- Nigerian firefighter Dooshima Dennis has questioned the safety of sleeping naked, urging people to prioritise emergency readiness over comfort in case of fire outbreaks or other emergencies.
- She urged people to think beyond comfort and consider their ability to respond quickly if danger strikes.

Dooshima Dennis, a Nigerian firefighter, has sparked online conversations after questioning people who prefer to sleep naked, raising concerns about emergency preparedness.
While acknowledging that doctors have linked sleeping naked to certain health benefits, Dennis warned that the habit could become a serious challenge during emergencies such as fires, where every second counts.
In a post shared online, she urged people to think beyond comfort and consider their ability to respond quickly if danger strikes.
“People who sleep n@ked… do you ever think about emergencies? Doctors say sleeping n@ked improves health. Emergency responders say readiness saves lives,” she wrote.
She further challenged readers to imagine a real-life crisis scenario:
“If the alarm goes off right now, what are you choosing comfort or survival? In emergencies, preparation beats preference.
“So tell me Sleeping n@ked or sleeping ready?”

In other news…. Nigerian singer and songwriter Simisola Kosoko, widely known as Simi, has generated online discussion after calling out men who complain about feeling neglected after their wives give birth.
In a video making the rounds on social media, the award-winning artiste stressed that the post-childbirth period should centre on the mother’s healing process and the newborn’s care, not the father’s need for attention. She urged men to respond with understanding and support rather than resentment.
Simi highlighted the intense physical and emotional challenges women face during pregnancy and delivery, referencing painful medical procedures, body swelling, fatigue, and sleepless nights that often follow childbirth.
According to her, these sacrifices far outweigh any temporary lack of attention experienced by men, noting that such complaints ignore the realities mothers endure before and after delivery.
She also criticised the tendency for people to immediately ask women about their husbands shortly after they give birth, saying it diverts attention from someone who has just gone through months of bodily changes, risks, and potential complications.
Simi maintained that priority should be given to the wellbeing of the mother and the baby, not concerns about whether the father feels sidelined.
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