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Childhood | Zikoko!
  • 12 Nigerian Gospel Songs that Shaped Our Childhood

    Growing up in a Christian Nigerian home in the 90s to early 2000s meant you listened to certain gospel songs over and over again. We all sang along to these tunes during weekend chores, and danced choreographies to them in church or at end of the year parties.

    Come, Let’s Praise the Lord — Panam Percy Paul

    Panam Percy Paul released Bring Down the Glory 2 (God of War) in 1989, and its first song, Come, Let’s Praise the Lord, instantly became the go-to for choreography presentations in schools and churches. Once upon a time, at this time of the year, kids across Nigeria would be rehearsing their synchronised moves to the gospel worship song.

    Akanchawa — Princess Njideka Okeke

    Akanchawa is an Igbo gospel song that was popular across households in the South-East and Lagos. The title means “The hands that bring good things”, a reference to God’s hands. Akanchawa is the first track on Princess Njideka Okeke’s Ministration Worship Part 1 album. Almost every Nigerian mum had the audio CD and played it on Saturday mornings.

    Apata Ayeraye — Cherubim and Seraphim Movement Church (Surulere District)

    The Cherubim and Seraphim Movement Church choir, Surulere, Lagos, released their Oke Mimo album in 1991. Apata Ayeraye which means “rock of ages” in Yoruba, was a standout hit for most families throughout the 90s. The worship song interpolates from the popular Yorùbá hymn of the same name.

    Opelope Anointing — Dunni Olanrewaju

    Every Sunday morning before rice and stew, this song was the tonic. If you grew up in a Christian Yorùbá home in the early 2000s, there’s no way you escaped this song. The titular track on Dunni Olanrewaju’s Opelope Anointing (2000) became a pop statement for gratitude and escaping adversity. The filling station closed immediately after they sold me fuel? Opelope anointing.

    Chioma Jesus — Amaka Okwuoha

    In 2003, Amaka Okwuoha released her hit song, Chioma Jesus, under New Jerusalem Music. She performed the song in Igbo with her iconic high-pitched vocals backed with heavy keyboard and drums. Chioma Jesus became such a hit that the singer is still referred to as “Chioma Jesus” today.

    Oga Eme — Rosemary Chukwu

    In 2008 and 2009, you couldn’t travel from Lagos to the South-East for Christmas and back without hearing this jam. It was a favourite for bus drivers and Igbo mothers alike. Oga Eme is fast-tempo and full of traditional Igbo music elements.

    Baba Mimo Mowa Sope — Tope Alabi

    Baba Mimo Mowa Sope (2001) is one of Tope Alabi’s classics and most diverse records. The praise song has a Makossa sound that sampled Magic System’s 1er Gaou (1999). It wasn’t just a turn-up jam in Christian circles, it was the ultimate birthday party favourite. Back then, the best dancer to this song always got sweet and biscuit. What a period.

    Igwe — Midnight Crew

    The year was 2008 when a music quartet called Midnight Crew stormed the country with Igwe, their multi-lingual gospel hit. It was recognisable instantly from its beat drop — the perfect ringtone material. If Midnight Crew, made up of Patricia Uwaje-King, Odunayo Ojo-Onasanya, Mike Abdul and Gbenga Oyebola, put this out today, it’d be a TikTok bop.

    Olori Oko — Infinity

    Infinity arrived in the era when Nigerian Gospel music was experimenting with diverse genres to bridge creativity with spirituality. Although Olori Oko came out in 2006, it’s an evergreen gospel bop today.

    Ijoba Orun — Lara George

    Lara George’s 2008 debut album, Forever In My Heart, gave us the hit single, Ijoba Orun, which has since become the Nigerian church’s call-to-action for those seeking to become “born again”. Ijoba Orun is a mellow and soulful cut, and Lara did absolute justice to it with her skilled vocals.

    Opomulero — Angel

    As a kid, Opomulero (2009) by Angel signalled gospel music’s complete shift from the stereotype to elements of secular pop instrumentals and delivery. Opomulero didn’t just eat as a party jam, it was the go-to for choreography presentations across Nigerian primary and secondary schools.

    Joy, Joy, Joy — Destined Kids

    “Joy, joy, joy in my heart is ringing” was on the lips of every kid when it came out in 2008. The Iwueze siblings (Favour, Rejoice, Joshua, Best and Caleb) had everywhere in a chokehold when they debuted with Joy Joy Joy, the first volume of their gospel music installations.

  • I Had a “Spoilt” Upbringing, by Nigerian Standards

    This week, a young girl shared a TikTok video of her parents’ reaction to her request for an iPhone 8, striking up a conversation about Nigerian parents and their preferred parenting styles that tend to border on abuse.

    Angel (22) had a different Nigerian upbringing. She talks about experiencing gentle parenting with her mother and grandma, and how it’s made her a self-assured adult.

    This is Angel’s story, as told to Boluwatife 

    Image designed by Freepik

    Corporal punishment is the average Nigerian parent’s default when a child misbehaves. That wasn’t the case for me. And I did misbehave— a lot.

    My mother had me very young, while still schooling in the university. So, I spent most of my formative years living with my grandmother in Abuja. 

    I was a troublesome, extroverted child. So much so that I was already sneaking out to go play by six years old. We had only recently moved to Maraba then. My grandma thought the new environment was unsafe, so she thought it best to keep me at home with my nine-year-old uncle (whom I called “brother”) when she was away. An older uncle was supposed to watch us, but my brother and I would time him. Immediately he started washing plates, we’d run to a fence close to my house and jump over it.

    One day, during our usual running escapade, I suddenly developed cold feet when I climbed the fence. I became scared of jumping down, and when my brother got tired of talking me into jumping, he left. I later jumped after a while, but instead of going to look for him, I decided to play with a neighbour’s son on a nearby farm instead.

    Only, we were playing with lighters, and before you could say jack, I’d burned down the entire corn farm to ashes. Luckily, the mother of the boy I was playing with pleaded with the farm’s owner on our behalf and my grandma never knew. Even if she did, she didn’t believe in spanking.

    I remember when, still at six years old, I created a dance group with about six other girls, and we were practising to show off our moves at a neighbour’s birthday party. We called our dance group “Hottie Pop Girls” and really thought we’d get to Maltina’s dance all competition. 

    On the day of the party, I was excited to get to the venue as soon as possible, but my grandma asked us to wait a while. That didn’t sit right with me, and I angrily threw a stone at our window louvres and broke a couple of them. She didn’t beat or shout at me. Instead, she said, “Well, now you aren’t going to the party.” I had to sit and hear all the festivities. It was painful, but as usual, she explained how actions have consequences, and how my impatience had cost me something I wanted. At that moment, I wished she’d just punish me and let me go to the party, but that wasn’t her way.

    I was nine years old when I got into boarding secondary school, and that’s when I started living with my mum in Kaduna. She was pretty much on the same wavelength as my grandma when it came to discipline: calm, rational and believed in conversation.

    In JSS 2, I got into a fight with a classmate who’d taken a letter from my bag to read without my permission. The fight led to me getting suspended from the hostel for two weeks because even though the other person had started it, she falsely accused me of ripping out her hair. When school authorities called my mum to inform her, she immediately defended me. She asked if a proper investigation had been carried out, knowing I wouldn’t just pick a fight for the sake of it. The school insisted, so she came to pick me up. 

    That day was our inter-house sports day, so she took me to the stadium and bought me snacks and a yoghurt. She allowed me to explain what happened and never once questioned me. She even bought food for my classmates at the stadium too, including the girl who’d falsely accused me. The school later did an investigation and apologised to me, but my mum never doubted me for a second. She taught me always to speak my truth, regardless of who believed me or not.

    It’s not like I was a saint. I got into trouble with neighbours too, but when they came to report me, she’d defend me in their presence but then show me the error of my ways when we were alone. With her, I never had to hide anything. She made sure I could tell her even the most uncomfortable things, like when I started getting attention from boys. She never used whatever I said or did against me, and we’d always just talk and talk.

    There was a time I almost burned the house down. I returned from school extremely tired and hungry, so I started cooking. I was watching TV at the same time and somehow fell asleep. By the time my mum returned home, I was still sleeping, but the kitchen was on fire, and smoke was seeping into the sitting room. She put off the fire, woke me up and took me outside. I was expecting her to shout or ask why I was so careless, but she hugged me and told me not to try to cook when I was tired. It was like, “Don’t put yourself in this kind of danger. Just buy bread when you’re tired instead. Collect it on credit if you don’t have money, and I’ll pay.” That was the kind of relationship we had.

    I sat for WAEC in 2015 and passed all my subjects except Maths. Even on the exam day, I knew I’d done rubbish. So, when I came out of the hall, I put a call through to her and said I’d messed up. She encouraged me to think positively and wait for the results.

    I was on holiday with my grandma when the results came out. As expected, I failed, and I was devastated. My grandma had the funniest reaction. She was like, “Why are you crying because of only one fail? Come and eat.” 


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    My mum saw how bad I felt and just encouraged me to focus on the GCE alternative. She got me a math tutor, and I passed— end of story.

    I had a “spoilt” upbringing by Nigerian standards, seeing as I was never spoken to harshly or punished unnecessarily, but it’s made me a very self-assured adult. Even when I got into uni and would get mocked for being so skinny, I’d remember how loved I was at home, and soon the comments stopped getting to me. It was also when I got older that I realised not everyone had the privilege of growing up in a place where they were actually talked and listened to. 

    I had this roommate in my first year in uni who came from an extremely strict background. It was basically taboo for her to talk to boys. When she experienced freedom in school, she started running after every Tom, Dick and Harry. It was like she was set free and didn’t know how to handle herself. It was strange to me because I was trusted with freedom from a young age and didn’t think it was anything special. It made me grateful for my background.

    I grew up with so much assurance, and it’s such that even the people I call friends now show me the same type of assurance. It’s a continuous cycle. That’s definitely what I want to pass across to my children, regardless of the Nigerian status quo.


    NEXT READ: I Was Happier When I Stopped Sending My Parents Money

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  • “What’s It Like Growing Up Too Fast?” — We Asked These Nigerians

    “I became the third parent” — Tola, 27

    I’m a first-born daughter and that meant that from an early age, I had to fill in for my mum who had a full-time job. I hated every minute of it because I didn’t even know what I was doing. I learned to cook at age 7 and I was in charge of all house chores. I thought it’d get better when I left for university, and it did for a while. But then I graduated from school and got an awesome job. I started making my own money, and requests for financial assistance have been pouring in from everyone. I’m back here, living my life for them, and it feels like there’ll never be an end to it.

    “Losing my dad forced me to grow up” — Daniel, 24

     I had a sheltered background, but everything changed when I lost my dad. I was 16 at the time, and I had two other siblings. My mum was a petty trader, so we quickly went from being relatively comfortable to very poor. What made it worse was that we weren’t close to the extended family, and my parents were all I had. 

    I had to make money to survive somehow because my mother still had two kids (14 and 12) to take care of. I started with the easiest thing I could think of — laundry. I was washing clothes for my classmates for ₦‎200 a piece, even missing classes sometimes. I quickly became popular for this and soon started my own laundromat in school. My grades weren’t bad, but I’d gotten too preoccupied with making money that I’d lost interest in school.

    Eventually, I discovered tech through a friend and started learning how to code. I was 19 at this point and I already had a lot of money saved up from my business. I shut it down to focus on school and coding. I graduated at 20 and got my first job two months before graduation. In many ways, losing my dad forced me to grow up faster. Even though I’m sad that he’s gone, I’m still grateful for the road that brought me here.

    “I wasn’t ready to go to the university when I did” — Feyi, 29

    Growing up, I was the ideal child. I was well-behaved, got good grades, and made my parents proud. I even skipped two classes in secondary school and got into the university at 14. It’s not that I was done with secondary school, but I’d taken JAMB and GCE in SS2 and passed really well. I got admitted to study medicine and my life pretty much looked like a straight line towards becoming a doctor at 20.

    I got into school and quickly found out how brutal it was. I wasn’t used to the long classes. I’d never lived outside of home, and I didn’t even know how to take care of myself outside the influence of my parents. But that was easy to learn. The hardest part was blending in with people who were several years older than me. 

    I had classmates who had boyfriends, and who’d talk about sex like it wasn’t a big deal. Meanwhile, the closest thing I ever had to a boyfriend was a class crush that lasted one term. I didn’t even know “Netflix and Chill” meant something else until my third year in school. 

    Even though I’ve always been proud of the fact that I grew up fast and had excellent grades, I realized that I had poor social skills.Growing up too fast had done nothing to prepare me for life in school.

    “My parents were never around so I had no choice” — Ibrahim, 22

    My parents worked late every day, and they went to parties on weekends. It also didn’t help that I was the first of  five kids. We used to have a maid, but she was sent away after she had a physical fight with my mum. Somehow, all her duties were transferred to me when I was only 8. 

    I’d take care of my siblings after school and wash their uniforms. I cooked most of the food we ate, and I did most of the chores around the house, with my siblings doing as little as possible because they were really young. The worst part was that I had mischievous siblings, who made sure I always got into trouble with our parents for things they did. That gave me a huge sense of responsibility to keep them in check. It’s probably why I’m such a control freak now. But looking back, the experience gave me invaluable life skills.

    “I started working when I was 15” — Amaka, 25

    My family fell on hard times after my father died, and my mum didn’t have enough money to support all four of us through school. After I graduated from secondary school, my mum told me to wait a few years and work before going to university. This was so she could have enough money to support my two other siblings through school.

    I started out working as a waiter at a nearby restaurant for ₦‎15,000 monthly when I should have been in school. A lot of it was demeaning and I was sacked two years later when I slapped a customer who tried to harass me. With the help of someone I met at the restaurant, I went on to learn how to import shoes from China and sell them for huge profits. In my first round of sales, I made ₦‎90,000 in profit. That was the highest amount of money I’d ever seen in my life at that time.

    I continued with the business and used the money to support the family and enrol in school. It wasn’t the most horrible experience, but it forced me to grow up and learn to fend for myself.


    NEXT READ: We Asked 7 Nigerians for the Biggest Lies They’ve Told on Their CVs


  • Watch These 13 Cartoon Intros to Relive Your Childhood Saturday Mornings

    It’s 9 a.m. on a Saturday morning. If the world made sense, you’d be in front of a TV screen watching cartoons while waiting for breakfast to be ready. But adulting has taken that away too. 

    That’s why you should watch these 13 cartoon intros to relive your childhood Saturday mornings.

    1. The Animaniacs

    https://youtu.be/whUOy_q7_vA

    2. Pinky and the Brain

    3. Cow and Chicken

    https://youtu.be/Vii7Tkejrfg

    4. Johnny Bravo

    5. Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends

    6. Ben 10

    7. The Powerpuff Girls

    8. Skunk Fu

    9. Samurai Jack

    10. My Gym Partner’s a Monkey

    11. Justice League

    12. Ed, Edd n’ Eddy

    13. Time Squad

    14. Scooby Doo

    15. Phineas and Ferb

    16. The Flintstones


    NEXT READ: 10 Best Feel-good Anime for Beginners


  • QUIZ: Can We Guess What Was Used to Discipline You As a Child?

    If you were born to Nigerian parents in Nigeria, chances are, you got ass-whopped a fair amount of times. And you see, Nigerian parents use different items to spank their kids.

    Take this quiz and we’ll guess which one was mostly used to spank you as a child.

  • 7 Childhood Snacks You’ll Miss if You Grew Up in Northern Nigeria

    When you grow up in the north, there are specific snacks that must have made your childhood. And if they didn’t, go and claim Lagos as your state. When everyone else is reminiscing about the good times of Goody Goody and baba dudu, northern kids are thinking about these seven snacks.

    Licky licky 

    If you grew up in the north and didn’t have a massive tree with yellow fruits called licky licky on your street or in your school, your childhood wasn’t complete. Scientifically, the tree is called the black velvet tamarind tree, but that’s not our business. It’s called licky licky because you suck on the fruit until it melts away in your mouth like candy. Some people chew it, but we don’t judge here.

    Fried chinge/grasshopper and yaji

    “Chinge” are those insects that gather around lightbulbs when it rains. When you fry them and eat them with seasoned pepper, your life will change forever.. Secondary school was the best because we’d have them tied in nylons and hidden somewhere for break time.

    RELATED: 6 Snacks You Ate As A Child But Would Probably Kill You Now

    Ridi

    Buying ridi after school with your last change was something special. Ridi is simply sesame seeds covered in sugar syrup, then dried and cut into different shapes and allowed to cool. So ridi is basically the candy of the north. You can’t say you grew up in the north without having memories of gathering all the ₦5 to your name to buy ridi.

    Masa

    Masa was everything. I think of it as tiny fluffy pancakes made from rice. You can imagine it as akara because, unlike pancakes, they puff up when you fry them. Even as an adult, I daydream about masa doused in suya pepper after work. Sometimes, masa is made from millet but isn’t as sweet as when it’s made with rice, so you’d want something sweet like sugar or syrup to the mix.

    RELATED: 11 Foods And Soups You Have To Try If You Find Yourself In Kaduna

    Kuli Kuli

    You can still get these outside the north, but nothing compares to the kuli kuli an elderly woman from Maiduguri or Jos prepares. Kuli kuli is basically chin chin made from groundnut. The groundnut is ground into a paste and mixed with hot water to help extract all the oil. After that, the residue is rolled into different shapes and fried with the groundnut oil you separated from the mix.

    Dankwa

    Once you put dankwa in your mouth, it melts. It was a savoury snack for long car rides or walks because you’d find it sold on almost every street. In fact, I’d say it’s one of the most accessible street snacks in and out of the north. Dankwa is made from dried millet or groundnut that’s mixed with seasoning, particularly pepper and salt, and rolled into balls. 

    Alewa

    I know I said ridi was the candy of the north, but this is the real OG. It’s literally water and sugar mixed with food colouring for variety. It may be the quickest way to die of diabetes, but alewa was everything you needed for a good day as a kid. If I wasn’t trying to outlive my grandmother, I’d still buy it almost every day.

    READ ALSO: 12 Things to Snack on if You Work From Home

  • QUIZ: If You Served 7/10 of These Punishments, You Were a Stubborn Child

    If you served at least seven of these punishments as a child, you were either stubborn or your teachers didn’t like you.

    Tick all the punishments you served:

  • How Nigerian Millennials Got Introduced to Betrayal

    When you think of betrayal, you think of lovers hurting you or friends doing unimaginable things to you, but that’s not the case for a lot of millennials.

    Before we go on, we need to ask one question: are baby boomers proud of the lies they told and the hurt they caused young millennials? 

    Here are a few ways millennials got introduced to betrayal.

    1. “Go and put on your shoes”

    Seems like a harmless statement, but this sentence was the poster phrase for betrayal. Nigerian parents, uncles and aunties broke our hearts with this phrase. Some of us almost gave up wearing shoes because shoes were synonymous with heartbreak and betrayal. 

    2. Finding thread and needle in the Danish cookie container

    Every millennial knows how good Danish cookies are. So imagine the hurt and pain when you open a Danish cookie container and find thread and needles there? Nigerian adults had several other containers they could store their thread and needles in but chose to put them in the ones that would attract the most and hurt their kids’ feelings. Peak betrayal. 

    3. Finding egusi in the Ice-Cream bowl

    Someone needs to do a study to understand the reason for this kind of wickedness. Opening up an Ice-Cream bowl (especially Supreme ice cream of those days) and finding egusi in it hurt more than finding thread and needles in cookie containers. And why must it always be egusi?!

    4. “If you tell me the truth, I promise I won’t beat you”

    Nigerian adults had a thing for lies, but no one comes close to boomer parents. You’ll tell them the truth and still get the beating of your life. We’re sure a lot of young Nigerian men are liars today because they had to tell a lot of lies to avoid getting betrayed/beat up as kids. 

    5. “Let me hold your money for you”

    Millennials being the sweet little peas they are, always trusted their parents (especially mums) to actually keep their money safe. Just imagine their shock when they asked for it in the future only to be blackmailed. Mummy, you promised to keep this money for me, not use it to feed me? 

    6.“I’ll be back soon”

    One day we’ll sit with older Nigerian parents and ask them why they had such an issue with telling the truth. You’d expect them to be back soon while waiting for several hours with a broken heart. 

  • 8 Childhood Moments Nigerian Parents and Baby Boomers Miss
    FCTA holds special Jumaat prayer for Nigerian children – Voice of Nigeria

    Childhood, we all miss those moments away from this scam called adulthood. Yours probably had the good times with Baba Dudu, early morning cartoons on NTA and rolling tyres down the street. But what are the moments from the late ’80s and early ’90s to reminisce on as a child? These eight Nigerian parents and baby boomers share moments they miss about their childhood.

    Felicia, 53

    I miss being by the water side with my mum and siblings.

    Top Popular Beaches in Lagos and their Entrance Prices - Kampari tours

    I loved visiting the pool at Federal Palace and Sheraton Hotel almost every Sunday. When we didn’t have money, we would go to the beach. My mum wanted so much for us to experience life outside of Mushin. We weren’t rich, but she never wanted us to feel like we couldn’t afford to enjoy life just because we didn’t belong to the upper class. The only thing I hated about being by the pool or beach was having to wear a skirt over my swimsuit. As much as my mum wanted us to live life, she was strictly against us ever showing our bodies.

    Kunle, 48

    My fondest memories are at Bar Beach with my dad, mum and sister.

    See Lagos Bar Beach in the 1960s, and What It Looks Like Today (Photos)

    The beaches in Lagos were different when I was 10. I wish I could go back to the drive up to Victoria Island on sunny days and the walk up to the sandy beach, while holding my dad’s hands as I struggled to get sand out of my shoes. I loved to ride the horses along the shore and feel the jolt of each gallop each time the rider holding me jerked the reins. If I could, I’d totally go back to those sunny days at Bar beach, but I’d probably skip one of the last few times we visited. I was casually chilling in the ocean with my dad when an under current almost carried me away. Luckily, my dad was a powerful swimmer so he managed to pull me out before I got too far. 

    Onyeche, 52

    The best thing about my childhood was spending time with my grandmother at Boji-Boji, Agbor in Delta State.

    96 Africa Poverty Child Grandmother Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty-Free  Images - iStock

    It was back in the 1980s, and I can still remember spending nights at her quaint house during my holidays from secondary school. She never stressed me with chores like my mum. All she did was ask, “Che, what would you like to eat?” My answer was always roasted corn and pear/coconut. My siblings always found it annoying to request the same thing all the time, but I really didn’t care and grandma never complained either. On the few days she ignored my request, she’d give me money to buy delicious rice or beans with plantain from Mama Ogugua’s canteen behind the house. Right now, I’m looking for who can feed me like this because adulthood has tired me.

    Aisha, 60

    I miss the peace I experienced in Kaduna before the religious crises.

    10 Beautiful Places In Kaduna State - PropertyPro Insider

    I haven’t been back since my mum and I left for Ibadan in 1983. I’d love to relive the moments sleeping underneath the mango tree when it got too hot inside the house. There was no fear of being robbed or killed in the middle of the night and we could sleep outside our home. It was so good that I could pack up my things from school in Ibadan and get a bus going to Kaduna State as late as 7 p.m. without any fear. I don’t have any reason to go back now, but I wish I could.

    Adeyemi, 57

    I can still remember the Afro-Brazilian festivals during Christmas and New Year on Lagos Island as a young boy.

    Is Nigeria's Brazilian heritage under threat? | Arts and Culture | Al  Jazeera

    I miss hiding to watch the different masquerades — Egungun, Oiko, Abey, and Eyo — from Campos Square. I enjoyed the drumming and dancing as the colourful outfits of the masquerades moved along the streets. I miss walking from house to house to wish the elders Merry Christmas,  collecting pennies in return, and later sitting on the floor with my friends as we ate from  trays of rice and stew. 

    Imaobong, 63

    I miss the days of being friends with my siblings.

    It’s one thing to be bonded by blood, but we actually loved to spend time gisting with one another late into the night at our family home in Calabar. Everything changed when we entered secondary school and made other friends. We weren’t as close and some of my siblings ended up in gangs that made them different. I’d give anything to just be able to sit with them again and talk like we once did. 

    Tunde, 55

    A lovely memory I would like to relive of my mornings as a child in Obalende.

    Lagos govt gives Obalende shanty owners 48 hours to quit - Punch Newspapers

    I come from a polygamous home, so nobody really bothered about what I spent my time doing. I would wake up and go to Dodan Barracks to watch young privates/soldiers on their morning parades. I loved joining them from behind and marching along as the commander led the parade round the barracks. After that, I would walk through the European Quarters like Rumens Road, Gerald Road, Alexander Street, Bourdillon, and Queen’s Drive (now Kofo Abayomi street), plucking mangoes. My strolls would usually end with me swimming at the lagoon or fishing. 

    Emeka, 65

    There were many interesting moments as a young boy but watching football with my boys in Teslim Balogun Stadium and National Stadium tops the bunch.

    Fans Applaud Sanwo-Olu For Igniting Teslim Stadium With AFCON Tie, Want  More Eagles Matches In Lagos - P.M.EXPRESS

    If a match was 4 p.m., we would arrive at 11 a.m. to enjoy the music and fun activities before a game. On the days we didn’t have the money to make it into the stadium, we would scale the fence or wait for the gates to be opened during half time. Sometimes it would get so rowdy that the guards would have to throw tear gas at the people gathering around the gate after a match. I’ve stopped watching football now, but I wouldn’t mind one more moment of cheering at a Nigerian FA Cup or Principal Cup match at the stadium.

  • QUIZ: If You Watched 32/40 Of These TV Shows, You Had A Lit Childhood

    There’s no doubt that this list will have you reminiscing if you had a lit childhood. Try it and see.

    Select all the shows you watched:

  • QUIZ: If You Had Friends With 12/20 Of These Names, You Were A Really Obedient Kid

    You think we can’t figure out how obedient you were as a child? Try us:

    Tick the names of friends you had in your childhood:


  • 6 Things From Our Nigerian Childhood That Really Fell Off

    Don’t you just miss those nostalgic experiences from your Nigerian childhood? Now that we’re journeying through this adulting maze, some things just seem to have fallen off.

    Here are six of them.

    1. Five Naira

    Before you argue, think about this: how often do you see a five Naira note these days? This denomination is so useless now that even two of it can’t buy pure water. What a waste. .

    2. Junior WAEC result

    All the days and nights you spent studying to prove you are worthy of being promoted to Senior Secondary School in the mud. Better go and sell your Junior WAEC result to Akara sellers so that they can make their daily 30k.

    3. One thousand Naira

    Remember those rare visitors who used to dash you money during festive periods as a kid? If you were lucky to get one thousand Naira then, omo, it’d feel like you’d made it in life. Now, those glory days are over. One thousand Naira is the new ten Naira. Life tuff.

    4. Business centres

    The good old days of 20 Naira per minute when you sneak out and pay someone to use their phone to talk to your crush without worrying that your strict Nigerian parents would catch you are over. Now, they mostly sell recharge cards or offer POS services. Team Gen Z cannot relate sha.

    5. Home video rental stores

    Netflix who? These OGs saved lives back in the late 2000s; from Naruto to Avatar, and every “Jackie Chan” movie, there was always something new to rent.

    6. Street Games

    How many kids do you catch outside playing suwe, ten ten, or heavenly king these days? The games that make us nostalgic about our childhoods have almost gone extinct thanks to smart devices. But hey, tech is the future. Who are we to complain?

    [newsletter]

    Spread the nostalgia! Share this with a childhood friend of yours.

  • 16 Nigerians Talk About The Most Ridiculous Things They Believed As Kids

    When I was a kid, I believed rain fell because an Angel left taps running in heaven. My older sister told me that, although she vehemently denies it. I was curious to know other ridiculous things people believed as kids and I got a lot of funny responses. Which of these did you also believe?

    Sandy

    1. If you poured the water you used to watch clothes on your legs, someone was going to lie against you. 
    2. I believed that if you stood under an umbrella when it was not raining, it was going to rain on your wedding day. 
    3. I believed that if you stood while eating, the food will go to your legs instead of your stomach. Also, if you laid down while eating, the food wouldn’t give you strength and if you got into a fight with someone you’re much older than, the person automatically becomes stronger than you and beats you up. 

    Ty

    1. Standing in the wind long enough would make me fly.
    2.  Looking at your shadow can make a person ugly.
    3. I thought looking at the moon would give you blue eyes.

    Faye

    1. I believed that if you threw your agbalumo on the wall 7 times and rubbed it between your palms, it would become sweeter.
    2. I also believed that rubber bands sucked my blood and that I had to lick my blood when I bleed, so I won’t lose blood.
    3. When you shared cooked eggs with someone, it meant you’re sharing your heart with them.

    Gabriel

    1. If you make a wish when you see a shooting star pass by, your wish will come to pass. I’ve seen a shooting star twice and I am still broke AF.
    2. When your teeth removes and you don’t throw them on the rooftop with seven stones, they won’t grow back.
    3. If you have a sore throat, it means you spat on the floor and someone stepped on it before it dried up.
    4. When you walk over burning ash from wood with your laps spread out, it’ll make bedwetting painful and ultimately stop it.

    Lola

    1. I believed if your teeth fell off, you had to throw it on a roof or bury it for it to grow back – I always threw it on the roof.
    2. If I plucked my lashes and put them on my head while holding the thought that a particular person should forget about me, they’d forget. I nearly pulled out all my eyelashes one day, hoping my maths teacher will forget about me, but he still remembered to flog me.

    Jay

    1. When you swallow agbalumo seed, a tree would grow in your stomach.
    2. If the sun was shining and it was raining at the same time, it meant an elephant was giving birth.
    3. If I didn’t throw my tooth on the roof and a lizard saw it in my hand, it meant my tooth would never grow back.

    Dami

    1. If you look at the mirror before you sleep you will have a nightmare.
    2. When rain fell, it meant angels were crying in heaven.

    Chidi

    1. I believed putting thread on the head helped with hiccups. It’s strange how I know it’s silly but can’t say it didn’t work.
    2. White birds (Leke Leke) gave me white fingers. 
    3. I believed that at the sight of a hawk if I bent any of my index fingers backwards and raised it in the direction of the bird, it would hypnotize the bird and make it fall. The more people doing it per time, the more effective it was. Frankly, I can’t say it didn’t work.

    Oyinda

    1. If you swallow agbalumo seed, a tree would grow in your stomach.
    2. When the sun was shining and it was raining at the same time, it meant an elephant was giving birth.
    3. If I didn’t throw my tooth on the roof and a lizard saw it in my hand, it meant my tooth would never grow back.

    Itohan

    1. I used to think that 10k was enough money to send someone from JS1 till they finish University. Ten thousand NAIRA oo.
    2. If I swallowed a seed, the whole tree will grow in my stomach.

    Tammy

    1. I thought clouds were made of cotton candy and that there was an all-you-can-eat buffet in heaven.
    2.  Also believed that thing about your child looking like someone because they crossed over your leg.
    3. I thought rain fell because Angels were either watering plants, crying or showering and that was why it rained.

    Erica

    I believed and still kinda believe that when it rains and you put out your hand, if lightning strikes, your hand will be paralysed forever in the form it was when the lightning struck.

    Kiki

    I believed that If I broke the television I could enter it and live with the actors.

    Imole

    I believe that the sun would make me lighter because it was bright. I would always stay outside whenever the sun is very bright just so I could get fair. Imagine my disappointment when I found out that it would only make me get darker.

    Ella

    My brother told me that if I sprayed perfume or put some body lotion in my butt and when I fart it won’t smell (he actually said it will scent greatly). I stupidly did it too. 

    Chichi

    I used to believe that people had sex through their navel. For some reason, I thought that was where babies came out from, so that’s how women got pregnant.

  • 6 Nigerian Women Talk About Having Strict Parents

    Women are raised differently. These six Nigerian women talk about what it’s like having strict parents .

    Christabelle, 20

    I had to create a whole new personality especially for them. I have a bunch of interests like photography, video editing, graphic design, music but they don’t know that. like they know nothing about any of my hobbies. Also, I’m not particularly nice to my family because I am always on edge. I can’t introduce my friends to them because unlike me, my friends are openly wayward. There was a period in my life where I never texted people partly because my dad used to randomly go through my phone.

    Temi, 20

    I’ve learned to keep a lot to myself. I don’t talk about anything, and I stopped asking for permission to go anywhere because it was always futile. My lying skills have been perfected, and they think they know me but they only know the me I’ve shown them.

    Tamilore, 18

    I have strict anti social parents. My parents don’t have friends and their family isn’t close-knit so I don’t any sort of relationship with my relatives. We’re like an island. I’ve never attended a wedding, birthday party, naming ceremony, stayed at my cousins’, that kind thing. I start to lie instinctively around them like a compulsive liar. I don’t think about it too much, it just flows. I pick and choose when to lie and they trust me because they’ve never caught me. My parents don’t think I need fun, so they don’t think I do anything for fun.

    Esther, 20

    I was warned to never have a social media account from a very tender age, but I was curious so I made a Facebook account and my parents found it. I knew hell that day. My mum kicked and punched me. I couldn’t fight back, so I just sat there and let her beat me. I was 15 at the time. Rebelling was something I had to teach myself because they will control any and everything they can. I got my first phone when I was 17, and I bought it for myself. My dad once beat me up, stripped me, punished me all night and woke up at midnight to beat me again because he found my Instagram. I always tell people, no one can hurt me more than my parents have. There’s no insult that can hurt me cause I’ve heard it all from my parents before.

    Omawunmi, 21

    My dad’s strictness is him being extremely security cautious, but my mum? I feel like she’s projecting because she knew what she was doing at my age. When my brother does something, suddenly my mum doesn’t remember you can beat someone with a lamp charger.

    Onome, 19

    Having strict parents means I get left out of things because I’m not allowed to go out. I’m incapable of maintaining a friendship with extroverted people because they always want to go somewhere. I’m 19 and can’t go out without my parents’ permission and them taking me there.

    For more articles on women and what they do, click here


  • What She Said: I Didn’t Like My Mum Until I Had Therapy

    The subject of this week’s What She Said is a 26-year-old Nigerian woman. She talks about the trauma she faced growing up with her mum, her dad leaving and how therapy improved her relationship with her mum.

    Tell me about your earliest memory.

    Growing up, I was very stubborn. I used to get into a lot of trouble, and my mum would beat me. There was a phase I was convinced she hated me. I used to ask if she was really my mother. 

    Does any incident come to mind? 

    I wouldn’t do my chores, so I would chop beating for that. If she asked me to do anything, I wouldn’t do it. I don’t remember my siblings getting beaten as much as I was.

    Tell me about a striking memory of your mum.

    I remember three distinct memories. When I was in primary school, I was smart. First to third — that was usually my position. There was one term I came tenth; my mother wanted to kill me. We lived in a face-me-I-face-you compound. She pursued me around it. I had to run for cover to my neighbour’s because she was going to beat the living daylight out of me.

    Omo.

    Another memory was in secondary school. After school, I would wait with my friend for her parent’s car to come pick her; meanwhile, I’d take a bus home. School closed at 3 p.m., and I would wait till 6 p.m., so I usually got home late. My mother would warn me, but I ignored her. One day, she got home before me. When I did, the beating no get part two.

    The last memory I have is traumatic for me. I think I’ve forgiven her now. When I was 13, my landlady’s son had an older friend or family living with them. I and the guy were close. It was nothing sexual, and I know that a lot of adults cannot fathom when the opposite sexes are chummy with each other — for good reason, with all sexual assault stories we hear. Anyway, someone told my mum that I said I wanted to have sex with him. According to this person, I said: “I’m going to be 13 soon, so he can disvirgin me.”

    She believed this person over me. At night, she came to room and asked me if I planned to be anything in life. She said other mean things. It affected our relationship and how I saw her.

    I’m sorry you experienced this. 

    It’s funny because I didn’t even have sex till I was 25.

    What’s something that changes when you feel like you can’t trust your mum?

    Our relationship was fraught. Since she didn’t trust me or believe me, I couldn’t confide in her. I confided in my sister or dad instead. My dad didn’t live with us — she did — so you’d expect she would know all my shit. But she didn’t have any idea, and it was largely because of that.

    Where was your dad?

    He was with his other family.

    Oh?

    He had two wives, and he lived with the other wife and kids. My mum is the second wife but she had the first child so she’s regarded as the first. My dad was really desperate for kids. People say the other wife jazzed him because he decided to stay with her. He used to visit occasionally. 

    I— Tell me about your relationship with your sister.

    Haha. We used to fight a lot, but we were close. I’m outspoken and she’s calm. It made other people think I was rude. Though she’s secretive, we share things. I told her when I had sex for the first time. She knew when I had a sugar daddy. She knows everything about me.

    A particular memory is when I was a teenager, there was an older guy asking her to meet him in a funny place. She was going to go, and I followed her and stayed around.

    Love it. Walk me through how you landed a sugar daddy. I’m asking for a friend.

    In 2015 my friend, who was a runs girl, introduced me, but it never really took off because I was not sexually active. He literally just kissed me out of the blue and I was like huh? Last year, he reached out again, and I told him his actions were rapey. He apologised and we hung out. People get cars and houses from their sugar runs, but I got mostly change.

    How did your relationship with your mum affect you?

    I only saw her as a provider. I loved her because she was my mum and she got me things. 

    How is your relationship with your mum now?

    It’s better. I had to get therapy in 2018 because there was a period I resented her — everything she did irritated me. I see her as a person now. I’m more open with her though I didn’t tell her when I started having sex because I was trying to protect my good girl image that she had.  We’re consciously building our relationship.

    When you say we, did she get therapy too?

    No. But she was willing to admit she’s not infallible. I berated her for a lot of the mistakes that she made, especially with my dad. We also have a lot of conversations. I was going to organise therapy for my mum, but she doesn’t believe in it. “I go just sidon dey tell person my life? I no fit.”

    How did you decide on therapy? 

    I was working in a coaching organisation and I had free access to therapists. I’d used therapy for other issues and decided to try it with this. 

    Tell me your happiest memory of your dad.

    I don’t remember. When I got older — 17 — we started fighting a lot because I realised his shortcomings. It wasn’t just my mum with issues; he had his faults too. He died when in 2015. Now that I think about it, I may have daddy issues. 

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here. 

  • QUIZ: Only Nigerians Above 23 Can Complete 9/13 Childhood Insults

    If you grew up in Nigeria around the late 80s and early 90s, then you definitely said these insults to both your friends and enemies. How well do you remember what happened after you messed?

    Test your memory:

  • 8 Things You Took For Granted As A Child But You Now Miss

    Childhood was probably the peak of our lives. Free food, no rent, no responsibilities and plenty of fun. Until we were scammed into adulthood, which we all know is the absolute ghetto. Sometimes I wonder about the things I would bring back from my childhood if I could.

    1. Naps.

    Remember how you had to be forced to take naps? What wouldn’t you give to be able to take naps freely now?

    2. Being taken care of you when you’re sick.

    The biggest scam of adulthood has to be you having to take care of yourself when you’re sick

    3. Pocket money.

    Pocket money used to land without having to work for it. God when again?

    4. Someone to carry you to bed when you sleep off.

    Remember how you’d sleep off in front of the TV and mysteriously find yourself in your bed the next morning? Now if you sleep off in front of the TV, that’s where you’ll meet yourself. When you’re ready, you’ll carry yourself to the room.

    A parenting anecdote: The rigors of getting a child to sleep

    5. Money from visitors.

    Receiving money from visitors was such a childhood flex. Your uncle would visit and crisp 500 naira notes would land in your palms when they were leaving. Now they assume that because you’re grown, you don’t need it anymore. Please it is now that I need it the most.

    6. Being carried.

    Being carried around when you were a kid felt terrific. Not going to lie, I won’t say no to it now.

    Black Middle Aged Man Carrying His Son On His Shoulders In The.. Stock  Photo, Picture And Royalty Free Image. Image 111696844.

    7. Having a bedtime.

    A standard beahviour was grumbling at bedtime because you didn’t want to go to bed. Now, if I get to sleep by 1am, I consider myself lucky.

    12 Good Habits Parents Need to Teach their Kids — Greensprings School

    8. Not having responsibilities.

    Having no responsibilities. The responsibilities that come with adulting are from the devil. Paying your own hospital bills, paying for your own food, paying rent, sending money home, maintaining your car and having a life were a  lot  more expensive that you would have thought. God abeg.

    IF YOU DON'T PROTECT YOUR CHILDREN, WHO WILL?

    Read: 13 Names For Men When You’ve Forgotten Their Names

  • QUIZ: Score 9/13 To Prove That You Had A Proper Nigerian Childhood

    I feel like every single person that grew up in Nigeria had the same childhood. So, that’s why this quiz shouldn’t be too difficult.

    Give it a try below:

    11 Quizzes For People Who Grew Up In Nigeria

    Prove your Nigerian-ness. Take these quizzes.

  • 10 Superstitions About Food Every Nigerian Believed Growing Up

    Childhood was the ghetto because we believed so many ridiculous things. Here are some of the unforgivable things I believed as a child.

    Laugh at your own peril:

    1) If your food falls on the floor, Satan has eaten it.

    Satan can’t do fit-fam in peace without blasphemy.

    2) If you want grow taller, eat beans.

    Crying from my 5’6 palace of gold. What matters the most is how I perceive myself sha. My personality is at least 6’5.

    3) Eating fish head makes you bad at math.

    Alexa, play olodo rabata.

    4) If you eat chicken bum bum, you will be an amebo.

    *Instablog 9ja left the chat*

    5) Coconut water makes you dull.

    *Sips* tell *sips* me *sips* more.

    6) Eating with your left hand means you are eating with the devil.

    huhuhuhu.

    7) If you eat your meat before finishing your food, you will grow up to be a thief.

    Well, bring my mask and a gun.

    8) Drinking Garri worsens your eyesight.

    Who off light? Why can’t I read this post?

    9) If you put banana peel under your armpit and get flogged, you will faint.

    I did this and Mr Idowu still gave me twenty strokes that day. Tell me why I didn’t faint.

    10) If you sing to Agbalumo, it will be sweet.

    Alkaline tears.

    What food myths did you believe growing up? Share in the comments section.

    Oh, by the way, you should totally read this next: 7 Funny Souvenirs From Nigerian Weddings That Actually…Exist?

  • QUIZ: Do You Remember Nigerian Myths From Your Childhood?

    Growing up in Nigeria, there were a lot of ridiculous myths we all believed. From food combinations that could kill to ways to make your tooth grow back, our younger selves were just too gullible. Now, many years later, we want to see if you remember some of those myths.

    Test your memory:

  • What The Hell Happened To These Childhood Songs?

    Long before we had Burna boy or Mr. Eazi, we had songs with local spice. Even though they didn’t have the greatest lyrics, they made us dance. And some even had moral instructions for us. Part of me wishes we had the adult version of these songs that made childhood a lot more bearable. I keep wondering: What happened to them? Where did they go? Give me a name.

    #bringbackthesechildhoodsongs

    #weneednewsongs

    1) Wherever you go.

    Do not say YES where you need to say NO. This is the most adult instruction eight year old me didn’t know he needed to hear. Next time someone from work asks me to do something I don’t want to do, I am just going to sing this song to them.

    2) Paw paw.

    Stay with me here. Paw paw is a kind of fruit, sweet like sugar, yellow like Fanta, everyone loves paw paw. The confidence of these lyrics is how I want to approach adult life. Because it must be crack.

    3) Parents listen to your children.

    We already know this one failed to do its job because Nigerian parents surely do not listen to their children. And with the age range of our president and politicians, we are definitely not the leaders of tomorrow. But the song made us happy sha.

    4) Some have food.

    Ah. Take me back to the time where my biggest worry was “Jesus come and eat, Satan go away.” These days we don’t even bless the food, we just eat it.

    5) Holiday is coming.

    The adult version should be “Holiday is coming, holiday is coming, no more 5 am alarms, no more Slack messages, goodbye employer, goodbye capitalism, I am going to spend my jolly one month leave. One month leave.”

    6) Home my Home.

    When shall I see my home, when shall I see my native fowl? I will never forget my home! – Me singing this song from Canada.

  • 7 Things We Now Desperately Miss From Our Nigerian Childhood

    “Don’t grow up, it’s a trap” but we didn’t listen. Now, here we are, all grown, reading this post about a time we wanted to so desperately leave behind.

    Here are some things we now miss:

    1) Exchange rate.

    I miss the days of 1 Dollar = 150 Naira.

    2) Proper holidays.

    I can’t believe I ever complained about being free from June till August without having money worries. I am sorry, Mum and Dad.

    3) Being carefree.

    Need that child-like lack of awareness during these Corona over-information times.

    4) Saturday morning cartoons.

    I can’t remember the last time I gave something my complete attention like this.

    5) Birthday excitement.

    This used to be exciting to look forward to because of sharing of cake and biscuits with friends. And especially not giving your haters anything.

    6) Looking forward to Sundays.

    As a child, Sunday = Jollof rice and enjoyment.

    As an adult, Sunday = Office email and plan for the week.

    7) Copious amounts of restless energy.

    The older you get, the more tired you become. Because I recall a time where I could do 5 intense activities in a day and not get tired. However, these days, if I climb the stairs twice, it’s a wrap for that day.

    What’s up, Zikoko Fam? It would mean the world to us if you spared a few minutes to fill this Reader Survey. It’s so we can bring you the content you really want!

  • 14 Dumb But Extremely Hilarious Things We Believed As Children

    I promise you that this is not nostalgia, but why did I have to grow up? Childhood was fun because things were simpler and I didn’t overthink. Also, it was easier to take anything at face value.

    As an adult, not so much. Overthinking left and right.

    Here is a list of absolutely silly yet funny things we all believed as kids growing up:

    1) Ojuju Calabar.

    If you don’t go to bed at a particular time, a mysterious monster would come and carry you. It’s so funny that as an adult you wish it exists so you don’t have to go to work the next day. Come out, you coward!

    2) Touch to impregnate.

    If you sit next to a girl or hold her hands, she will get pregnant and other tales.

    3) Adulthood is fun.

    Seeing adults sleep anytime they wanted to and also being able to buy anything convinced us that growing up was utopia. LOL!

    If only I could turn back the hands of time.

    4) Parents have all the answers.

    It’s only funny when you think about it that you realize that as a child, the go-to answer for any problem was “I’ll tell my mummy for you.”

    So, that she will do what exactly?

    5) Satan is on the floor.

    Food falls on the floor and you assume Satan has eaten out of the food. Cute.

    6) Children come from heaven.

    God gives kids. Periodt.

    7) Actors die in real life.

    Seeing an actor off the screen and running away because you saw them die in a Nollywood movie on T.v. Screaming ghost, ghost everywhere.

    8) Age of players displayed on their jerseys.

    Maybe I am alone in this one but I thought players had their age shown on their jerseys. I didn’t question why a full-grown person had number 1 on their back.

    9) If you lie once, hell-fire straight.

    I was raised that one lie = hellfire. Thank goodness God is merciful because…

    10) People live inside Television.

    Saying goodnight to people inside the Telly because I thought they slept inside.

    11) We could all be Presidents.

    “I want to be President of Nigeria” was the most common answer to questions about the future. Lewl.

    12) Whistle at night and snakes will come.

    How??? Is it like catcalling the snake?

    13) Swallow seed and it’ll grow in your stomach.

    Man, how??

    14) When the sun is out and it’s raining, a lion is giving birth.

    Damn.

  • QUIZ: What Did You Want To Be When You Grew Up?

    Growing up as a Nigerian, there were very few career options to aspire to, unless you wanted your parents to kick you out. So, we’ve created a quiz that can guess what your younger self hoped to become, whether it was a doctor, a pilot or a lawyer.

    Take and see if we got it right:

  • 6 Money Moments From Your Nigerian Childhood

    1) Not dropping offering money so you can buy ice cream after church.

    God pls forgive me

    2) Your parents offering to help you “save” the money visitors dash you.

    Mummy, where is my 1 million?

    3) Keeping the change when you run an errand.

    Turn up

    4) Greeting the visitor over and over again so they will drop money.

    Help me pls.

    5) Slightly inflating the price of textbooks.

    6) Volunteering to wash clothes in the hope of seeing free money inside pockets.

    Rich!

  • 7 Games That Prove You Had A Nigerian Childhood

    Growing up in Nigeria can be all shades of awesome, weird and just plain insane, depending on the kind of Nigerian parents you had. But, the awesomeness of playground time cannot be disputed, sometimes I want to shed off this adult skin and dance in the rain while playing suwe or ten-ten.

    We’ve listed seven games that make us reminisce about our childhood. Do you remember any?

    Ten-Ten

    This involves a lot of hand and leg movement; clapping your hands against your partner’s in a fast rhythm while moving your legs in a opposite direction to theirs, trying to best them.

    Suwe

    Multiple squares are drawn within a big rectangle on the floor, then each player hops on one leg after throwing a pebble in a square. The goal is to avoid stepping on the square with the pebble in it.

    Boju-Boju

    This is Nigeria’s equivalent of hide and seek. The only difference being that the seeker must sing; “boju-boju, oloro nbo, shey kin shi? (close your eyes, close your eyes, a maquerade is coming, should I open my eyes?)” while others find hiding places until they give permission to the seeker to open his/her eyes.

    Who Is In The Garden?

    After forming “a big circle like your mother’s cooking pot”, the next step is for someone to get within the circle then begin a call and response chant; “Who is in the garden? A little fine girl. Can I come and see her? No no no no. I beg my sister/brother follow me.

    I Call On!

    This is an indoor game that requires each player to write the letters of the alphabet on a notebook, then proceed to write names of people, places, animals, fruits and things that begins with any letter that is called on. The player with the highest results wins.

    Who Stole The Meat From The Cooking Pot?

    This is also a call and response outdoor game that also involves forming a circle. An accusation of who stole the imaginary meat is made and everyone shifts the blame, you are out of the game if you get caught unaware with no response ready.

    Number one stole the meat from the cooking pot. You mean me? Yes you. It couldn’t be. Then who? Number two stole the meat from the cooking pot.

    When Will You Marry?

    This involves a round of questions that must be answered while the player skips rope. Questions usually include; “When will you marry, this year, next year, single forever? How many wives/husbands will you have? How many kids would you have? How many cars would you buy? How many houses would you build?”

    So, which of these were your favorite?

  • Growing up, a number of games shaped our childhoods and frankly our whole lives. Tinko-tinko taught us pristine hand-eye co-ordination, Ayo sharpened our math skills. We are pretty sure this list isn’t exhaustive, but for me these are the most memorable childhood games I can remember.

    Who is in the garden?

    Who remembers how the chant went? “Who is in the garden?” “A little fine girl” “Can I come and see her?” “No no no no”

    Suwe

    To the ajebos its hopscotch but to me, it’ll always be Suwe. Who remembers slipping bits of chalk stolen from class to draw the lines for Suwe during break?

    Ten-ten

    For reasons I’ll never understand, this game was only ever played by girls. It was mad fun though.

    After round one

    This game was the bane of my existence because I always lost, but that didn’t stop me from playing it every day. I’d go home with my hands red and smarting but would still play it the next day.

    When will you marry?

    It’s funny how for me this went from being just a childhood game to a real-life question I’m asked every day.

    Tinko-tinko

    Your hand-eye coordination needed to be on point for this one. Miss a beat and you lose.

    Name, Place, Animal, Food, Thing

    Trying to fill out this form for X, U, V and Q used to be so hard.

    Fire on the mountain

    I remember never really running too far once I heard “There is fire on the mountain, run run run” so that I could easily get a partner once I heard “the fire is out”.

    Boju-boju

    You might know this one as hide and seek, but the real OGs remember this as boju-boju.

    Form a big circle

    This might not have exactly been a game itself but it was the start of all the greatest games from there is fire on the mountain to ‘who stole the meat from the cooking pot?’

    I’m sure I left many out so please help me jog my memory!

  • I’m walking home on a rather sunny evening, thinking about how I’m going to acquire my lamborghini, when I notice 2 kids who seem to be having a good time.

    Okay boy’s don’t forget talk to about what aunty taught you in school today.

    I decide to keep minding my business, since it seemed like a harmless gathering.

    “Let me be fast before these children come and ask me 2×2 that I don’t even remember”

    After increasing my pace, I had to pause when I heard one of them say “your daddy is a bombastic element”

    And the next kid replies; “You mean my daddy? it’s my own father you’re calling bombastic”

    I took a few steps back, and tried to ask..

    ..what’s going on here boys?

    It’s this American dustbin that called my own father a bombastic element, my father !

    Wawu this is getting serious o. But why did you say that to him?

    Haa aunty this boy is a Jabajantis stupendus liar.

    Meee! Ohh my life

    We were just playing oh, that’s how he said my head is like watermelon. Then I abused his daddy.

    Small abuse and he is now angry, rubbish

    Meanwhile, their noise had attracted all the kids on the street.

    Oyaa continue

    This boy is just an Unflushable toilet. Can’t you see his head? Was I lying aunty?

    The other kids were already shouting ‘yeeeeeee’

    Since I was the only old person there, I tried to counsel them.

    Everybody, just calm down, it’s not good to fight, if you fight you will go to hell fire.

    While I was being a saviour, one of the kids said ” this aunty is a nonsense and ingredient konkorbility, who put her mouth? “

    wait, but, what? what did I do?

    They all started laughing at me, and then I realised I had overstayed my welcome.

    I took a long miserable walk of shame back home.

    I wondered if they were alright, but realised even I wasn’t alright for not minding my business.

  • In a Nigerian home, there’s a very fine line between being a child and being an adult. 21 might be the official legal age for most things like voting or drinking but if you think that’s when you come of age then you are a joker. To prevent your parents from calling a family meeting on your head, here’s how you really know you’ve come of age in a Nigerian home.

    When your mum starts putting two pieces of meat on your rice.

    Is this me

    When they ask for your opinion during a family meeting.

    You mean you want my opinion??

    When you are still out at 7pm and your mother hasn’t called you ten times

    I don’t understand what’s happening right now

    When they start using style to ask you if you have a boyfriend/girlfriend.

    Is this a trick question?

    When your parents stop sending you pocket money just because you got one small job like that

    Am I not your child again?

    When they start asking you what you are still doing in their house.

    Is it not our house again?

    When they bring NEPA bill and your parents ask how much you are going to contribute

    But when did this one start?

    When your mum starts asking you for grandchildren

    Please ma stop this rough play

    When you can go out without dropping 5 working days notice

    Ehn sho mo age mi

    When during family prayer your parents only prayer point for you is to get married and leave their house.

    When did this one start?

    When you tell your parents you have a boyfriend and they reply ‘Thank God o!’

    Is it that serious?

    But the surest way to know you’ve come of age is when they give you signs you’re ready to become a parent. Are you ready to have a child? Watch this video to find out what Nigerians have to say about parenthood.

  • 5 Errands From Your Childhood You’ll Never Get To Give Your Kids

    1. You’ll never get to make your kids sit by the radio to listen for when your favourite programme is about to start.

    Or tune the radio until you get a frequency that works. Not when you can play the radio on your phone and carry that phone around with you.

    2. You’ll never get to put your kids in charge of washing the globe, changing the wick and filling this lantern with kerosene:

    Not when there are rechargeable lamps, solar-powered lamps, inverter, generator…sigh

    3. You’ll also never get to make them wash this stove every Saturday morning:

    From inside to outside till it shines like your teeth.

    4. You’ll never get to send them to change the television channel:

    Not when there are now remote controls. Although, you could always send them to get the remote but it’s really not the same thing.

    5. You’ll never get to make them tell the person calling that you’re not in.

    Not when anybody trying to reach you can just call you directly.

    More Zikoko!

    https://zikoko.com/list/18-rhymes-from-your-childhood-you-were-too-young-to-understand/
  • 8 Things Everyone Who Used To Be The Teacher’s Pet Will Immediately Understand
    There were some good things about being a teacher’s pet:

    1. You’re always the default person to write the names of noisemakers.

    2. You always know what everyone scored in the class test or exam.

    Because you were the one that recorded it for the teacher.

    3. Seniors are always afraid to punish you for fear of incurring the teacher’s wrath.

    So you walk around like there is boil in your armpit as per “The Untouchable”.

    4. You’re always exempt from general class punishments.

    Because your teacher will be like, “I’m sure you were not part of them”.

    5. Even if all your classmates are shouting:

    And you were even the leader sef.

    6. So because of that, your classmates almost always end up hating you.

    7. You can’t make any mistake because your punishment is always twice as severe.

    8. And you’re always the first to get called to answer a question.

    It’s not the teacher’s fault, it’s just that it’s only your name they can remember.

    If you used to be a teacher’s pet do like this:

    Let us know how many people we’re going to stop talking to now.

    More Zikoko!

    https://zikoko.com/gist/nigeria-is-set-to-launch-a-satellite-into-space-but-not-everyone-is-excited-about-it/
  • If You’re Over 25, These Photos Will Make You Upset for No Reason At All

    1. Playing with sand in the name of “Mummy and Daddy”:

    Even though you could never even really eat the food.

    2. When you fail ordinary exam and it’s like the world has ended.

    Are you the furst?

    3. Going to night class to study like our lives depended on it:

    Maybe it did…but just look at now. Look at.

    4. The way you dressed for your first job interview:

    Trying to confuse them into hiring you.

    5. Calling this “blow blow”:

    6. How you fought to sit next to that new classmate that just came from jand:

    7. Then all your stationery mysteriously goes missing so you have to borrow everything from that classmate because theirs is from jand.

    8. The way you begged your parents to get you this pair of sneakers:

    9. Filling this with sand so you could use it as a cellphone:

    10. When someone who isn’t in your group is trying to play with you:

    11. Your list of noisemakers when it was finally your turn to write it:

    12. When they say, “Make a big circle”, and you replied with, “Like your mother’s cooking pot”…

    …and then fought over whose mother’s cooking pot it was…SMH

    13. This plastic doll that caused too much wahala because they all looked the same:

    14. Sharing a stick of Goody Goody and fighting over who got the bigger half.

    15. Pretending to faint during Inter-house sports just so you can get some Glucose D.

    16. Sneaking this into school to prove that you have “chopped liver”.

    17. Writing your name inside your pen just so no one can steal it…

    …but they always did!

    18. Hiding your classwork so no one can copy you…

    …but have we all not finished school like this?

    And now, if you’re #TeamNatural, this is your life in 22 photos:

    https://zikoko.com/list/22-struggles-every-naturalista-can-relate-to/
  • 18 Rhymes From Your Childhood You Were Too Young to Understand

    1. Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star

    Twinkle, twinkle, little star, How I wonder what you are! Up above the world so high, Like a diamond in the sky. Twinkle, twinkle, little star, How I wonder what you are!
    The original lyrics of this rhyme was in French and told of a young girl tormented by love. A very sad something, not the starry, hopeful tune we constantly recited.

    2. Rock a Bye Baby

    Rock a bye baby, on the tree top. When the wind blows the cradle will rock. When the bough breaks the cradle will fall. And down will come baby, cradle and all.
    Even the lyrics alone are enough to make you wonder what you were saying as a child. This rhyme is basically predicting future harm about to befall a child. The unofficial history of the rhyme says that it was written by a pilgrim who had observed Native-American baby cradles hanging from the branches of trees, swaying children to sleep…and possibly to their deaths.

    3. Three Blind Mice

    Three blind mice. Three blind mice. See how they run. See how they run. They all ran after the farmer’s wife. Who cut off their tails with a carving knife. Did you ever see such a sight in your life. As three blind mice.
    Now this one is just painful to read, even without knowing the origins of the rhyme. It is believed that the earlier version written by English composer, Thomas Ravenscroft, referred to Mary I of England (“Bloody Mary”) and her execution of the Protestant martyrs, Nicholas Ridley and Hugh Latimer; and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cramner, in 1555. Have you ever heard a more violent rhyme?

    4. Row Row Row Your Boat

    Row row row your boat. Gently down the stream. Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily, Life is but a dream.

    This rhyme is as easygoing as it sounds. It really just reminds everyone to take life easier and one “row” at a time. Not such a bad lesson for a child, especially when compared with the other rhymes people were singing for us as children.

    5. Pop! Goes The Weasel

    All around the mulberry bush. The monkey chased the weasel. The monkey thought ’twas all in good sport. Pop! Goes the weasel. A penny for a spool of thread. A penny for a needle. That’s the way the money goes. Pop! Goes the weasel.
    No, Pop! Isn’t the sound a weasel makes. It’s an old English slang that means to pawn something (that is, sell it at a pawn shop) while “weasel” translates to “coat”. And the rhyme is about how no matter how poor a London man was in those days, he was expected to own a suit in order to dress nicely on Sunday. So he would pawn the suit (“Pop goes the weasel”) on Monday and then purchase it back before Sunday. A very silly tradition if you ask me but we sang it with so much excitement! Using our fingers to do the “Pop! Goes the weasel!” so it’ll sound very well. SMH.

    6. Goosey Goosey Gander

    Goosey Goosey Gander, whither shall I wander? Upstairs and downstairs and in my Lady’s chamber. There I met an old man who wouldn’t say his prayers. So I took him by his left leg and threw him down the stairs.
    Another violent poem about how back in 16th century Europe, most people were busy either fighting off plagues or killing off Catholics. Priests were persecuted for saying their prayers in Latin instead of English and so had to pray, because if they were caught, they would be given a very swift and very painful punishment of being hurled down the stairs. Ouch!

    7. Mary Mary Quite Contrary

    Mary Mary quite contrary. How does your garden grow? With silver bells and cockleshells. And pretty maids all in a row.
    This is another poem that alludes to the Catholic Queen “Bloody” Mary, her “garden” is a graveyard of martyred protestants, the silver bells and cockleshells were her instruments of torture, and the pretty maids referred to The Maiden, an English version of the guillotine. What was wrong with these British people?

    8. Ring Around the Rosy

    Ring around the rosy. A pocket full of posies. Ashes! Ashes! We all fall down!
    This one will make you want to cry. The rhyme alludes to the Black Plague that nearly wiped out all of Europe. The “ring around the rosy” refers to the red blotches caused by the plague. The “pocket full of posies” refers to the packets of herbs used to fight the infection, “ashes” refers to the cremation of the dead and “all fall down” refers to the fact that the plague affected both the rich and poor. Side note fellow Nigerians, it is “Ashes” o, not “a-ti-shoo!” You’re not sneezing.

    9. Mary Had a Little Lamb

    Mary had a little lamb. Little lamb, little lamb. Mary had a little lamb. Its fleece was white as snow…
    This rhyme might actually be the only rhyme based on a real occurrence. A real girl named Mary did take her lamb to school and naturally a raucous ensued. The first lines were written by visiting Harvard University student, John Roulstone who had seen what happened, and the rest – quite literally – is history.

    10. Humpty Dumpty

    Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall. Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the King’s horses and all the King’s men. Couldn’t put Humpty together again.

    Wait first. You might have been thinking, ” wetin Humpty Dumpty go find for wall sef?” But before you judge, you have to know that the real Humpty Dumpty wasn’t really a person but a massive siege cannon used by the British Royal Forces during the English Civil War. It fell, the soldiers could not use it again and they all died because they could not defend themselves. So, well, maybe there were people that died in the end sha.

    11. Here We Go Round The Mulberry Bush

    Here we go round the mulberry bush. The mulberry bush. The mulberry bush. Here we go round the mulberry bush. On a cold and frosty morning. This is the way we wash our clothes. We wash our clothes, we wash our clothes. This is the way we wash our clothes. On a cold and frosty morning…
    You know how they say sagging originated from prison, well, this rhyme legit originated from prison too. Female prisoners in England’s Wakefield Prison would exercise round a mulberry tree. So every time you sang it…hehehe…

    12. London Bridge Is Falling Down

    London Bridge is falling down. Falling down, falling down. London Bridge is falling down. My fair lady.
    There are a couple of meanings to this rhyme. But the most common one and the one that will definitely leave you shook is the one that connects the bridge in the rhyme with the practice of “immurement“. Which is something they used to do in the past where they’d put someone in a structure and seal it off so that they’d just die of hunger and thirst. This human sacrifice is believed to make the structure strong and last longer and it is believed they did that to little children under the London Bridge. Like, WTH! And they’ll tell you oyinbo no dey do witchcraft, IFIH! But that’s not the freakiest part, you know how as kids we would sing the song and take turns moving under an “arch” that we formed? That was us legit practicing ritual sacrifice without knowing. Mind sufficiently blown? Yeah…I thought so.

    13. The Old Lady Who Lived In A Shoe

    There was an old woman. Who lived in a shoe. She had so many children. She didn’t know what to do. She gave them some broth. Without any bread. And whipped them all soundly. And sent them to bed.
    The origin of this rhyme is sorta shrouded in mystery and some theories say it has some allusion to the British monarchy – because English people are very full of themselves and everything has to be about them – but just think about the rhyme for a minute. Why so much violence woman? I think maybe there was recession and the woman was just tired.

    14. This Old Man

    This old man, he played one. He played knick-knack on my thumb. With a knick-knack, paddy whack. Give a dog a bone. This old man came rolling home…
    The origin of this rhyme suggests some unfair treatment of the Irish by the English. Historically, these neighbors weren’t really best of friends and if the Irish were indeed treated poorly and then sent “rolling home” like the rhyme suggests, then it is no wonder.

    15. Baa Baa Black Sheep

    Baa Baa Black Sheep. Have you any wool? Yes, sir, yes, sir. Three bags full. One for the master. One for the dame. And one for the little boy. Who lives down the lane.
    This rhyme is really all about wool but the earlier version has one difference. Where there is now “one” there used to be “none”. At that time, the farmers were so heavily taxed that after giving one-third to the king and one-third to the church, there was nothing left for the poor farmer. AYA…

    16. Jack And Jill

    Jack and Jill went up the hill. To fetch a pail of water. Jack fell down and broke his crown. And Jill came tumbling after.
    Guys!! Jack and Jill really did climb that hill for more than just a pail of water. But it’s a very tragic story really. According to these guys, Jack and Jill were a young unmarried couple who used to climb the hill for some “rock climbing and chill” so that no one will catch them. That was how Jill carry belle but just before she gave birth, Jack was killed by a rock that had fallen from their ‘chilling’ hill. A few days later, Jill died while giving birth to their love child. That story is too sad. It’s not even fair.

    17. Eeny, Meeny, Miny, Mo

    Eeny, meeny, miny, mo. Catch a tiger by the toe. If he hollers, let him go. Eeny meeny miny mo.
    This rhyme is just racist. Well, at least it was before they changed the “nigger” that was there to “tiger”, because really, why would you even think to catch a tiger by its toe?

    18. Old Roger Is Dead

    Old Roger is dead and gone to his grave, H’m ha ! gone to his grave. They planted an apple tree over his head, H’m ha! over his head. The apples were ripe and ready to fall, H’m ha ! ready to fall. There came an old woman and picked them all up, H’m ha! picked them all up. Old Roger jumped up and gave her a knock, H’m ha! gave her a knock. Which made the old woman go hippity hop, H’m ha! hippity hop!
    This rhyme will leave you with more questions than answers. Why did Roger die? Why did they plant the apple tree over his head? Why did Old Roger give the woman a knock? And why did the woman hop? Was it not her head and not her leg that they knocked? Why? WHY? WHY?!!! Too many questions that probably weren’t passing through your mind as a child.

    Knowing all you now know about these rhymes, would you teach them to your children?

  • 1. Super Mario Bros

    This was pretty much the first game everybody played. We loved playing as Mario or Luigi, his brother, as they ate mushrooms to grow bigger, ate flowers to acquire the ability to shoot fireballs and fought the villain, Bowser, to save the Princess Peach only to find out from Toad (the short guy with the mushroom hat) that the princess has been moved to another castle.

    2. Mortal Kombat

    Mortal Kombat was the combat game to end all combat games. It blew our minds when it was released thanks to its stylized violence and its insanely awesome finishing moves that, in the game and among fans, were referred to as Fatalities. Even cooler were the wide array of characters available for game play. Raiden: the god of thunder, Liu Kang: the Shaolin monk, Shang Tsung: the evil wizard who had the ability to absorb the souls of those he defeated and many more amazing characters.

    3. Contra

    Long before there was Call Of Duty, there was Contra. Who can forget this game that had guns with unlimited bullets? A  run and gun action game on the Family Com console that had the double player feature meaning that two people could play and go on missions together. All the modern gun games that are popular today like Metal Gear Solid and Splinter Cell should all thank Contra for paving the way.

    4. Mario Kart

    A spin off of the Super Mario franchise, Mario Kart is a racing game starring all the major characters you know and love from the Super Mario Bros universe. The game play differed from every other racing game that came before it in the sense that characters could sabotage each other by leaving banana peels in their path or by throwing bombs at them. It was the ultimate racing game for a group of friends because up to 8 people could play at the same time.

    5. Street Fighter

    Another insane combat game. Everything about Street Fighter was epic. From each character having their own own individual stages in their respective countries of origin, to the moves (remember E-Honda’s hundred hand slap?). You could play alone where you played against computer-controlled opponents or you could play with someone else where you both fight each other.

    Wait – there’s more! We basically made a bunch of photos that summarize your childhood here:

    15 Pictures that Basically Sum Up Your Nigerian Childhood
  • 7 Ordinary Things That Are Only Terrifying If You’re Afraid of the Dark

    1. When you’re having your bath and NEPA takes the light

    2. So you run out of there like…

    3. Then you switch on all the lights in the room

    As a child of light chasing away the darkness

    4. You when you hear something moving in the room

    Who goes there?

    5. How you wait for that thing hiding in the wardrobe to come out and attack

    Oya, I don ready for una.

    6. In the darkness, you start to see things

    7. You, waiting for the morning to come like…

    Lord, if I make it through this night, I will never leave my plate in the sink again.
  • 1. ‘Oya go and bring your books, lesson teacher is here’

    2. “Is it me you are talking to like that? Go and break cane from the tree outside”

    3. Anything that has to do with drinking agbo!

    4. “Aunty Tolani that fed you akpu and banga when you were three is on the line from London, come and talk to her”

    5. When the Channels movie you’ve been waiting for starts at 10, and that’s when your parents know they’ll tell you to go to bed

    6. When you see your friends playing outside, but your parents put you on compulsory house arrest because they’re kidnapping children

    7. When your siblings are sleeping and your parents start calling them, you already know you’re the automatic scape goat to do the work for them

  • 1. Home Alone

    Why didn’t he just call the police?  He almost killed them tbh.

    2. How the Grinch Stole Christmas

    Otherwise known as “when my mother-in-law came to town”.

    3. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer

    Every time you hear ‘Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer’, you think of the song

    4. A Christmas Carol

    Because of this movie, every miser is called “Scrooge”.

    5. Frosty the Snowman

    Another childhood movie with a super catchy theme song.

    6. Jingle All The Way

    Back when Arnold was in every movie.

    7. The Polar Express

    All I wanted (still do) was a ticket to the North Pole.

    8. Die-Hard

    Just in case you forgot that Die Hard is set during christmas.
  • All The Things That Happen When Stubbornness Is Your Default Setting

    1. When people think talking to you normally will change your mind, you’re like:

    No thanks!

    2. When people now try shouting and abuse like that one will convince you to change your mind.

    You must be joking!

    3. You, when a debate starts in class or in the office and you can show your talents.

    On your marks…

    4. When too many people agree with your opinion for your liking.

    Hmm was I not contrary enough?

    5. When people complain you are too stubborn, you’re like:

    My friend will you get out of here before I embarrass you!

    6. When you end up being right and everyone has to apologise to you!

    Oya dobale!

    7. When after all your stubbornness you are wrong, you’re like:

    Well nobody is perfect!

    8. When someone says stubbornness is not a virtue.

    Okay! And so what?
  • Remember These? 9 Of Your Favourite Childhood Comics & Books

    1. Archie.

    Original Yoruba demon, I’m sure his full name is ‘Oluwa-archie’.

    2. Beano.

    Dennis the Menace and wahala went hand in hand.

    3. Famous Five.

    If you remember this, you’re an OG.

    4. Dandy.

    Remember how they were the rivals of Beano?

    5. Asterix and Obelix.

    With their magic strength potion.

    6. The Adventures of Tintin.

    The original Indiana Jones.

    7. Richie Rich.

    Had bastard money, everyone wanted to be him.

    8. The Secret Seven.

    Written by the same author as ‘Famous Five’.

    9. Enid Blytons ‘Popular Reward Series’.

    Always set in a magical world and full of fantasy.
  • 8 Movies/Shows Your Parents Probably Said Were Demonic.

    1. Harry Potter.

    “You want to be your mother-in-law? A witch?”

    2. Pokemon.

    “A demon? In your pocket?! Are you even balanced at all?”

    3. Digimon.

    “The devil is now digital? Tufia!”

    4. Jumanji.

    “Im sure its Sister Jacqueline from the village that came up with it.”

    5. Dragon Ball Z.

    “It has ‘Dragon’ in its name… do the math yourself.”

    6. Matilda.

    “You want to be making things fly ba? Very what? Very good”

    7. The Addams Family.

    “You want to watch the devils family?”

    8. Sabrina The Teenaged Witch.

    “Oh, you want to be a witch now? To learn how to kill me ba?”