are also trying to keep their heads above the water.

Some of them dey look up to us for help. Many of them still dey as dem been dey since you were in primary school. cheesy
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Oteikwu1(m): 9:50pm On Aug 08, 2020
I'm much inspired but does it mean dat my bsc is of no use or how ??
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by brian91(m): 9:53pm On Aug 08, 2020
Nuttella:
It is not easy finding a job as a Nigerian graduate, I dont blame ladies that use marriage as an escape route after nysc.

☺... are you one?

#no offense

2 Likes

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Laslaslala: 9:55pm On Aug 08, 2020
Topmaike007:
As it stand now I don't even blame anyone that is into Internet fraud cos guyman must eat, you can't school for years and graduate just to be given 30k or less, is it what they will use to feed wife, kids and relatives...

If I was told earlier in my life that this is how schooling is I would have learn trade or a professional skill early...

My younger ones that i am groomed are all doing well by themselves..
this is just not you alone, many of us here have similar experiences
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Sammy07: 9:58pm On Aug 08, 2020
pocohantas:
All those uncles that told us to bring our CVs...

How far?

100Km from work grin
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by davidtuzy(m): 10:11pm On Aug 08, 2020
No matter what, i must succeed in 2020.... Although making it in Nigeria is hard but with Christ and a rigth skill, u are good to go••••••••

1 Like

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by CsRockefeller(m): 10:11pm On Aug 08, 2020
pocohantas:


Some of them dey look up to us for help

Exactly!! embarassed


Many of them still dey as dem been dey since you were in primary school. cheesy

Inside life cry

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Farki: 10:13pm On Aug 08, 2020
Rilwayne001:
Most youth are less productive in this age of technology and social media is far making everyone lose focus of reality. Making us less productive and in the long run affects our ability of securing a job and even maintaining if eventually secured.

i believe social media, even though with its disadvantages, has quite a lot of advantage to offer teeming youths that's really concerned and focused on his/her future career prospects. I believe it's all depend on how we utilize social media to better ourselves. That way, it doesn't just prepare us for the labor market but always prepare our minds to have a well grounded channeling of creativity even away from working as an employee to establishing one owns business and maintaining it. But youths of today, rather than follow on social media, people that have something tangible to offer our career prospect, contribute on topics that open our minds to entrepreneurship, most youths prefer to engage in frivolities. You see most of them on Twitter acting like a primary kids. Most even don't have a LinkedIn profile to position themselves for opportunities, but of course, it's better fun than work while thinking something good comes easy.

Until we youths change our mindset of seeing life being rosy post graduation and understanding the fact the labour market is really competitive and nothing good comes easy, and also that you can become and employer of labor too provided you prepare yourself hard for the task—we may continue to struggle as a graduate.

I don't believe that for one second.
I have seen young people using social media to promote their business all while still juggling full time work and/or school. These days we don't have a choice because most entry level jobs these days won't even pay enough for us to have any savings left.
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Rilwayne001: 10:18pm On Aug 08, 2020
Farki:


I don't believe that for one second.
I have seen young people using social media to promote their business all while still juggling full time work and/or school. These days we don't have a choice because most entry level jobs these days won't even pay enough for us to have any savings left.

Take note of my choice of words, most youths do not utilize the social media for bettering their opportunities. Most use it for frivolities. And of course we have the ones that use it effectively. But they're very few.

2 Likes

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by walkwithgod(m): 10:27pm On Aug 08, 2020
First things first, Rest in peace uncle Phil.

IF we want to go far as a race or country we need to study the Lebanese, Indians, Chinese and Iranians. They rise by lifting others up, here na to compare who house big pass, who dey drive Benz, who dey smoke pass, useless black man mentality. We should learn how to build businesses from scratch no matter how little, you'd be suprised how much you learn in a short time.

I read somewhere in Canada how Iranians are taking over the trucking industry. Do you know what they do ? When they get into Canada, they learn how to drive trucks, overtime they must have saved enough to buy a truck to rent out or lease depending on the arrangement. At some point, they invite their relatives over and it becomes a cycle, everyone becomes financially independent and skilled. It's what the igbos do aswell with thier apprenticeship model. Going to school is good, but the Nigerian economy does not support all of that for now. We are in a sabificate economy and there's a lot of money to make in this country if you have a particular skill set as the demand keeps soaring BUT there's a gap between the skilled professionals and unemployment. In the building and construction industry, we hire Togolese boys to come and do POP work ooooo, what happened to Nigerians ? Are we handicapped ?..what happened to someone opening an institute to train people with these skills ? This country is just so useless. People wan work but enabling environment and cost of learning.

In yankee, once you finish high school..you either decide to go to trade school (learn work) or uni...as you dey finish..u go dey engaged, no cap.
you will start earning...here you go see man of 30+ still dey stay with ein parents, no income, see finish sef na the baba wey top the list.

In this part of the world (AFRICA) I don't know why we are always in a competition to outdo or outlive each other. A young man shared stuff he's going through yet some idiots are in a competition of 'who suffer pass'.

We are in a 3rd world country where poverty remains a very cancerous disease. I'm in my 20's aswell but it's not easy out there.

The 30 - 40's bro need to point us in the right direction so we don't end up making foolish mistakes in the name of going through the 'learning curve'.

I share similar story with you OP, lost my job in March due to covid19 and I'm a bit depressed. Thinking of relocating to another state to hustle and meet like minds.

We need to come together and form a support group cause as it is now, the government, parents, friends, can't help. We need to take the bull by the horn.

Please if you have a high income skill (handwork) that can fetch income daily, I want to learn by all means...Welding & Fabrication...Tiling...Carpentry...HVAC...Auto Tech..Solar...CCTV... I'm tired of applying for non existent office jobs. I need a skill, I need a skill, I need a skill, I need a skill (kindly reach out to me via dm). I wanted to learn HVAC engineering, they gave me a cost of 200k..where I wan get that kind money ? I be armed robber.

There are a lot of us that want to engage in something meaningful (trade or skill) but no income or someone to put us through. If a kind nairalander can teach or guide some of us and we replicate, the level of poverty and depression will greatly reduce in this country.

THE FIGHT IS AGAINST POVERTY AND DEPRESSION, ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT.

Please if there's anyone with the above skills, please reach out to me via signature, we need to help each other. One step at a time, we can overcome poverty, depression and unemployment all at once.

Please if there's anyone with the above skills, please reach out to me via signature, we need to help each other. One step at a time, we can overcome poverty, depression and unemployment all at once.

THE FIGHT IS AGAINST POVERTY AND DEPRESSION, ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT.

19 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by earnit1: 10:38pm On Aug 08, 2020
Hmmmm
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by abundanceseun: 10:38pm On Aug 08, 2020
I like this piece.
Indeed, Surviving Nigeria as a Graduate Today.
VBCampaign:
Surviving Nigeria as a Graduate Today

By: Deji Yesufu

Kunle Ojeleye told the story of how he left the shores of Nigeria as a young graduate back in 1989. He had sought the help of a number of people; people he felt would ordinarily help him. These people were friends to his parent but he was horribly disappointed. None of them came to his rescue. He eventually took the offer an uncle was providing him to leave the shores of Nigeria. Ojeleye’s story, which he relayed on his timeline on Facebook, is similar to what most Nigerian graduates experience from the mid-1980s, when Nigeria began to experience a downturn in her economic situation, to this moment.

When I left school in 2003 and had completed my NYSC, I spoke with one of my father’s friends on the matter of getting a job. He said: “Jobs are scarce in Nigeria… but if you will be patient, it will come. These things take time. The only thing is that no one knows how long…” I learnt of one man who graduated from the University of Ibadan and until his death, sometime in his early 50s, he was never gainfully employed. Those are the kinds of stories we hear about graduates and job hunt in Nigeria. In this article, I want to suggest a few ways Nigerian graduates can survive the harsh economic reality all around us today in this country.

The first admonition I want to give is that young Nigerians should have, develop and increase in their sense of responsibility – generally. A retired civil servant, who lives close to my house and sells provision, asked me to help his son get a job where I work. The first thing I asked him was this: “Baba, your son is looking for job but I have never seen him in this provision store selling for you.” If I had opportunity to recommend that boy for a job, I would not because he has clearly failed in my observation of him.

Our young people need to realize that the work that anyone will pay for must be a job that will add value to a system. Gone are the days in this country when free money roamed the streets of Lagos. Today, if you will earn a Naira, not steal, you would have to work for it. And since there are no jobs, the people who will earn these monies are people who have enough sense of responsibility to recognize needs in people’s lives and offer themselves to fill that need. But they must also realize that people grow in their sense of responsibility. A child that does not know how to offer a hand of help to his or her parent, under whose roof he lives, is not likely to know what to do when he or she is in the outside world.

The first thing our young people must do is to quit social media, abandon the television and develop an attitude for work that is etched in a sense of responsibility. Today, first class or second class upper will not save anyone from unemployment. It is what you can do that will give you a job and you will not be able to do anything except you have built a work ethic etched in a thorough sense of responsibility.

The second thing that our young graduates must realize is that they are almost too late to the Nigerian labor market if the first time they ever worked was when they left the university. This is what happened to some of us and we paid dearly for it. I have promised myself that it will not happen to my children. I look back now and wonder what I did with those few months between primary and secondary school; what did I do with my long vacations in secondary school; what did I do with the almost 18 months strike between 1994/1995 in the university. I remember what I did with the latter of these situations: I learnt how to play chess and spent long hours playing the game. A game that add nothing to me today except recreation.

There is no reason why children, leaving primary school, and with a few months on their hands before proceeding to secondary school, cannot use such a period to learn a trade, or skill, or follow Daddy or Mummy to the office and learn the work of a personal assistant. The long vacations during secondary school can be used to learn some skill. The mechanic, Tunde Onokanya, here in Ibadan, offers to train secondary school children in auto-mechanic during their long vacations. I am thankful to my Dad who took my brothers and I to learn typing sometimes after my secondary school. All my essays today come from that skill. Our young people do not have to spend all their time with season movies or on the phone; those things are sure ways to poverty.

They must begin to work with their hands the moment they are out of primary school and are old enough to do some responsibilities. All of these things will key into a curriculum vitae and make them stand out from others in the future. Some others may never even write a CV because in the process of working, they would have discovered their niche and must have begun to produce something for the community they live in that will earn them a lot of money such that they might have even begun to make money long before they leave the university. Again, if the first time you are working is when you left the campus, you are already too late to the Nigerian labor market. Others would have gained a head-start that could take you years to catch up on.

Third: VOLUNTEER! I cannot say this enough and thus the reason why I must bold it at this point. Our young people must learn to volunteer; they must learn to work for free and while doing this, opportunities for jobs will open up to them. A heart for volunteer jobs exhumes from a mind that has a sense of responsibility. A lot of people are too suspicious of others and they think that everybody is out to use them. The truth of the matter is that in the early days of our work life, we would be used.

In fact I think the way the world works is that you do most of the hard labor of life in your younger days and earn little; and then you do less work in your older days and earn more. If a person despises work and does not have a sense of responsibility, that shows forth in volunteer jobs, that person will suffer for it in his older days – when he would need to work more and earn money to cater for the large responsibilities that adult life shores up.

Most things about this life are anchored on volunteering. Most of those who are earning big on a certain job today, first of all volunteered their time and effort to do those things for free once. Also, our parents must encourage our young people to volunteer themselves for work. During my National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) in Yola, Adamawa State, I worked briefly for the Deeper Life Headquarters Church in that town. Then I moved on to work for a construction company, while at the same time I lived in the Deeper Life Church apartment given to me.

The State Overseer, Pastor James Akpofure, and the person who was my first boss, has a son who had learnt computer hardware repairs as of the time he was just in his early secondary school. His father told him that he could repair people’s computers for them but he forbade him from collecting money for those services. The time will come for him to collect money but for not now, he was to volunteer his skills.

Everything that I am today came about by volunteering to serve other people. I remember working for a Church and publishing their quarterly magazine. I suffered doing that job; I could write a book about my experience there. It was a thankless work and I was often criticized for it. But I left that church with a reward; a reward that no man could give but only God. Even the whole blogging thing that I do today is volunteering to give people information – free of charge – and not getting anything in return. Most times what I get are insults; but we press on, knowing that one’s reward remains ahead. So, young man and woman, volunteer to work. Don’t complain. Just work and trust God for his own time to pay back.

Lastly, on this note of volunteering: I would implore parents to support their young people as they volunteer. Volunteering to work may not earn them a living wage but it would give the young person a lot of experience that could prove rewarding for another job. Parents would have to do what parents do while your child or ward does the volunteer work: you would have to support them and hopefully you would not have to do that for too long before they get a proper job.

Fourth: While waiting for that dream job, you could spend your time doing what you love doing. Now, loving to eat or watch TV or talk or keeping a girlfriend is not the kind of thing I have in mind here. There are hundreds of things people love doing that can prove rewarding in the days to come. I used to love writing and when there was no Facebook, I would write into notebooks and just store them away. What you love doing may be cooking or singing or writing or driving or helping others. God created every human being with something they can do and do without stress.

You must discover yours and learn to do that thing and do it well. It is something you will ordinarily do without pay; so hone that skill and someday it may become the means with which you can earn some extra cash for yourself. Again, this is premised on a sound sense of responsibility. With time you can take what you love doing very well, hone it into a workable skill and use it to produce something that people are ready to pay a lot of money for. Thus, I enjoin our young graduates to have useful hobbies and look out for making them into something that can bring money their way.

Fifth: I want to implore our young people to learn to do the right thing, always. This might sound moralistic in a way but the truth of the matter is that our worlds is not so depraved that people cannot recognize good and reward it. At each junction life, we would be tempted to cut corners and follow a short cut; our young people must desist from engaging in such acts. I finished with NYSC when I was 26. My name still appeared in the NYSC call-up system twice every year until I was 30. Throughout this period I had no job but I chose not to go for another NYSC because it was not the right thing to do. There are hundreds of other examples.

Somebody told me that his company received 6 Sure-P enrolments from the Federal Government recently. All of them called in and said they do not wish to work for him and are ready to part with ten thousand naira each, every month, if he would accept them and just sign their documents and pretend to government that they are working on his company. My friend wondered at the kind of youths our country was producing.

One would think that the rising religious fervor in our universities should instill some fear of God in our young people but this is not the case. Recently, I shared a two-apartment building with a young man for three years and I just wondered at how his mind worked. He did not work but was living in a three bedroom house. After a while, he could not pay for basic amenities like power. He was eventually evicted. One could never tell what he was doing to survive. Some people alleged it was yahoo-yahoo but since I never saw him in the act, I could not say so for sure. The earth is based on some laws and I think that those laws are premised on what we do in life. If we do good, we will reap good; if we do evil, we will reap that equally. Our young people should commit to doing what is right, no matter what and trust God for rewards.

As you do this, it is not wrong to apply to companies for jobs. You can also seek the favor of family members and friends. You should do everything and anything your friends and colleagues are doing, within the law, to get a job. But I am positive that the job that would come to you and be yours without your having to know anyone, or beg anyone for it, are the ones that come as a result of practicing and perfecting the five aforementioned qualities in this essay. I believe there are many other such qualities. While you endeavor to work and live responsibly, those qualities will come forth and you should increase more and more in them. It is possible that one can so develop oneself in these qualities that you end up not working for anybody at all and you would be earning good money at the same time.

One last thing: having done all and even as you do these things, our young people must learn to wait for their own rewards. They must eschew greed and the temptation for quick riches. While you volunteer, you must be patient for the job to come. While you serve a master, you must be content with a little pay. You should wait, wait and wait. Let me chip in a little religious admonition here: the Bible talks about God being the Father of all creation and as parents provide for their children, God provides for all his creation. There is a provision for every man. You would however come into it as you endeavor to do the right things. These will lead ultimately to your own good in life; such good that will bring fulfilment, joy and peace. There is no short cut to success; but there is a sure way to it. I believe this is the way Providence apportions good to all creation. And this is the way I believe that young graduates in Nigeria can survive the harsh economic climate that Nigeria has found itself in.

Source: https://textandpublishing.com/surviving-nigeria-as-a-graduate-today/

1 Like

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Nobody: 10:48pm On Aug 08, 2020
pocohantas:
All those uncles that told us to bring our CVs...

How far?
they're still processing it.
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Topmaike007(m): 10:51pm On Aug 08, 2020
Laslaslala:
this is just not you alone, many of us here have similar experiences
bro the thing Don tire me
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Nobody: 10:51pm On Aug 08, 2020
pocohantas:


Some of them dey look up to us for help. Many of them still dey as dem been dey since you were in primary school. cheesy
chai.... So savage
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Topmaike007(m): 10:54pm On Aug 08, 2020
walkwithgod:
First things first, Rest in peace uncle Phil.

IF we want to go far as a race or country we need to study the Lebanese, Indians, Chinese and Iranians. They rise by lifting others up, here na to compare who house big pass, who dey drive Benz, who dey smoke pass, useless black man mentality. We should learn how to build businesses from scratch no matter how little, you'd be suprised how much you learn in a short time.

I read somewhere in Canada how Iranians are taking over the trucking industry. Do you know what they do ? When they get into Canada, they learn how to drive trucks, overtime they must have saved enough to buy a truck to rent out or lease depending on the arrangement. At some point, they invite their relatives over and it becomes a cycle, everyone becomes financially independent and skilled. It's what the igbos do aswell with thier apprenticeship model. Going to school is good, but the Nigerian economy does not support all of that for now. We are in a sabificate economy and there's a lot of money to make in this country if you have a particular skill set as the demand keeps soaring BUT there's a gap between the skilled professionals and unemployment. In the building and construction industry, we hire Togolese boys to come and do POP work ooooo, what happened to Nigerians ? Are we handicapped ?..what happened to someone opening an institute to train people with these skills ? This country is just so useless. People wan work but enabling environment and cost of learning.

In yankee, once you finish high school..you either decide to go to trade school (learn work) or uni...as you dey finish..u go dey engaged, no cap.
you will start earning...here you go see man of 30+ still dey stay with ein parents, no income, see finish sef na the baba wey top the list.

In this part of the world (AFRICA) I don't know why we are always in a competition to outdo or outlive each other. A young man shared stuff he's going through yet some idiots are in a competition of 'who suffer pass'.

We are in a 3rd world country where poverty remains a very cancerous disease. I'm in my 20's aswell but it's not easy out there.

The 30 - 40's bro need to point us in the right direction so we don't end up making foolish mistakes in the name of going through the 'learning curve'.

I share similar story with you OP, lost my job in March due to covid19 and I'm a bit depressed. Thinking of relocating to another state to hustle and meet like minds.

We need to come together and form a support group cause as it is now, the government, parents, friends, can't help. We need to take the bull by the horn.

Please if you have a high income skill (handwork) that can fetch income daily, I want to learn by all means...Welding & Fabrication...Tiling...Carpentry...HVAC...Auto Tech..Solar...CCTV... I'm tired of applying for non existent office jobs. I need a skill, I need a skill, I need a skill, I need a skill (kindly reach out to me via dm). I wanted to learn HVAC engineering, they gave me a cost of 200k..where I wan get that kind money ? I be armed robber.

There are a lot of us that want to engage in something meaningful (trade or skill) but no income or someone to put us through. If a kind nairalander can teach or guide some of us and we replicate, the level of poverty and depression will greatly reduce in this country.

THE FIGHT IS AGAINST POVERTY AND DEPRESSION, ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT.

Please if there's anyone with the above skills, please reach out to me via signature, we need to help each other. One step at a time, we can overcome poverty, depression and unemployment all at once.

Please if there's anyone with the above skills, please reach out to me via signature, we need to help each other. One step at a time, we can overcome poverty, depression and unemployment all at once.

THE FIGHT IS AGAINST POVERTY AND DEPRESSION, ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT.
it's well bro as you see me now na electrical work I dey learn after years i spent in higher institution

1 Like

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Ceeblaq10: 10:54pm On Aug 08, 2020
e easy to talk na.. Rubbish
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by infogenius(m): 10:55pm On Aug 08, 2020
Nice article
The only remedy is to learn a skill.
I am teaching my kids little stuff that I have knowledge about.
My boy can create a blog and simple graphic designs.

I have told my wife as long as I live my children will spend two years after secondary school (that's if we are still Nigeria) to learn a skill in demand before they go to university.

The system is so bad even nysc is a waste of a full year of many graduates.

A skill is a handy weapon against poverty so it's important the youths embrace it.

Skills are even easier to learn now, go to YouTube (loaded with tons of life changing information) and get school.

Nigeria will be great again if only our Youths explore their creative abilities.

7 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Topmaike007(m): 10:56pm On Aug 08, 2020
walkwithgod:
First things first, Rest in peace uncle Phil.

IF we want to go far as a race or country we need to study the Lebanese, Indians, Chinese and Iranians. They rise by lifting others up, here na to compare who house big pass, who dey drive Benz, who dey smoke pass, useless black man mentality. We should learn how to build businesses from scratch no matter how little, you'd be suprised how much you learn in a short time.

I read somewhere in Canada how Iranians are taking over the trucking industry. Do you know what they do ? When they get into Canada, they learn how to drive trucks, overtime they must have saved enough to buy a truck to rent out or lease depending on the arrangement. At some point, they invite their relatives over and it becomes a cycle, everyone becomes financially independent and skilled. It's what the igbos do aswell with thier apprenticeship model. Going to school is good, but the Nigerian economy does not support all of that for now. We are in a sabificate economy and there's a lot of money to make in this country if you have a particular skill set as the demand keeps soaring BUT there's a gap between the skilled professionals and unemployment. In the building and construction industry, we hire Togolese boys to come and do POP work ooooo, what happened to Nigerians ? Are we handicapped ?..what happened to someone opening an institute to train people with these skills ? This country is just so useless. People wan work but enabling environment and cost of learning.

In yankee, once you finish high school..you either decide to go to trade school (learn work) or uni...as you dey finish..u go dey engaged, no cap.
you will start earning...here you go see man of 30+ still dey stay with ein parents, no income, see finish sef na the baba wey top the list.

In this part of the world (AFRICA) I don't know why we are always in a competition to outdo or outlive each other. A young man shared stuff he's going through yet some idiots are in a competition of 'who suffer pass'.

We are in a 3rd world country where poverty remains a very cancerous disease. I'm in my 20's aswell but it's not easy out there.

The 30 - 40's bro need to point us in the right direction so we don't end up making foolish mistakes in the name of going through the 'learning curve'.

I share similar story with you OP, lost my job in March due to covid19 and I'm a bit depressed. Thinking of relocating to another state to hustle and meet like minds.

We need to come together and form a support group cause as it is now, the government, parents, friends, can't help. We need to take the bull by the horn.

Please if you have a high income skill (handwork) that can fetch income daily, I want to learn by all means...Welding & Fabrication...Tiling...Carpentry...HVAC...Auto Tech..Solar...CCTV... I'm tired of applying for non existent office jobs. I need a skill, I need a skill, I need a skill, I need a skill (kindly reach out to me via dm). I wanted to learn HVAC engineering, they gave me a cost of 200k..where I wan get that kind money ? I be armed robber.

There are a lot of us that want to engage in something meaningful (trade or skill) but no income or someone to put us through. If a kind nairalander can teach or guide some of us and we replicate, the level of poverty and depression will greatly reduce in this country.

THE FIGHT IS AGAINST POVERTY AND DEPRESSION, ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT.

Please if there's anyone with the above skills, please reach out to me via signature, we need to help each other. One step at a time, we can overcome poverty, depression and unemployment all at once.

Please if there's anyone with the above skills, please reach out to me via signature, we need to help each other. One step at a time, we can overcome poverty, depression and unemployment all at once.

THE FIGHT IS AGAINST POVERTY AND DEPRESSION, ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT.
I love your comment pls can we be friends I can see that you know what you're doing...

1 Like

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by Vanmatrix(m): 10:58pm On Aug 08, 2020
Wow this piece is for me, I just graduated last year studied mechanical engineering, and still serving my country, I must say life in school and life outside school is a whole different ball game.
Have been practicing most of what you mentioned and I pray it works for me.
Again thanks for this wonderful piece...
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by FuckHomophobes: 11:04pm On Aug 08, 2020
infogenius:
Nice article
The only remedy is to learn a skill.
I am teaching my kids little stuff that I have knowledge about.
My boy can create a blog and simple graphic designs.

I have told my wife as long as I live my children will spend two years after secondary school (that's if we are still Nigeria) to learn a skill in demand before they go to university.

The system is so bad even nysc is a waste of a full year of many graduates.

A skill is a handy weapon against poverty so it's important the youths embrace it.

Skills are even easier to learn now, go to YouTube (loaded with tons of life changing information) and get school.

Nigeria will be great again if only our Youths explore their creative abilities.


Yes boss

1 Like

Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by ilovelearning(m): 11:21pm On Aug 08, 2020
Thank you so very much for sharing this. Read through to the very end and I have taken some notes already.

God bless
Re: Surviving Nigeria As A Graduate Today By Deji Yesufu by cronsberg: 11:43pm On Aug 08, 2020
I always have a problem with these kind of advice. All of them are greedy wicked jack****$sses that form holier than everyone else. They keep advising you to be disciplined, to learn responsibility, work hard, be fair and honest, and with time, you will get a job and also be successful. But what do you see in the society? Isn't it the complete opposite of what they always say? Is it not bandits and terrorists and ritualists that they are rewarding daily?

Imaging him telling the old man who asked him to help his son get a job that he simply doesn't see the character of responsibility in the old man's son because if he did, he would have been helping in selling in the shop. And that is the exact type of excuses that our people in high positions keep telling us. Greedy bunch of wicked people. They can't help a graduate secure a job, they won't even help you with small capital to start something for yourself, they will keep zigzagging you around, make you to be spending the already little you have in business centers to photocopy CV and application letters as if they genuinely want to help you, only for them to dump your documents in the bin and never to be looked at. But come and see the kind of money and help they render to anything female.

If there is one thing I have learned so far, it is to never rely on people, especially relatives in high positions. They will never help you. Scrap whatever you can together, raise some capital, invest in a small business, then save money as if it is a religious obligation, and use it to get out of Nigeria or use it to stay and build your life from there. At least no one will disappoint that way.

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