Local Girl With Good Diction

Local Girl With Good Diction

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It's just a personal blog for local girl to share her experiences.

01/01/2023

Okay, shall we start reading?

How about we start of this year with a billionaire mindset?
Nice right? I know 😁😁.

I got this book titled: "The Billionaire Mastermind" and I think it's a great way to start reading this 2023.

It's an easy read because it's a compilation of quotes from Billionaires.

Photos from Local Girl With Good Diction's post 31/10/2022

How to speak English with confidence.

Ten steps:

25/10/2022

Access is pronounced "Ak-ses"
For example: "Access Bank" isn't "As-ses bank” but "Ak-ses Bank"

12/10/2022

Facebook User Abraham Isaac Adigun wrote:

Miss Faith Odunsi, 15 years old represented Nigeria🇳🇬 at the Global Mathematics Competition, beats China, United States of America, United Kingdom and others and became the world best mathematics student ...

The judges called her Calculator in the end.

She is schooling in Nigeria not abroad, she should be celebrated.

Congratulations NIGERIA 🇳🇬

09/10/2022

What do some of your everyday symbol sound like?
Listen here👇👇

Video credit

07/10/2022

Whoever wrote this manual definitely needs help.

E for Star?
I for bird?
V for cow?

The things we see daily.

28/09/2022

Our hearts go to the victims of this years flooding

05/08/2022

I am fine ✔
I'm fine ✔
Am fine ❌

Please work on your writing and speaking skills. Do not be the reason schools or countries force an English-speaking national to take an English exam to enter a foreign university or nation.

Photos from Local Girl With Good Diction's post 15/06/2022

Women have endured a lot in the name of culture and tradition. If they aren't being deformed to avoid being attractive, they are being mutilated to avoid them from being promiscuous, or face modification in what some term beautiful from Africa to Asia the stories are the same.

Our last post was on the Chinese women whose feet had to be folded to fit into small shoes considered fashionable I captioned the post Golden lotus.

Today we were looking at the "Apatani Woman” of a tribe found in the Indian valleys.

The day an Apatani woman reached puberty and had her first period, her face was inked, and her nose plugged marking her as an adult. Such face modifications aimed to make the woman unattractive and undesirable to the tribal raiders.

The plan worked but not without a cost.

Firstly, the wooden nose plugs called “Yaping Hullo” were not placed in the nostrils but pierced on each side of the nose. The initial pain was terrible, and so was the discomfort.

Secondly, the process of getting a face tattoo was perhaps even worse. The tattoo of an Apatani woman, “Tippei,” is a thick black line that goes from the top of her forehead, down the entire face, and splits into 4–5 lines on the chin. The tattoo is done by a thorny plant that is dipped in a mixture of soot and pig’s fat. The thorn is placed on the skin and then hit with a small hammer until the face is inked. The bleeding is abundant, and so is the pain.

Ultimately, agonizing as the whole process was, the women were safe. But after some time, an unexpected thing happened.

The nose plug and face tattoo practices that were intended to make the Apatani women unattractive became an important part of the tribe’s culture. The women did not only not rebel against the changes but were proud of their unique looks. The modifications were even seen as beauty symbols and were desired by the Apatani tribesmen.

But it was not to last.

In the early 1970s, the Indian Government imposed a ban on nose plugs. It was said that they made the Apatani women easily recognizable and therefore prone to discrimination. The ban was not well received by the tribe. But eventually, they made their peace with it.

Today, less than 30.000 Apatani people are left. And whereas the younger generations are leaving the villages to work in towns, the elders are keeping the rich Apatani culture alive. Many of the women reminiscence about the old days when every dress had to be handmade and call their nose plugs and face tattoos beautiful. They take pride in standing out and being recognized as members of the Apatani Tribe.

Picture credit: Wikipedia commons

Sources: Rupkatha Journal on Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities & Atlas of Humanity.

https://historyofyesterday.com/the-unsettling-story-behind-the-nose-plug-tradition-aff0927233fe

Photos from Local Girl With Good Diction's post 01/06/2022

THE GOLDEN LOTUS

Foot binding Stories of pain and endurance the Chinese girl had to face before the 20th century.

Foot-binding was a practice first carried out on young girls in Tang Dynasty China to restrict their normal growth and make their feet as small as possible. Considered an attractive quality, the effects of the process were painful and permanent. Widely used as a method to distinguish girls of the upper class from everyone else, and later as a way for the lower classes to improve their social prospects, the practice of foot-binding would continue right up to the early 20th century CE.

Chinese girls had their feet bound typically from the age of five to eight. The process began by choosing an auspicious day in the calendar. Next prayers and offerings were offered to the Tiny-Footed Maiden Goddess; another recipient was the Buddhist figure of Guanyin, a bodhisattva or enlightened one who was thought to protect women in general. When all was ready, the task was done by the older women of the family or by a professional foot-binder. The big toe was left facing forwards while the four smaller toes were bent under the foot. In this position, the feet were tightly bound using long strips of cloth, which then restricted any future growth and gave the foot a pronounced arch. The feet were unbound after one month, any ulcerations of the skin treated, and the foot rebound again. The bindings were loosened and retightened thereafter once each month until the girl reached her early teens (or even longer depending on the desired effect). It was not uncommon for one or more toes to be lost or to have infections in the foot or gangrene. Even as an adult a woman continued to wrap her deformed feet in bindings, wearing them at all times in public and when bathing.

The aimed result of the long and excruciating process was to have feet no longer than 7.5-10 cm (3-4 inches), when they were known as jinlian - “Golden Lotus” or “Lotus” feet after the central life symbol of Buddhism. The smaller the feet the more attractive they were, even erotic for some, and it became a distinct mark of elegance. The same was true of the style of walking a woman with bound feet was now forced to adopt - small, light steps. With servants to perform menial tasks, a lady's mobility was limited even in normal circumstances, but with bound feet, walking must have only been achieved with great difficulty. Smaller feet required especially dainty shoes, and these, made of silk or cotton and often beautifully embroidered, have been found in abundance in tombs of Chinese upper-class women.

For more read on: https://www.worldhistory.org/Foot-Binding/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot_binding?wprov=sfla1

17/04/2022

The spirit of Easter is all about hope, love, and joyful living. Here is wishing you all the love and happiness that only Easter can bring.

Have a joyous celebration with your family!

Happy Easter Sunday!

13/03/2022

Growing up my dad would make me read books according to him that is one of the ways to learn to read, write and speak well.

I also believe movies help too.

Like this clip below from the movie: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

Video credit on tiktok

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