Episodes
Constance asks if strict parenting can help a child.
Constance asks if it is overboard to compel people to join in a religious practice in a non-religious space.
As the Sokoto State House of Assembly passes a bill to regulate marriage expenses in the state, Constance asks if the government should regulate how people choose to spend their money partying.
Constance asks listeners if they would rather be tough to handle life or have a soft life.
Constance asks if there should be a limit to progressive political ambitions.
Constance asks how important first impressions are.
Constance asks listeners if family and friends are allowed to post their kids online without seeking consent.
Constance asks how the government can curb the rising trend of civilians attacking security personnel.
Constance has a conversation about ‘where your treasure is’.
Constance has a conversation centered around talking to kids about death.
Constance asks if doctors' giving back to society with their expertise would tackle the brain drain in the health sector.
Constance asks if listeners feel excited about going to work every morning; what their employees can do to make them enjoy going to work; and if they observe the holidays at their workplace.
Constance asks if parents should tell their kids how much they earn, She asks listeners if they knew their parents’ financial status as a kid.
Constance has a conversation with Public Health Physician, Dr Ebere Onyeije, about World Health Day and the hindrances to access to adequate healthcare in Nigeria.
Constance asks listeners if they would patronise a restaurant with a no-phone use policy.
Constance asks if the government should consider a national lockdown for a successful census.
Constance asks listeners if a secret can remain hidden forever and if it is necessary to keep something good secret.
Constance asks listeners if the devil is the sole architect of every evil.
Constance asks listeners what other three tribes in Nigeria apart from theirs they like, and why.
Constance asks listeners if parents are still to blame for the wrong decisions of their adult children. She also asks how one can choose a role model, and if a celebrity is automatically a role model.
Constance asks listeners if they feel amused, entertained, or irritated when explicit content is played in public.
Constance asks if motive matters when a good deed is done.
Constance asks listeners for their views about the saying ‘the reward for a good job is more work’.
Constance asks if it is wrong for listeners to call their spouses by their names.
Constance asks if the Rivers government's plan to promote civil servants and employ 10,000 youths is coming too late, or if is it better late than never.
Constance asks if Nigerians are deserving of the current economic hardship in the country.
Constance asks listeners how they teach their child/ren to handle losing.
Constance has a conversation about drawing a line between loving and spoiling kids
Constance asks how ready Nigerians are for the deadline for old notes.
Constance asks if one can truly say they know a person when they have not experienced them in every way.