Joyce Binitie Diva Chef

Joyce Binitie Diva Chef I am a digital creator and nature lover. I love to cook and share the joy cooking great meals brings
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This is a shout out to two most supportive followers over the years .Don't get me wrong..I appreciate you all, but you s...
16/07/2025

This is a shout out to two most supportive followers over the years .
Don't get me wrong..
I appreciate you all, but you see these two? They've been there through thick and thin

Not asking for anything
Just believing in me and truly enjoying my post..

I just want to send you a token
It's not much but it's given from a place of love, appreciation and repent!!
I see you 💙💙🩵💙🩵💙🩵💙
Yinka Iziren
Okike Ruth Nnenna

Please I already have your numbers so I'll be topping up your subscription
💋💋💋💋💋💋

Weldone sir!!We appreciate you and we're super duper proud of you
16/07/2025

Weldone sir!!
We appreciate you and we're super duper proud of you

16/07/2025

Watch this video ooo
Caterers and food vendors
It's a must watch and please share

Amazing story of motherhoodShe was 24. Fresh out of college.He was 3 months old. Left in a box outside a hospital with a...
16/07/2025

Amazing story of motherhood

She was 24. Fresh out of college.
He was 3 months old. Left in a box outside a hospital with a note that read:

“I’m sorry. Please love him.”

No one came for him.
No family. No calls. Just silence.

They called him “Baby Elijah” on the news. But everyone assumed he’d end up in the system.

Except her.

Rachel wasn’t planning on being a mother. She was just volunteering at the hospital nursery.
But the first time she held him, his tiny hand curled around her finger and wouldn’t let go.
Neither did her heart.

The agency told her she was too young. Too single. Too inexperienced.

She told them:

“I may not have a husband. I may not have money.
But I have love. And he needs that more than anything.”

She adopted Elijah.
Her white skin and his dark brown curls drew stares.
She heard the whispers:

“Is that even her child?”
“She won’t last a year.”
“He’ll resent her.”

But they never saw the way he clung to her during storms.
Or how she worked three jobs just to afford his piano lessons.
Or how she cried when he called her “Mom” for the first time.

She raised him on courage, bedtime stories, and unconditional love.

Years passed.

Elijah grew tall, kind, brilliant.

When he turned 18, he got into Harvard. Full scholarship.

At the graduation dinner, he stood on stage and said:

“Everyone always asked where my real mom was.
Well, she’s right here.
The woman who chose me when no one else would.
Who gave me a name, a home, a future.
She didn’t give me life…
She saved it.”

The room cried.
Rachel cried.
But Elijah just smiled and whispered in her ear:

“You’re still holding my hand, Mom. And I’ll never let go.”

Dear parents...In genuine Parenting , there's no competition..No parent should be seen to be better than the other one i...
16/07/2025

Dear parents...
In genuine Parenting , there's no competition..
No parent should be seen to be better than the other one in the eyes of the children............
Don't be a weakling and delude yourself to think that you're the better parent.
It should be a cooperation
Not competition..
If you as a weaker parent cannot discipline or correct your children, then support the one doing it.
Don't go behind and tell the children to ignor them..
Because you want them to see you as the better and more loving parent..
Yes, for a while they'll think so, but eventually, they'll get the gist that you were just being manipulative, ev!l and stup!d!! Yes, you heard me right.
Think of the greater good of the children who are your future.
I have seen this play out several times.. Amongst the divorced or even within the marriage.
Always remember that you will give account for all your doings in the here and in the here after..
©️Joyce Binitie Diva chef 😎

16/07/2025

Let's make suya pepper

A nurse working night shifts in 1960s Queens, Marie Van Brittan Brown, feared burglars. This led her and her husband, Al...
16/07/2025

A nurse working night shifts in 1960s Queens, Marie Van Brittan Brown, feared burglars. This led her and her husband, Albert, to invent a pioneering home security system.

Faced with rising crime rates and slow police response, the Browns, with Marie a nurse and Albert an electronics technician, took matters into their own hands.

They filed a patent for their system in 1966, which was granted as U.S. Patent 3,482,037 on December 2, 1969.

Their sophisticated invention included a motorized camera that could slide to view through different peepholes, catering to various heights.

It also featured a monitor to see who was at the door, a two-way microphone for communication, a remote to unlock the door, and an emergency button to quickly alert police.

The system garnered attention, receiving an award from the National Scientists Committee and a feature in *The New York Times*.

Their work laid some of the groundwork for the advanced home security systems we see today.
Photo for emphasis

Sources: Patent 3,482,037, The New York Times (December 6, 1969)

Pov: Check comment
15/07/2025

Pov: Check comment

15/07/2025

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