<p>Sometimes, Gen-Z isn’t even the problem.</p><p>They’re just a group trying to break free from horrible traits, toxic discipline, and suffocating cultural norms that have been passed down for generations.</p><p><br/></p><p>The change is happening.</p><p>But the way it’s unfolding? It often feels so disruptive that older generations think the world is ending.</p><p><br/></p><p>Take this for example:</p><p>A mother who praises every other child except her own.</p><p>No matter how small the achievement, she applauds just not when it’s her child.</p><p>As if acknowledging your own child’s wins is an abomination.</p><p>Now, that child has options:</p><p> • Sit their mother down and speak sense into her.</p><p> • Walk away and never look back.</p><p> • Or sink into depression so deep it ends in suicide.</p><p>Back in the old generations, this wasn’t allowed.</p><p>Children were expected to just “try harder.”</p><p>Try and try and try until they broke.</p><p>But today? We’re no longer breaking in silence.</p><p>We’re talking back.</p><p>We’re walking away.</p><p>We’re refusing to kill ourselves trying to earn love that should’ve been unconditional.</p><p>Another thing that fascinates me about this generation: our spirituality.</p><p>Say what you want about our gender identities, pronouns, and choices</p><p>but our connection to God? Strong.</p><p>Africans hate to hear “LGBTQ” and “God” in the same sentence.</p><p>Yet, I see lesbians going to church.</p><p>I see gay men praying in mosques.</p><p>It’s not easy for them, but they’re doing it.</p><p>They’re carving paths for the generations after them.</p><p>Firstborns?</p><p>We’re the ones breaking generational trauma.</p><p>We’re challenging parents, tearing down toxic expectations, forcing change whether they like it or not.</p><p>It’s not easy.</p><p>It’s messy.</p><p>But at least,Finally we’re making a change.</p><p><br/></p><p>I just hope every African mother and father learns to reason with us.</p>
Random thought
ByZarah Writes
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At the end of the month, we give out prizes in 3 categories: Best Content, Top Engagers and
Most Engaged Content.
Best Content
We give out cash prizes to 7 people with the best insights in the past month. The 7 winners are picked
by an in-house selection process.
The winners are NOT picked from the leaderboards/rankings, we choose winners based on the quality, originality
and insightfulness of their content.
Top Engagers
For the Top Engagers Track, we award the top 3 people who engage the most with other user's content via
comments.
The winners are picked using the "Monthly Engagers" tab on the rankings page.
Most Engaged Content
The Most Engaged Content recognizes users whose content received the most engagement during the month.
We pick the top 3.
The winners are picked using the "Monthly Contributors" tab on the rankings page.
Here are a few other things to know for the Best Content track
1
Quality over Quantity — You stand a higher chance of winning by publishing a few really good insights across the entire month,
rather than a lot of low-quality, spammy posts.
2
Share original, authentic, and engaging content that clearly reflects your voice, thoughts, and opinions.
3
Avoid using AI to generate content—use it instead to correct grammar, improve flow, enhance structure, and boost clarity.
4
Explore audio content—high-quality audio insights can significantly boost your chances of standing out.
5
Use eye-catching cover images—if your content doesn't attract attention, it's less likely to be read or engaged with.
6
Share your content in your social circles to build engagement around it.
Contributor Rankings
The Contributor Rankings shows the Top 20 Contributors on TwoCents a monthly and all-time basis.
The all-time ranking is based on the Contributor Score, which is a measure of all the engagement and exposure a contributor's content receives.
The monthly score sums the score on all your insights in the past 30 days. The monthly and all-time scores are calcuated DIFFERENTLY.
This page also shows the top engagers on TwoCents — these are community members that have engaged the most with other user's content.
Contributor Score
Here is a list of metrics that are used to calcuate your contributor score, arranged from
the metric with the highest weighting, to the one with the lowest weighting.
4
Comments (excluding replies)
5
Upvotes
6
Views
1
Number of insights published
2
Subscriptions received
3
Tips received
Below is a list of badges on TwoCents and their designations.
Comments