Mr jumbo

Mr jumbo A creative director

20/05/2026

Dancing for daddy.

19/05/2026

Wetin man do man

15/05/2026
15/05/2026

So women like gbola like this?

At the edge of umu-nwanda village stood a forbidden forest called **Ojukwu Forest**.Nobody fetched firewood there.Nobody...
13/05/2026

At the edge of umu-nwanda village stood a forbidden forest called **Ojukwu Forest**.

Nobody fetched firewood there.

Nobody hunted there.

Even goats avoided it.

The elders said the forest belonged to spirits older than memory itself.

But children laughed at such stories.

Especially a stubborn young boy named “Kene”.

Kene feared nothing.

Not snakes.

Not darkness.

Not even Mama Ure, the village widow whose eyes were so sharp people believed she could see lies moving inside a person’s stomach.

Kene loved asking questions.

Too many questions.

“Why can’t we enter the forest?”

“Who planted the stories there?”

“Why do spirits always choose forests instead of marketplaces?”

His grandmother would hiss loudly.

“A child who keeps testing the depth of a river with both legs will someday sleep inside it”.

But Kene only laughed.

One evening, while returning from the stream, Kene heard something strange.

“GBOOM.“

He stopped walking.

The sound came again.

“GBOOM… GBOOM…”

A drum.

Deep inside Ojukwu Forest.

Kene’s heart jumped.

Nobody played drums there.

Nobody even went there.

Yet the sound continued.

Slow.

Heavy.

Like a giant heartbeat hiding among the trees.

When Kene reached home, he told his grandmother.

Her face changed immediately.

The cooking spoon fell from her hand.

“Did you hear it clearly?” she whispered.

Kene nodded.

His grandmother quickly shut the door.

Even the firewood seemed afraid.

That night, she warned him:

“When the forest begins to sing, human’s ears must become deaf”

But outside…

The drum continued.

“GBOOM.“

“GBOOM.“

“GBOOM.“

The next morning, the entire village was restless.

Women gathered in groups whispering.

Men avoided eye contact.

Even the village chief looked troubled.

Then the oldest man in Umu-nwanda , “Papa Nnanna”, finally spoke.

“The drum has returned.”

Silence swallowed the village.

Children stopped playing.

Even the wind seemed to slow down.

Kene moved closer.

“What drum?”

Papa Nnanna stared at the forest.

Then he said softly:

“Fifty years ago, the drum sounded before people disappeared.”

Nobody spoke after that.

By evening, every household locked their doors early.

Parents warned their children not to wander.

Dogs barked at empty places.

And that night…

The drum returned again.

But this time, it sounded closer.

“KPOOM.“

“KPOOM.“

“KPOOM.“

Kene could not sleep.

Curiosity burned inside him like pepper in the eyes.

He opened his window carefully.

The moonlight covered the village like white cloth.

Then he saw something that made his chest tighten.

Footprints.

Fresh footprints.

Leading from the center of the village

Straight into Ojukwu Forest.

Bare human feet.

Very large.

Kene’s breathing became slow.

Who entered the forest at night?

And why did the footprints stop halfway

As if the person vanished into the ground?

The next morning, another problem arrived.

Mama Eka’s son was missing.

Only his slippers were found near the forest entrance.

The village exploded with fear.

Women cried loudly.

Men carried charms and cutlasses.

Some blamed witches.

Others blamed angry spirits.

But Papa Nnanna only said:

“The goal that mocked the masked dancer forgets that masks do not chase without reason “

Nobody understood his meaning.

Except Mama Ure.

The sharp eyed widow.

That evening, she secretly called Kene.

“I know you heard the drum first,” she said.

Kene nodded nervously.

Mama Ure leaned closer.

“What I am about to tell you must not leave your mouth.”

Then she pointed toward Ojukwu Forest.

“There is something inside that forest that should never wake up.”

Kene swallowed hard.

“What is it?”

Mama Ure looked around carefully.

Then she whispered:

“Your father went into that forest twenty years ago…”

Kene froze.

His father died before he was born.

At least,

That was what everybody told him.

Mama Ure’s eyes trembled.

“But your father never died.”

The drum sounded again in the distance.

This time louder than ever.

“KPOOM.

“KPOOM.“

“KPOOM”

And suddenly

Every dog in the village began to howl at once.

That night, fear sat on every rooftop in Umu-nwanda

Nobody cooked outside.

Nobody sang.

Even babies cried softly, as if they too understood that something evil had opened its eyes in the village.

The dogs kept howling toward Ojukwu Forest.

Then suddenly

“KPOOM.“

The drum sounded again.

Closer.

Louder.

Angrier.

Kene felt the sound inside his bones.

Mama Ure quickly grabbed his arm.

“You must never answer if you hear your name from the forest,” she warned.

“Why?”

Her face darkened.

“Because some spirits borrow familiar tongues to lead foolish people into darkness”

Before Kene could ask another question, a scream exploded from outside.

“Help me!”

It was Mama Eka.

Villagers rushed out carrying lanterns and charms.

Kene followed behind carefully.

Mama Eka stood in the middle of the village square, shaking violently.

“There is somebody standing near my hut” she cried.

Men raised their lanterns toward the darkness.

At first, they saw nothing.

Then,

A figure stepped slowly from behind a tree.

Tall.

Thin.

Covered in mud.

Its eyes looked pale like smoke.

Women screamed.

One man fainted immediately.

The figure opened its mouth slowly.

“Kene…”

Kene froze.

His heart nearly stopped.

The voice sounded familiar.

Very familiar.

Then the figure stepped closer into the lantern light.

Kene’s knees weakened.

It was his father.

Or at least

Something wearing his father’s face.

His grandmother collapsed crying.

The villagers began running backward.

But the figure only stood there silently.

Watching everyone.

Then it spoke again.

“The forest is hungry.”

Its voice sounded rough.

Like dry leaves rubbing together.

The village chief stepped forward with a trembling charm.

“Leave this place!” he shouted.

But the figure laughed softly.

“The wall that hides smokes is already burning inside “

Nobody understood the meaning.

Except Papa Nnanna.

His face suddenly became pale.

The figure turned slowly toward him.

“You remember me, old friend.”

Papa Nnanna staggered backward.

The villagers stared in confusion.

Then Mama Ure whispered:

“They know each other…”

Kene looked from one face to another.

Something terrible was hiding beneath the village fear.

Then the figure raised one muddy hand and pointed toward the chief and Papa Nnanna.

“You buried innocent blood beneath the forest.”

The crowd gasped loudly.

The chief shouted angrily.

“Lies!”

But the figure roared.

“THEN WHY DOES THE DRUM KNOW YOUR NAMES?”

At that exact moment,

“KPOOM!“

The forest drum sounded so loudly that birds exploded from the trees.

Children cried.

Goats broke their ropes.

And suddenly,

The ground beneath the village square trembled.

Small cracks appeared in the earth.

Women screamed and scattered.

Then old madman Okiri began laughing again.

“The earth is vomiting secrets!” he shouted.

Nobody listened to him.

Fear had already swallowed the village.

The figure turned toward Kene.

Its eyes softened slightly.

“My son…”

Kene wanted to run.

But his legs refused.

“Are you truly my father?” he whispered.

The figure looked toward Ojukwu Forest.

Then it answered slowly:

“A man who sleeps inside darkness does not return home unchanged”

Silence fell again.

Then Papa Nnanna suddenly dropped to his knees.

Tears filled his old eyes.

“We were young,” he whispered.

The village chief shouted at him.

“Do not speak!”

But Papa Nnanna continued.

“Twenty years ago we entered the forest searching for gold.”

The villagers gasped.

Gold?

Inside Ojukwu Forest?

Papa Nnanna nodded weakly.

“There was no spirit then. Only greed.”

The chief’s face became hard.

But the old man continued speaking.

“We found a sacred place deep inside the forest. A place guarded by drums carved from black trees.”

The muddy figure stared silently.

Papa Nnanna trembled.

“We were warned never to touch them.”

“But the chief wanted the gold buried beneath the shrine.”

The villagers turned toward the chief in shock.

The chief shouted angrily:

“Enough!”

But Papa Nnanna cried loudly.

“We broke the shrine!”

Thunder exploded across the sky.

The wind rose violently.

Then the muddy figure whispered:

“And the forest woke.”

Suddenly

“KPOOM.“

“KPOOM.“

“KPOOM.“

The drumbeat became wild.

Fast.

Heavy.

Like giant footsteps approaching.

The trees around the village began shaking violently.

Then from the darkness of Ojukwu Forest…

More figures emerged.

Dozens of them.

Mud-covered.

Silent.

Walking slowly toward the village.

Some were people who disappeared years ago.

Others were strangers nobody recognized.

Their eyes looked empty.

The villagers began screaming and running.

Mama Ure grabbed Kene tightly.

“It has started,” she whispered fearfully.

“What has started?!”

She looked toward the forest.

Then she said the words nobody ever wanted to hear.

“The forest has come to collect its debt”

The chief tried to run.

But suddenly the ground cracked beneath him.

Two muddy hands burst from the earth and grabbed his legs.

He screamed wildly.

Villagers watched in horror as the earth slowly swallowed him.

“The forest forgives slowly,” Papa Nnanna whispered.

Then he too fell to his knees crying.

Kene stared at his father.

“What do we do now?”

His father looked toward the ancient forest.

Then he spoke softly:

“There is only one way to silence the drum.”

Kene swallowed hard.

“How?”

His father pointed toward the deepest part of Ojukwu Forest.

“The shrine must be rebuilt before the next full moon.”

Mama Ure’s face turned pale.

“Impossible,” she whispered.

“Anyone who enters that place never returns.”

Kene looked toward the forest.

The drum sounded again.

Slow.

Patient.

Waiting.

Then his father placed something inside Kene’s hand.

A small carved wooden symbol.

Warm like living skin.

And immediately

The drum stopped.

Complete silence covered Umu-nwanda village.

Even the wind disappeared.

Then far inside the forest…

Something enormous growled.

To be continued…

12/05/2026

She’s the voice behind the viral song “mbgakoje “ let’s promote our own. Ogba to the world

Enjoy yourself bro, life no get duplicate.
12/05/2026

Enjoy yourself bro, life no get duplicate.

In the ancient village of Umude there lived a hunter named Otimpku.But Otimpku was not famous for bravery.He was famous ...
11/05/2026

In the ancient village of Umude there lived a hunter named Otimpku.

But Otimpku was not famous for bravery.

He was famous for failure.

Whenever hunters marched proudly into the forest at dawn, their wives smiled with confidence because before sunset, meat would surely enter their kitchens.

But when Otimpku returned from hunting, even dogs refused to follow him because they already knew his bag carried only disappointment.

Children mocked him openly.

“There goes the hunter that scares animals away!”

Women whispered whenever he passed.

“If bad luck had a brother, it would be Otimpku.”

Even his fellow hunters avoided him.

Some believed his shadow frightened animals.

Others swore the spirits of the forest had cursed him before birth.

Little by little, mockery became poison in Otimpku’s heart.

Night came and passed.

Days came and passed.

Still, fortune refused to look his direction.

He visited medicine men.

He sacrificed fowls.

He washed in sacred rivers.

He rubbed herbs on his guns.

Yet the forest gave him nothing.

Even his wife, Elekebe, grew tired of hunger and shame.

One evening she shouted bitterly at him.

“A man who cannot provide is like a basket with holes. No matter how much rain falls, it remains empty!”

Those words broke him deeply.

The elders often said.

“A poor man is advised by everybody but helped by nobody “

One cold morning, before the c**k crowed, Otimpku carried his old hunting gun and entered the forest once again.

That day, the forest felt strange.

The trees stood too still.

The birds sang no songs.

Even the wind moved carefully as though hiding secrets.

As Otimpku wandered deeper into forbidden territory, he suddenly saw a magnificent antelope.

Its body glittered strangely beneath sunlight.

Its eyes burned like tiny fires.

Otimpku immediately sensed danger.

Quietly, he hid himself behind a giant anthill and watched carefully.

The antelope slowly approached an ancient iroko tree.

Then something unbelievable happened.

The creature stood upright.

Its skin loosened from its flesh like clothing being removed.

Otimpku’s body turned cold.

The antelope removed its entire skin and placed it beneath the iroko tree.

Then instantly transformed into a breathtakingly beautiful woman.

Fear gripped Otimpku.

But as a brave hunter, he remained hidden.

When the woman walked toward a nearby stream, Otimpku rushed out quickly and grabbed the animal skin.

The woman screamed in shock.

Immediately, she attempted to transform back into the antelope.

But nothing happened.

Without the skin, she was powerless.

“Please!” she cried desperately. “Return my skin!”

Otimpku stepped backward carefully.

“No.”

The woman’s eyes trembled with fear.

“You do not understand what you hold.”

Otimpku tightened his grip.

“For years I have suffered shame,” he cried painfully. “Everyone mocks me. My wife insults me. Even children laugh at me. Help me become fortunate!”

The woman stared deeply into his eyes.

Then she spoke softly.

“I shall not only make you fortunate,I shall give you a gift.”

Otimpku frowned in confusion.

“A magic drum.”

Suddenly, the forest wind blew violently.

Leaves danced wildly.

Then a strange drum appeared beside the iroko tree.

It was small, covered with animal skin, and carved with ancient symbols.

“With this drum,” the woman explained, “you shall understand the language of all animals.”

Otimpku froze in disbelief.

“You shall no longer need to hunt. Whenever you desire animals, beat the drum, and they shall come willingly.”

Otimpku laughed nervously.

“That sounds impossible.”

The woman smiled mysteriously.

“To a blind man, sunrise sounds like a lie.”

Then she instructed him.

“Beat the drum.”

Otimpku obeyed reluctantly.

GBOOM!

Suddenly, the forest exploded with movement.

Bush rats.

Antelopes.

Monkeys.

Rabbits.

Wild goats.

Birds.

Animals rushed toward him from every direction.

Otimpku nearly fainted from shock.

Overwhelmed with excitement, he returned the skin immediately.

The woman transformed back into the shining antelope.

Before disappearing into the forest, she gave one final warning.

“The drum brings fortune… but fortune without wisdom destroys its owner.”

Then she vanished.

Otimpku ran home with the drum hidden carefully beneath his wrapper.

That evening, he beat the drum secretly behind his hut.

Within moments, animals flooded his compound.

The next day, meat filled the entire village.

People became shocked.

“How did Otimpku suddenly become the greatest hunter?”

Soon, his fame spread everywhere.

Whenever villagers needed meat for festivals, funerals, or marriages, Otimpku simply entered the village square and beat the drum.

GBOOM!

Animals would appear from every direction.

The villagers worshipped him like a god.

No one hunted in the forest anymore.

Otimpku became richer than chiefs.

His compound expanded.

Goats filled his backyard.

Palm wine flowed endlessly.

Even the same wife who once insulted him now praised him daily.

“The gods have remembered my husband!” Elekebe would boast proudly.

But the elders often warned

“When a lizard grows too comfortable in a king’s palace, it forgets that the hawk still flies above”

One afternoon, Elekebe went to their farm to harvest cassava.

Elekebe had a defect in one eye, so her sight was weak on one side.

After returning home, she sat outside peeling cassava while Otimpku rested nearby.

Suddenly, three goats entered the compound and began eating the cassava peels.

Elekebe chased them angrily.

“Useless animals!”

The goats ran away briefly.

But moments later, they returned.

Then one goat whispered to the others.

“Let us follow the side of her bad eye. She will not see us there.”

The other goats agreed immediately.

Otimpku heard every word clearly because of the drum’s power.

He burst into uncontrollable laughter.

Elekebe stopped peeling suddenly.

Her face tightened.

“Why are you laughing?”

Otimpku waved his hand carelessly.

“It is nothing.”

But Elekebe refused to let it go.

“No. Tell me.”

“It is not important.”

Her anger grew.

Days passed.

Still, she demanded answers.

At night she disturbed his sleep.

During meals she remained silent bitterly.

She refused him food.

She accused him of mocking her disability.

The matter became unbearable.

Finally, one rainy evening, Otimpku surrendered.

“All right!” he shouted. “The goats insulted your blind eye, and I heard them.”

Silence swallowed the room.

Elekebe stared at him in disbelief.

“You heard goats speaking?”

Immediately she realized there was a secret behind Otimpku’s fortune.

Fear entered her heart.

That night, while Otimpku slept heavily after drinking palm wine, Elekebe searched the house secretly.

At last, she found the magic drum hidden inside a clay pot.

Curiosity burned inside her.

“What power truly lives inside this thing?” she whispered.

Without thinking, she struck the drum.

GBOOM!

The earth shook violently.

Suddenly, animals flooded the compound wildly.

Snakes crawled everywhere.

Bats filled the sky.

Wild boars smashed fences.

Hyenas attacked goats.

Villagers woke up screaming in terror.

Elekebe panicked and beat the drum repeatedly.

Each beat worsened the chaos.

The village became a nightmare.

Then suddenly, a terrifying wind entered the compound.

The mysterious antelope woman appeared again beneath darkness.

Her eyes burned with anger.

“You were warned.”

Otimpku fell to his knees trembling.

“Forgive me!”

But the woman shook her head sadly.

“A secret shared carelessly becomes a knife.”

She stretched forth her hand.

Immediately, the drum flew from Elekebe’s hands into hers.

At once, every animal disappeared.

The compound became silent.

Otimpku cried bitterly.

“Please! Without the drum I am nothing again!”

The woman looked at him with pity.

“No,” she replied softly. “You were nothing because you believed fortune alone could make a man great.”

Then she vanished forever into the night.

By morning, Otimpku’s riches began disappearing mysteriously.

Animals no longer came.

Villagers returned to the forest themselves.

Slowly, people stopped worshipping him.

Mockery returned again.

His wife became ashamed.

And little by little, Otimpku returned to the same lonely hunter he once was.

But this time, the pain was worse because he had tasted greatness before losing it.

Till today, elders still tell his story beside evening fires.

And whenever pride enters the heart of a fortunate man, they warn him with these words:

The drum that calls blessings can also summon distraction .

11/05/2026

Did you observed anything in this video?

Every hardworking person deserve this moment.
10/05/2026

Every hardworking person deserve this moment.

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