No one taught me how to code; YouTube taught me.

I didn’t go to anyone physically to learn graphic design; people on YouTube taught me.

I learned how to use DaVinci Resolve, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe Photoshop—basically, most video editing apps—I learned all of them on YouTube.

I was able to learn everything about stocks and how to buy them on YouTube.

Eighty percent, or even ninety percent, of what I know today is a product of the app called YouTube.

There is nothing you want to learn on this planet that isn’t there.

If you are starting in tech and you don’t have money to pay for an offline bootcamp, brother or sister, that data you waste every day watching curn or playing bets or looking for the next gossip on the internet —it’s your life, I agree, but if you don’t have any skill at all, invest your time in watching YouTube to learn your desired skill. Then, give yourself time; trust me, by this time next year, you will have a skill all to yourself.

Dare me.

One of my cousins, who is now a badass full-stack developer, learned everything on YouTube. He was so addicted to that app that he literally begged me for data all the time. He started learning while he was in secondary school because he had a passion for it. He is now in his final year at university, and I know how well he is doing for himself right now.

See, you don’t have a single excuse. Don’t complain that your phone is bad. Don’t say you don’t have a laptop or data, but you are always on the internet. You do not have one single excuse. Stop creating it.

Just spare two hours every day, like I did, learning any skill of your choice on YouTube. Give yourself until December, and you will definitely know fifty percent of whatever you are learning.

Don’t tell me you don’t know what YouTube is, because you definitely know all the curn sites on the internet.

Tabugbo( meaning it’s still early), the government doesn’t care about you. If you like, shout bad governance from now till the end of time; they don’t give a flying f⭕️rk about you.

Your parents have tried; stop putting pressure on them. Be useful for yourself, and stop procrastinating. There is no perfect time—you can start now or continue procrastinating.

Yagazie.
Credit: Kelvin onovo
No one taught me how to code; YouTube taught me. I didn’t go to anyone physically to learn graphic design; people on YouTube taught me. I learned how to use DaVinci Resolve, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe Photoshop—basically, most video editing apps—I learned all of them on YouTube. I was able to learn everything about stocks and how to buy them on YouTube. Eighty percent, or even ninety percent, of what I know today is a product of the app called YouTube. There is nothing you want to learn on this planet that isn’t there. If you are starting in tech and you don’t have money to pay for an offline bootcamp, brother or sister, that data you waste every day watching curn or playing bets or looking for the next gossip on the internet —it’s your life, I agree, but if you don’t have any skill at all, invest your time in watching YouTube to learn your desired skill. Then, give yourself time; trust me, by this time next year, you will have a skill all to yourself. Dare me. One of my cousins, who is now a badass full-stack developer, learned everything on YouTube. He was so addicted to that app that he literally begged me for data all the time. He started learning while he was in secondary school because he had a passion for it. He is now in his final year at university, and I know how well he is doing for himself right now. See, you don’t have a single excuse. Don’t complain that your phone is bad. Don’t say you don’t have a laptop or data, but you are always on the internet. You do not have one single excuse. Stop creating it. Just spare two hours every day, like I did, learning any skill of your choice on YouTube. Give yourself until December, and you will definitely know fifty percent of whatever you are learning. Don’t tell me you don’t know what YouTube is, because you definitely know all the curn sites on the internet. Tabugbo( meaning it’s still early), the government doesn’t care about you. If you like, shout bad governance from now till the end of time; they don’t give a flying f⭕️rk about you. Your parents have tried; stop putting pressure on them. Be useful for yourself, and stop procrastinating. There is no perfect time—you can start now or continue procrastinating. Yagazie. Credit: Kelvin onovo
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