Wilson Igbasi
Bio
Hi, I'm Wilson Igbasi — a passionate writer, researcher, and tech enthusiast. I love exploring topics at the intersection of technology, personal growth, and spirituality.
Stories (765)
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The Math Behind Retiring Early in a Small Town vs. Struggling in a Major City.
Retirement planning is often framed around income, savings rate, and investment growth. Few people consider how much location shapes financial outcomes. Living in a small town versus a major city can drastically affect your ability to retire early, not because of lifestyle alone, but because of the numbers. Let’s break it down.
By Wilson Igbasi7 days ago in Humans
As a Hiring Manager, I Immediately Reject Resumes With These 3 Phrases.
Every hiring manager has a mental checklist when scanning resumes. In the first 10–15 seconds, we assess whether a candidate is clear, confident, and professional. Many resumes fail not because of lack of experience, but because of careless phrasing. Over the years, I’ve noticed three specific phrases that instantly make me hit the “reject” button. They’re subtle, but they communicate the wrong things about you.
By Wilson Igbasi7 days ago in Humans
My $100 to $10,000 Flipping Challenge: The 5 Rules That Actually Worked.
Flipping is one of the oldest ways to make money, yet few people approach it with a plan. I started with just $100 and a simple goal: turn it into $10,000. Over six months, I learned that success wasn’t about luck or finding rare items. It was about systems, discipline, and following rules that most beginners ignore. After experimenting, failing, and refining my approach, I discovered five rules that consistently worked.
By Wilson Igbasi7 days ago in Humans
The 'Lazy Girl Job' Concept Is Genius, But Everyone Is Misinterpreting It.
You’ve probably seen the phrase circulating on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter: “lazy girl job.” The concept seems simple at first glance. People assume it’s about being lazy, avoiding hard work, or finding the easiest gig possible. The reality is much more strategic, and most of the chatter online misses the point entirely.
By Wilson Igbasi7 days ago in Humans
I Reverse-Engineered 100 'Day in the Life' TikToks. Here's the Lie They're All Selling.
Scrolling through TikTok, it’s easy to believe some people have it all. Perfect mornings, tidy homes, flawless outfits, and a seemingly endless flow of achievements. “Day in the life” videos promise authenticity, a window into someone else’s routine. But after analyzing over 100 of these videos, I noticed a pattern: most of what you see is carefully curated storytelling designed to sell an idea—not reality.
By Wilson Igbasi7 days ago in Humans
The Subtle Art of the 'Mid-Tier' Life: Why Not Everything Has to Be a Hustle or a Hot Take.
The internet rewards extremes. You either hustle nonstop or reject work entirely. You either chase luxury or denounce money. You either shout opinions or disappear. The middle feels invisible. The middle gets mocked.
By Wilson Igbasi8 days ago in Humans
We Need to Talk About 'Trauma Dumping' as a Substitute for Real Friendship.
Trauma dumping sounds honest. It sounds brave. It sounds like healing. It often is none of those things. People share pain everywhere now. Group chats. First dates. Comment sections. Work calls. Stories spill without warning. Listeners freeze. Silence follows. Confusion lingers.
By Wilson Igbasi8 days ago in Humans
The 'Digital Ghost Town' Phenomenon: What Happens to Our Online Selves When We Die?
The internet never forgets. People do. This mismatch creates a quiet crisis. Millions of profiles belong to the dead. Posts remain. Photos surface. Birthdays trigger reminders. The digital world keeps talking after life ends.
By Wilson Igbasi8 days ago in Humans
"Millennials Are Becoming Their Parents, And Gen Z Is Horrified. A Cultural Autopsy."
Millennials once promised rupture. You mocked routines. You rejected ladders. You chased meaning. Now you defend stability. You protect schedules. You praise balance. Gen Z watches and cringes.
By Wilson Igbasi8 days ago in Humans
Jobs That Will (Probably) Not Exist in 2030, and the Skills to Future-Proof Yourself
People fear robots taking jobs. The truth feels less dramatic. Jobs disappear because habits stay fixed while systems change. By 2030, many roles people defend today will fade quietly. No headlines. No warnings. Just fewer openings and lower pay.
By Wilson Igbasi8 days ago in Humans