Hardship in my country
Hardship in my country
The level of hardship faced by the average citizen in Nigeria is difficult for those of us in more privileged nations to fully grasp. With widespread poverty, most Nigerians struggle daily to secure the most basic necessities for their families. Unemployment, rising costs, government instability and corruption have trapped millions in a cycle of destitution.
Jobs are painfully scarce, leaving many Nigerian families without a reliable source of income to afford food, clean water, electricity, healthcare or housing. Prices keep rising steeply for transportation, fuel, utilities and other needs. But salaries remain stagnant, often unpaid for months. Widening inequality means the suffering poor grow poorer while elites profit from their positions.
The hardship permeates every part of daily life. Citizens line up for hours to buy rationed fuel, never sure if it will run out before their turn. Blackouts from an unstable power grid plunge major cities into darkness for days or weeks.
Grocery stores carry fewer and fewer subsidized items, leaving cupboards bare. Doctors and medicine are unaffordable luxuries for most families. School fees keep children from attending class so they can work instead, perpetuating the cycle of poverty.
Crime spikes as desperate citizens turn to illicit ways of earning income merely to feed their families another day. Many must scavenge trash heaps and landfills to find items of value, discarded food, or anything to sustain them. Begging on the streets becomes commonplace, even for educated people. No one feels secure in their livelihood.
This hardship crosses ethnic and religious lines. Christians and Muslims alike face the grinding destitution brought on by the failings of government, systems based on greed, and ongoing instability. No region of the country remains immune from the suffering.
Nigerians do not lack the resolve to work hard and build a thriving nation if given the chance. But the system has been rigged against them by the ruthless selfishness of leaders who pocket the wealth. Though many still hope God will intervene and justice will come, for now daily survival remains a struggle.
Those of us in developed nations have the power to aid the suffering in Nigeria through policy changes and generosity. But what is most needed are righteous leaders to emerge who will reject corruption, steward resources justly, and serve the Nigerian people instead of themselves. Nigeria's potential prosperity rests in accountable governance and integrity. With God's help and engaged citizens, Nigeria can transform hardship into hope
The hardship reaches into all parts of daily life. Long lines form for rationed fuel while blackouts plunge cities into darkness for days. Families ration food, healthcare is unaffordable, school fees keep kids from attending. Parents work tirelessly with no safety net if illness or old age makes them unable to provide.
Crime rises as desperate citizens turn to illicit acts for survival. Begging on the streets, raiding trash piles and landfills become normal. The struggle transcends ethnic and religious lines - Christians and Muslims alike face this hardship. Nowhere is immune from the destitution.
Nigerians do not lack the will to work hard and provide for their loved ones. The system has been rigged against them through corruption and instability. Yet many maintain faith that God will intervene, justice will prevail, relief will come. They share their meager rations with neighbors who have even less. Community bonds strengthen to fill the gaps left by failing institutions.
The rest of the world has the ability to aid the suffering through policy changes and generosity. But what Nigeria needs most is righteous leaders to rise up, reject corruption, and serve the people justly. The nation is not poor in resources - only in stewardship. Nigeria needs prayer and accountability. Nigerians keep their hope alive that future generations may know a different reality built on integrity where hardship is not the norm. With God's help, may it be so.
Thank you for reading my post
Designed on Canva
To be sincere it is only God that can help us In the country as at now ,people are really suffering , things are very expensive to buy too .
This post has been manually curated by @bhattg from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.
Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share more than 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators in the form of IUC tokens. HP delegators and IUC token holders also get upto 20% additional vote weight.
Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.
100% of the rewards from this comment goes to the curator for their manual curation efforts. Please encourage the curator @bhattg by upvoting this comment and support the community by voting the posts made by @indiaunited.
Naija problem too long my brother.
Lolz sure