LATEST ISSUE![]() FEATURED STORY: "THIN END OF TIK DEPENDENCY "
As tik tightens its addictive grip on the Western Cape, a worrying new trend is emerging: teenagers and young women going on the "tik diet" to shed unwanted kilos, reports The Big Issue SA.
"I have always had issues with my weight ever since I can remember. I have tried everything, but never really followed through with the difficult ones, like Weigh Less. Through peers I discovered that tik was the easiest way to keep my weight down. Whenever something went wrong or when I felt fat, I used tik to feel better. It curbed the binge eating and gave me a false sense of confidence, made me feel sexier", says Stacy-Anne Michaels, 28, one of a growing number of young South African women turning to tik (methamphetamine) for a quick-fix weight loss solution.< ... |
BITS & BYTES
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FEATURED VENDOR Siyabonga Bobo
Siyabonga Bobo believes that obtaining his learner’s licence was merely the first step towards creating a brighter future for himself and his young family.
“Now that I am a father I must do everything that I can to give my son, one-year-old Siyabonga Jr, a happy and safe life and the way to do that is it to improve my prospects,” he says.
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BIG ISSUE BLOGOur latest blog![]() Get a glimpse of the behind-the-scenes workings of THE BIG ISSUE by visiting our blog. I usually don't get too concerned when man-child Julius Malema opens his chubby mouth and spews forth another of his pearl... > Read More |
VISION & MISSIONVISIONThe Big Issue is a socially responsible non-profit organisation that enables willing unemployed and marginalised adults to take responsibility for their own lives through a developmental employment programme. MISSIONTo publish a saleable, quality magazine that serves as an economically viable job-creation tool offering developmental self-employment opportunities to marginalised adults to enable them to move from social exclusion to self-sufficiency. To create a platform that promotes the principles of social responsibility. To empower beneficiaries to achieve the dignity of independence through life intervention and skills development programmes. To achieve organisational self-sustainability through socially responsible income-generating activities. |
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Siyabonga Bobo

