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JOS, Nigeria — The Regional Chairman of the Church of Christ in Nations (COCIN) in Barkin Ladi Local Government Area of Plateau State, Rev. Ezekiel Dachamo, has alleged that members of the Boko Haram insurgent group have occupied strategic positions within the Nigerian Armed Forces.

The cleric made the remarks in a video circulated on his social media page, where he discussed the security situation in Nigeria and the recurring violence in parts of the country.

According to Rev. Dachamo, the alleged infiltration of the military was the reason United States military personnel were withdrawn from Nigeria after, he claimed, they received security reports from troops deployed to assess the security situation.

He further alleged that the U.S. personnel had been sent in connection with concerns over what he described as the killing of Christian communities in parts of the country.

Rev. Dachamo did not provide evidence to substantiate his claims during the video.

As of the time of filing this report, the Nigerian Armed Forces, the Federal Government of Nigeria, and the United States Government had not publicly confirmed Rev. Dachamo
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Renowned Islamic scholar and founder of Darul Hadith Salafiyya, Zaria, Sheikh Muhammad Auwal Adam (Albani Zaria), has stated that teaching Kitabul Al-Musannaf requires an exceptional level of scholarly competence that, according to him, many Nigerian Islamic scholars do not possess.

The late cleric made the remarks during one of his Sahih al-Bukhari lectures in 2013, while discussing contemporary religious issues and the qualifications required to teach classical Islamic texts.

According to Sheikh Albani, Al-Musannaf is among the most comprehensive works in Islamic scholarship and demands mastery of several disciplines before a scholar can competently teach its contents.

"Teaching Kitabul Al-Musannaf requires rare scholarly expertise beyond what many Nigerian scholars possess," he said.

He explained that a scholar seeking to teach the book must possess extensive knowledge of Islamic jurisprudence (Fiqh), Hadith sciences (Mustalah al-Hadith), Islamic history (Tarikh), principles of narration, and other related Islamic sciences.

Albani argued that beyond academic qualifications, teaching the text requires years of specialization, extensive research, and a deep understanding of the differences among classical scholars and schools of thought.

According to him, many scholars lack the time, specialization, and depth of knowledge necessary to undertake such a demanding scholarly responsibility.

The respected scholar maintained that teaching advanced Islamic texts without the required expertise could lead to misunderstanding, inaccurate interpretations, and confusion among students of knowledge.

Sheikh Muhammad Auwal Adam (Albani Zaria), who passed away in 2014, remains one of Nigeria
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#worldcup #footbal #iran
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Home News Health

The Psychology and Genetics of You

by Chinenye Odikpo
May 7, 2026
in Health
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The Psychology and Genetics of You
Article Lens How to read this story
Desk Health
Story Mode Health Report
Region Public Wellbeing
Public Interest Public wellbeing, healthcare access, prevention and social impact

The Psychology and Genetics of You. Your body is shaped by a powerful combination of genetics and psychology, working together in ways you may not even realize.

aUTHOrPUBLICATIONPUBLICATION DATE
CHINENYE ODIKPOMORGANABLE MAY 6, 2026
ABUJA— Have you ever wondered why your friend can eat a giant bowl of pasta and feel great, but a single slice of bread makes you feel like you need a three-hour nap? For a long time, health experts gave everyone the same dietary pattern and told us to follow it. But science is finally catching up to something we’ve always felt: your body is unique. Your DNA, the trillions of tiny germs in your gut, and even your daily stress levels make your nutritional needs as personal as your fingerprint. It’s time to stop following “the” diet and start finding “your” diet.


In the past, we treated the human body like a car that all runs on the same fuel. We went through phases where fat was the villain or carbs were the enemy. But if you’ve ever tried a popular diet and felt zero change or felt even more tired you aren’t the problem. The “one-size-fits-all” approach is the problem.
The truth is that we don’t just eat food; we process it. This process is called metabolism, and it is far more complex than a simple “calories in vs. calories out” equation. Two people can eat the exact same meal, and one person’s blood sugar will stay steady, while the other person’s sugar will spike and then crash. This isn’t about willpower; it’s about how your specific body is built and how your hormones respond to specific molecules. When we ignore these individual differences, we end up frustrated, hungry, and stuck in a cycle of failed resolutions.


One of the biggest reasons we are all different is our gut microbiome. This is a collection of trillions of tiny organisms living in your digestive system. Think of it like a garden. If your garden has the right tools to break down fiber, you’ll feel amazing eating beans and greens. If it doesn’t, those same healthy foods might make you feel bloated, gassy, and foggy.


These tiny organisms mostly bacteria act like an internal chemical factory. They don’t just help with digestion; they also talk to your brain through the “gut-brain axis.” They help produce neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine, which make you feel happy or focused. If your gut is unhappy with your food choices, it sends distress signals to your nervous system. This is why a food coma isn’t just a physical sensation in your stomach; it’s a neurological event.
Food and Your Genes: The New Science of Nutrigenomics


There is a burgeoning field called nutrigenomics, which is essentially the study of how food
talks to your genes. Think of your DNA as the instruction manual for your body. For a long time, we thought this manual was set in stone. We now know that the food you eat can actually flip switches in that manual a process known as epigenetic expression.
Some foods might turn on health switches that protect you from inflammation and disease, while others might turn on stress switches.

The Caffeine Example: Consider how people handle coffee. Some people are fast metabolizers of caffeine due to a specific variant in the CYP1A2 gene. For them, a cup of coffee is a quick boost that clears the system in hours. For others, the body processes it slowly. For a slow metabolizer, that one cup of coffee can stay in the bloodstream for up to 48 hours, ruining sleep and causing unexplained anxiety.
This isn’t a lack of toughness; it’s a genetic reality. Understanding these nuances allows you to stop punishing yourself for things you literally cannot control.
The goal of eating right for your body is to reach metabolic flexibility. This is just a way of saying your body is skilled at switching between different types of fuel specifically glucose (sugar) and ketones (fat).


In our modern world of constant snacking, most of us have become sugar burners. Because we eat frequently and consume high amounts of refined carbohydrates, our bodies forget how to tap into our stored energy (fat). When our blood sugar levels dip, we don’t switch to fat-burning; instead, we crash, leading to that hangry feeling or intense brain fog.
By finding the right balance of fats, proteins, and healthy carbs for your specific body, you can retrain your system to be metabolically flexible. This results in steady energy levels throughout the day and the end of the dreaded 3:00 PM energy slump.
How Your Environment Changes Your Needs
Where you live and what you do also matters significantly. Our bodies are not closed loops; they are constantly interacting with our surroundings.

  • Climate and Heat: If you live in a busy, hot city like Abuja, your body uses up certain minerals and vitamins—like B-vitamins, magnesium, and electrolytes—much faster because of the heat and the physiological stress of daily life.
  • Stress Levels: High-stress environments trigger the production of cortisol. Constant cortisol elevation can change how your body handles insulin, making you more sensitive to sugar than someone living a quiet, relaxed life in a cool, rural village.
  • Seasonal Changes: Your body may crave more fats and root vegetables in the winter to stay grounded and warm, while preferring hydrating, light fruits in the summer. Your diet should be a living thing that changes based on your lifestyle and the weather.
    The Inflammation Connection
    Inflammation is your body’s natural defense system, but when it’s triggered by the wrong foods, it becomes chronic. For some, dairy is the trigger; for others, it’s nightshade vegetables (like tomatoes) or specific grains. Chronic inflammation is the hidden reason behind many modern complaints:

  • 1.Joint Pain: Itchy or stiff joints in the morning.
    2.Skin Issues: Acne, eczema, or unexplained redness.
    3.Brain Fog: Feeling like you’re thinking through a cloud of cotton.
    Identifying your personal inflammatory triggers is perhaps the most important step in the journey toward bio-individuality.
    How to Start Listening to Your Body
    You don’t need an expensive lab test or a scientist to tell you what to eat. You can start by becoming an expert on yourself. Here is how to begin:

Notice the Small Things
Notice the Small Things: Skin breakouts, itchy joints, or a fuzzy brain are often signs that your body didn’t like something you ate. For one week, don’t track calories. Instead, track sensations. Note when you feel bloated, when your skin looks clear, or when you feel particularly happy. You will quickly see patterns that no diet book could ever teach you.


The Simple Truth
We are moving away from an age where we follow rigid rules from a book. We are moving into an age of self-knowledge.
Your body is not a machine that needs to be fixed or a problem to be solved. It is a highly intelligent, living system that is constantly trying to keep you in balance. It changes with the seasons, with your age, and with your emotions. It doesn’t want a rigid set of rules; it wants you to pay attention.
When you stop fighting against your body and start giving it the specific fuel it needs, health stops feeling like a struggle. The best health expert in the world isn’t on the internet, and they aren’t writing best-selling diet books. The best expert is the voice of your own body, telling you exactly what makes it feel alive. Listen to it.

The Two-Hour Energy Check
Two hours after you eat a meal, check in with yourself. Ask: “Do I feel focused, or do I feel like I need a nap?” If you are sleepy or craving sugar immediately after a meal, it’s a sign that the meal caused a massive insulin spike. That “fuel” wasn’t right for you at that time.

Feed the Garden (Eat the Rainbow)
To support a diverse gut microbiome, aim for variety. Try to eat 30 different types of plant-based foods per week including spices, nuts, seeds, and fermented foods. This ensures you are feeding different tribes of good bacteria in your gut.

The Buffer Rule
Whenever you eat carbohydrates (like rice, bread, or fruit), try to
buffer them with protein or healthy fat (like eggs, fish, avocado, or nuts). This slows down the absorption of sugar, preventing the spike and crash cycle that ruins your productivity.

.
The Simple Truth
We are moving away from an age where we follow rigid rules from a book. We are moving into an age of self-knowledge.
Your body is not a machine that needs to be fixed or a problem to be solved. It is a highly intelligent, living system that is constantly trying to keep you in balance. It changes with the seasons, with your age, and with your emotions. It doesn’t want a rigid set of rules; it wants you to pay attention.
When you stop fighting against your body and start giving it the specific fuel it needs, health stops feeling like a struggle. The best health expert in the world isn’t on the internet, and they aren’t writing best-selling diet books. The best expert is the voice of your own body, telling you exactly what makes it feel alive. Listen to it.

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Chinenye Odikpo

Chinenye Odikpo

Chinenye Odikpo is a Staff Reporter at Morganable, covering Entertainment and Lifestyle news with a focus on culture, people, creativity, public life, and the stories shaping contemporary society. At Morganable, she reports on developments across the entertainment industry, lifestyle trends, personalities, events, fashion, arts, media, and human-interest stories. Her work supports Morganable’s commitment to credible, engaging, and well-presented journalism that informs readers while capturing the energy of modern culture. As part of the Morganable newsroom, Chinenye contributes to the publication’s growing coverage of entertainment and lifestyle issues, bringing attention to the people, movements, trends, and cultural moments that influence public conversation locally and globally.

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