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Children | Zikoko!
  • QUIZ: What Do You Deserve to Get for Children’s Day?

    No matter what age you are, you deserve to be celebrated on this day because you’re somebody’s child after all.

    Don’t just take this quiz to find out what you should get on children’s day, we want you also go for it!

  • Why Did I Have Kids? — 7 Nigerians on Deciding to Become Parents

    Children are blessings, or at least what most Nigerians hold on to as a reason to become parents or convince others to tow the parenthood line.

    But why do people really have kids? Do prospective parents stop to consider why they want a child? I spoke to seven Nigerians and they shared how — and why — they decided to become parents.

    Image designed by Freepik

    Oyin, 28

    I have kids because I love babies. It’s a weird reason, but I just love cuddling babies and inhaling their scent. 

    When I first got married, my husband and I agreed to wait a year before having kids so we’d get to know each other better. But I started getting baby fever after the first few months and “accidentally” got pregnant. I wasn’t prepared for how fast babies grow out of the cute infant stage and start scattering your house, though. 

    Baby fever hit again when my child was one year old, and I got pregnant again. Just like the last time, I loved the baby stage but I’ve realised it’s just a small reward for the years and years of raising them — which isn’t easy at all. I don’t know if I want to try for another one again.

    Sola*, 25

    I’m a single mum of a five-year-old. My baby daddy wanted me to get an abortion, and I refused. I was in uni when I got pregnant and wasn’t ready for a child, but killing an innocent child is a sin I didn’t want to add to my list of errors.

    I love my son, but I sometimes wish I didn’t have him so early. I’ve lost jobs because he was always falling sick as a toddler and we were in and out of hospitals. It’s also tough providing for him without help. I feel like I’d have been able to achieve more and even give him more things if I’d done the right thing at the right time.

    Samuel, 31

    Having children was the logical next step after marriage. My wife and I didn’t discuss whether we wanted children or not; we just discussed how many we wanted to have, and we landed on three kids. 

    It was after we had our first baby two years ago that I actually started to think about why we even decided on three. We can have one more to give our child a sibling, but that’ll be it. I love children, but they’re stressful and expensive. There’s honestly no need to amass them like property. 

    Tunde, 29

    I believe children are a commandment from God. The Bible says we should “go forth and multiply”, so I’ve always wanted a large family. Maybe it’s also because I was an only child. I only have one kid now, but my wife and I plan to have at least five. The only thing that might reduce that number is this economy. 

    Loveth*, 36

    I haven’t really thought about why I have kids. I’m a Nigerian woman; having children has been like a given since I was a child myself. All I knew was that pregnancy before marriage was a big no. After marriage? Start pushing them out. I guess I just did that. I got married in 2009 and I have three kids. They’re all I know, and I love them.

    Christy*, 28

    I’ve always loved children. But it’s not just wanting to have one for the sake of it. I think it’s important to guide the next generation on the right path and children are the best way to do that. If more parents trained their children well, we wouldn’t have so many evil people today. 

    And it doesn’t even have to be your biological children. I have only one child and I intend to adopt more rather than go through pregnancy again. There are more than enough kids on earth already who need guidance.

    Kunle*, 38

    I think children are what makes a family a family. So, after marriage, the next thing was obviously children. My wife and I dealt with infertility for a while, but deciding to go without kids just wasn’t an option. It took six years after marriage, but we’re a proper family now.

    *Some names have been changed for anonymity.


    NEXT READ: Am I a Terrible Mother for Wishing My Child Is Normal?

    Get a free ticket to Strings Attached and enjoy a feel-good evening of music, dancing and games at Muri Okunola Park, Lagos on May 11, 2024.

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  • Having Kids Took Me From Middle-Class to Poor

    Chima* (36) has two children under five years old, and compared to the average income of most Nigerians, he’s a high earner. But when I asked how parenting has affected his budget and cost of living, he simply responded: “I’m now poor”.

    This is Chima’s story, as told to Boluwatife

    Image designed by Freepik

    I didn’t go into parenting blind. I knew having children would stretch my finances. But I wasn’t prepared for how much.

    It was a full house growing up — six children and just as many cousins and extended family members dropping in at one point or the other. It was chaotic, but I loved it. When I started thinking about marriage and having my own family, I decided I wanted six children too.

    Of course, my girlfriend (now wife) was horrified when I first mentioned it during one of our “planning the future” talks. Coming from a much smaller family with only one sibling, she couldn’t fathom having six children. The conversation went something like this:

    Me: I’ve always wanted to have six children like my parents. Don’t you think it’d be an adventure?

    Girlfriend: Six, as how? Who will “born” all of them?  

    We eventually reached a compromise — four children. That was the plan when we got married in 2018, but I can confidently say the plan has changed now.

    I was earning ₦400k/month at the time, and it was more than enough in the beginning. My wife’s salary was ₦100k/month, but it was mostly for her needs or when she took me out for a treat. I took care of everything else. The major expenses were the ₦800k annual rent, feeding, clothing and transportation, and of course, romance bills. My wife and I made it a duty to go on weekly dates. We also regularly had staycations. We were comfortably middle-class.

    We had our first baby in 2019, and the financial implications began to dawn on us right from the birth. My wife delivered by caesarean section, which tripled our hospital bills. We spent roughly ₦800k on that, which was a huge chunk of my savings. Then there was the cost of other essentials, like the baby’s bed, car seat, bath, carrier and others.

    My wife also had problems with lactation, so we had to lean on formula. I can’t recall how much each tin cost, but we typically went through two tins in a week. 

    Then there were the clothes. It was as if the baby grew an inch per day. We had to buy new clothes every three weeks. We thought we wouldn’t have to buy diapers for a long time because we got quite a lot as gifts, but most of them were the smallest size. As baby grew, diaper size increased, so we ended up giving out most of the gifted diapers.

    By then, my wife had stopped working temporarily to care for the baby, and my salary was our only income source. ₦400k that made us ballers before struggled to take us through an entire month. I was almost always broke by month’s end. Weekly dates and staycations? Those became a thing of the past.

    We had another baby in 2021. I blame the pandemic for this. We’d originally planned to space our kids by three years, at least, but what’s there to do when you’re locked up together in the name of global safety?

    I got another job around the same time, and my salary increased to ₦500k/month, but it hardly made a difference. We had to move to a bigger apartment (₦1m yearly) and take an additional ₦1m loan to cover the agent fees, renovation and furnishing. 

    Remember all those expenses I mentioned when we had our first baby? Multiply it by three. We now had two babies, while struggling with inflation and removing ₦100k out of my salary each month for one year to pay back the loan. My wife had to suspend all plans of returning to work because daycare and a nanny were additional expenses we couldn’t afford.

    I love my children, but my wife and I jokingly call them “money-sucking creatures”. They eat like the world is about to end and grow out of clothes like someone is pursuing them. If they’re not eating, they’re spoiling something. 

    I was complaining to a friend about having to change their game tablets because they’d spoilt them, and the friend was wondering why they couldn’t do without the tablets. I just laughed. When you have kids, don’t give them something to entertain themselves so they can expend the unused energy on your walls and home appliances.

    It’s starting to look like we’ll stop at two children, so we can continue to afford food. I still earn ₦500k/month, and 60% of that goes into child care. I try to stretch the remaining 40% to save for rent and other household expenses. But the truth is, every expense is still related to child care. 

    For example, the new fuel prices mean I spend at least ₦20k weekly to fuel the generator so my kids can sleep at night. I pay ₦1m for rent because I need more room for them. Our feeding bill is almost ₦160k monthly because of the extra mouths to feed. I can’t spend ₦10k without thinking too much about it. I feel poor.

    My eldest will be old enough to start school next year, and the thought of school fees is already giving me heart palpitations. My friend is paying ₦400k per term for nursery school, and the school’s planning to increase fees because of the economy. I don’t even want to think about it. My wife and I are considering homeschooling till primary school. We can’t starve because we gave birth na, abi?

    Again, I love my children and consider them a blessing. But my quality of life has drastically reduced because of them. I lived better when I was earning less than my current income. If you aren’t stupidly rich, and you plan to have children in Nigeria, just accept that you will see pepper.

    *Name has been changed for anonymity.


    NEXT READ: Rainbow Babies: “I Was Supposed to Be Happy, but All I Felt Was Fear”

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  • The Only Items Kids Actually Want in Party Packs

    A couple of weeks ago, some Nigerian mums shared their experiences with party packs and how it has now become a rich vs rich competition among parents.

    Nollywood actress Regina Daniels also broke the internet after sharing a video of travelling boxes cosplaying as party packs for her son’s birthday. Let the poor breathe, abeg.

    While the mums are free to go as wild as they want, we know kids are only interested in these basic things.

    Biscuits

    The Only Items Kids Actually Want in Party Packs

    Source: WigmoreTrading Nigeria

    What is a Nigerian party pack with a biscuit without chocolate or strawberry filling? This is the most important part of the whole thing.

    Sweets

    The Only Items Kids Actually Want in Party Packs

    Source: Ekulo group

    You don’t even have to go extra with the expensive ones. Just the sight of a ₦50 – ₦100 lollipop will get the kids giddy.

    Crayon

    The Only Items Kids Actually Want in Party Packs

    Source: Amazon UK

    Have you seen kids with crayons? There’s no stopping the Vincent Van Gogh in them once they lay their little hands on them.

    Jotter

    Source: Jumia NG

    Dead the idea of that customised towel with a simple jotter, and you’d have made the kids happy. They’ve got a lot of jargon to offload on the pages of that jotter.

    Eraser

    Source: Ubuy Nigeria

    Honestly, kids are not hard to please. Just give our little princes and princesses erasers to clean all the atrocities they’ve committed on those jotters.

    Juice packs

    The Only Items Kids Actually Want in Party Packs

    Source: Food Network

    Give those children their favourite flavours of Capri Sun, Chi Exotic, Hollandia and Tasty Time, and you might have as well hand them the keys to their own cartoon-character-themed bedrooms. Kids are moved by basic things that give them instant gratification.

    Pencil

    Source: E bay

    You’ll get extra points if you go for the customised Barbie, Power Rangers or any of their favourite cartoon characters.

  • These Nigerians Talk About Their Parent’s Reaction to Them Not Wanting Kids

    Your parents are always going to think they know what’s best for you, even if that includes you bringing a whole human being into the world. These seven Nigerians want no part in raising a child, and did one of the hardest things ever; resist their Nigerian parents. Here are the reactions they got.

    “She asked if I plan to just be having sex.” – Rehia*, 29

    I’ve never aligned with the idea of kids, I’ve just never been interested. My mum is a God-first, family-second kind of Christian. When I turned 26, she playfully brought up marriage.

    I immediately cleared her so rubbish like that wouldn’t fester. She responded with something about God’s purpose for women and whether I plan just to be having sex. I made it very clear, there was no way I could be interested in men or kids, after watching the domestic violence in her marriage. She hasn’t mentioned marriage or kids since then.

    “He’s sure I know what’s best for me. – Tomi*, 19

    I was 17 when I told my dad, and it wasn’t a conversation per se. I just said, I’m not really interested in having kids, because they didn’t align with the goals I set for myself. He was like okay, we’ll see how that goes, but he’s sure I know the best thing for me. He probably thinks I was joking. I was not.

    “She just said I was going to have a child, and that’s it.” – Chuks*, 24 

    My mom was telling me how her friend’s daughter who is close to my age is expecting a second child and how she can’t wait for me to get married and start having children.

    I told her that I don’t want children, she didn’t even ask me why , she just said that I didn’t know what I want, I was going to have a child and that’s that.

    I’m her only son, so I understand where she is coming from, but it’s my decision to make.

    I like being around kids, but if we’re honest, they’re a lot of work and hinder growth in many ways. Everybody talks about kids being a blessing, but nobody talks about them also being a burden.

    Kids tend to upend lives, you could have a specific timeline to achieve a goal and then a kid comes along, and you have to rearrange the timeline and sometimes the goal, just to accommodate them.

    I’m a very ambitious person, and I don’t want that in my life.

    “She says I shouldn’t use my mouth to curse myself.” – Davina*, 19

    I’ve always known I didn’t want kids. Not because I don’t love children or anything just because I never saw myself being a mother. In my mind, there are more disadvantages than advantages to having a child, and every advantage you can think of is selfish.

    I haven’t told my dad yet, but I mentioned it to my mum one day as we were talking about my plans after school. She was talking about me moving abroad for my Masters and said if I got married and gave birth there, I’d become a citizen. I told her I didn’t mind getting married but giving birth is not something  I want to do. She shouted, “God forbid.” That I’ll carry my children, and I’ll have plenty children, then started praying. She says I’m still young,  and I shouldn’t use my mouth to curse myself.

    “She called me Jezebel” – Lucy, 22

    An aunt had just given birth, and my mom was having baby fever one day, then she goes “do and grow up and marry let me carry your child o” and I told her that even if I get married, which I also don’t want, I’m not having kids.

    She reacted by calling me Jezebel for refusing to fulfill God’s word and we had an argument about it. I brought up the fact that many people were not capable of having kids, like her sister, and asked if that made them Jezebels too. 

    She got defensive, but I was adamant. She hasn’t said a word since but she hopes my mind changes because I’m still ‘young’. I don’t think my mind’s ever going to change though. I’ve never had any sentiment towards kids or fantasized about having them. As I grew up, I became more aware of the responsibility and decided I wanted no part in it.

    I think it’s the longevity , the fact that there’s no end to raising a child. There’s also the possibility of being a bad parent, or a deadbeat, and it scares me shitless.

    “They still think I’m joking.” – Debo, 26

    I told my parents when the subtle “We can’t wait to hold your children -our grandchildren” talk became not-so-subtle.

    They still think I’m joking, but the world is already overpopulated, and looking at the general state of things , it seems unfair to bring another person into this world. I’d rather be the rich uncle.

    “You’ll grow out of it.” – Daniel*, 35

    I just don’t want children. The same way people decide they want kids, is the same way I’ve decided I don’t. There’s no rationale.

    One day, I opened my mouth and told my parents I don’t want kids. I’m not scared of them and they’re not going to take care of my children for me, so they’ll be okay. When I told them they were like, “You’ll grow out of it.” But over the years, they’ve come to see that I haven’t grown out of it. They see that I don’t care for it. So they’ll be alright. 

  • Why Babies Actually Need All the PR They Get

    Babies are wonderful…or are they? 

    You’re scrolling through IG, and it’s one cute video of an infant or toddler after the other. 

    I’m here to expose these miniature people and reveal why all that cheap PR is just to trick unsuspecting folks into wanting more of them.

    Babies have zero communication skills

    Imagine not being able to survive on your own and you can’t talk. Why?

    For such tiny people, they make so much noise 

    They can only communicate in a way that’ll destroy your peace of mind. And you still have to decipher whether they want milk, a diaper change, or nothing at all. You know they’re doing it just to run you mad because there’s never water in their eyes, just loud cries at awkward hours of the day.

    They can’t even blow their own noses

    I feel like blowing your nose is an important life skill to have if you plan to survive.

    They can’t eat honey

    No, I’m not making this up. Almost as if in exchange for cuteness, they got weak immune systems. Now, you have to do extra work outside capitalism just to get their meal plans right.

    They can’t drink water

    Babies younger than six months are in danger of water intoxication. Imagine dying because you drank water. Please, God.

    Other baby animals > human babies

    A newborn goat can stand in minutes. Infants, on the other hand, can’t even sit till they’re six months old. I know who my GOAT is.

    They still have to learn how to sit 

    Imagine after waiting for nine months to learn to stand, they still have to learn to sit. 

    Babies are simply the perfect example of “great User Interface, terrible User Experience”.

    Speaking of experiences, are you ready to enjoy the hottest women-only party in the land, HERtitude? Click here to buy your tickets.

  • QUIZ: What Nickname Should You Give Your First Born?

    Whatever name you get on this quiz is what you have to call your first born.

  • Why Government’s Plan To Help Abandoned Children Is Inadequate

    On December 7, 2022, the House of Representatives passed a bill titled, “Act to Re-amend the Child Rights Act, Cap. C50, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004”, for second reading. 

    House of rep abandoned children bill prison

    This bill ensures children won’t  be abandoned whenever or wherever they’re born. Parents found guilty of abandoning children would either be fined a sum of ₦200k, sent to prison for six months or both. 

    House of rep abandoned children bill prison

    This is definitely a good step by the government to tackle a very serious problem, but it’s difficult to ignore the fact they may  have failed to take certain things into consideration before this bill. 

    We still have archaic abortion laws

    On October 8, 2019, a one-day-old baby was found in a refuse dump covered with maggots in Lokoja, Kogi State. Fortunately, the baby survived because residents took her to a specialist hospital for treatment. When the government found the mother of the baby, she refused to take her back. The baby ended up in an  orphanage. 

    In 2017, the Lagos State government rescued about 237 abandoned babies, and one of the reasons these things will continue to happen is the country has refused to reform its abortion laws. Nigerian women don’t have a legal second option when they end up with unwanted pregnancies. 

    Our anti-abortion laws put women found guilty of violating it at risk of seven years in jail. So, these women are left with the possibility of either abandoning the child or illegally terminating the pregnancies at the risk of their lives. 

    We need better welfare programmes

    During the passing of the bill for a second reading, lawmakers discussed the need for Nigeria to develop  something similar to America’s social security system. Nigeria currently has over 17 million orphans and vulnerable children, some of them abandoned as children. They still struggle daily to access food, shelter, education, protection, and care. What’s the government currently doing to address the problem with functional social welfare services?

    We need a working economy

    Poverty is another reason parents choose to abandon their children. On April 21, 2020, a six-month-old baby was found by the roadside with a note from the mother saying she had no means to care for her. For those who decide not to abandon the child, they try to sell them off at a baby factory

    With the level of inflation in the country now and the price of things increasing almost every week, life must be especially difficult for those who struggle to make ends meet, how much more so for a new mother.

    House of rep abandoned children bill prison

    So while lawmakers make laws, they must realise the trend of parents abandoning children has more to do with a failing system than wickedness. They should first try to take out the log in their eyes before throwing these people into prison.

  • Memes You’ll Relate to If You Have a Baby in Your House 

    Living with a baby is the ultimate mental health test because life can never be peaceful with them in your house. I’m talking about the babies that are about to become toddlers (10 months to 1 year), those ones are the worst. If you’ve ever lived with a baby (whether it’s yours or someone else’s), you’ll relate to these things. 

    They wake up and immediately cause chaos 

    They do this by crying the entire house down. How do you wake up and just start crying for no damn reason? 

    They’re always trying to hurt themselves 

    Look away for one second, and they’re on the verge of falling down the stairs and breaking their necks. They can’t see that their tiny legs can’t go down the stairs; all they see is a fun little adventure.

    You’d be surprised what their poo smells like 

    How can one tiny human being produce such a foul smell? Blood of Jesus. 

    They sleep and wake up whenever they like 

    What’s their business if it’s 2 a.m. and you’re tired? As long as they’re awake, you have to be awake. 

    The house is never tidy 

    Their toys are all over the place all the time. The day isn’t complete if you don’t mistakenly step on one of them and cry in pain.

    Get ready for your things to be destroyed 

    You’ll be searching for your phone, only to find out that they’ve put it in the toilet. 

    They communicate by crying 

    You always have to play the fun game of “Guess why I’m crying now.” 

    They always do crackhead things 

    Why do they think it’s okay to cover themselves in Vaseline, for God’s sake?

    There’s wahala if they don’t get their way

    Don’t give them what they want, and the floodgates of tears will come pouring down. Either that or they throw tantrums by throwing themselves on the floor. Who are you hurting, dear? Yourself. 

    Also read: If Your Year Was Full of Failed Talking Stages, You’d Relate to These 15 Memes 

  • QUIZ: Name Your Child After the Song You Get on This Quiz

    Finding the perfect name for your child on your own may be difficult. But this quiz will help you choose a Nigerian song to name your child after.

  • 8 Solid Ways to Become Your Parents’ Favourite Child

    Nigerian parents have proven to be the same everywhere. Do you want to win their hearts? Follow our list to become their favourite child. If you don’t think your parents have favourites, well, you need this article more than you think.

    Call them regularly 

    You already knew this — constant communication with someone makes them more fond of you, talk more of Nigerian parents that love gist. Whether it’s gist about a relative, gossip about church people or an annoying co-worker, they’re there for it.

    Send them pictures 

    Forget all the love languages you think you know, this is what your Nigerian parents want — especially if you don’t see them often. Send them pictures of your day, of you with your friends, at work, in church, everything. 

    Even though they’ll always see something wrong, like your hair, dress, makeup or bikini, they’re lowkey excited. You’ll be giving them pictures to update with a  “my priceless jewel” caption on their Wuzzsup.

    Stop pressing your phone

    They’ve made it very clear that they hate the sight of you pressing your phone, imagine how happy they’ll be when you actually decide to stop. 

    We’re not saying it’ll be easy but love is sacrifice, right? 

    Introduce them to your friends 

    Remember when you were younger and your parents kept complaining about you always going over to your friends instead of them visiting you? Well, turns out Nigerian parents don’t like to feel left out; they actually want to meet your friends and infiltrate your circle. 

    Give them grandkids

    From what we hear, Nigerian parents become softer when they have grandkids, so having a baby is your opening to steal their love and affection. 

    RELATED: The Different Ways Nigerian Parents Change When They Have Grandchildren  

    Become a doctor 

    One thing parents love more than grandkids is having a child they can brag about. Adding “Doctor” to your name will make your parents love you even more. I mean, who doesn’t want to be a “Mama/Papa Doctor”? 

    Be the first or last born

    We don’t understand why this works, but it does. If you’re already a middle child, *tears* wake up and claim a different position. If they ask you, just say you’re born again and that’ll be the end of that conversation. 

    Follow them on social media 

    You may not know it, but your parents see your follow-back on social media as a stamp of validation. It means you rate them and it shows. Before you know it, you’re bonding over funny memes and the latest trends. I don’t see how you’ll not be their fave after that. 

    CONTINUE READING: 12 Frustrating Things Nigerian Parents Do To Their Kids  

  • QUIZ: We Can Tell if You’re More of a Child or an Adult From This Quiz

    Have you ever felt like you’re in the wrong body? Like they got your age wrong at the hospital and now you’re being forced to adult even though you clearly identify with a different generation?

    Then you should take this quiz.

  • These Politicians’ Kids Are Taking Over from Their Parents

    Like all elections, the 2023 general election has been lauded as what’ll make or break Nigeria. It’s been touted as another opportunity for young people to get into politics and make a change that’ll shame the people who have been running Nigeria into the ground since 1960.

    Nigerian politicians need to do better

    But we’ve noticed a pattern of many of these young changemakers being the offsprings of the same politicians Nigerians want to see less of. Below are some of them.

    Mustapha Lamido, son of Sule Lamido

    Sule Lamido is a former federal minister, a former presidential candidate, and a former governor of Jigawa State. Mustapha is set to step into one of his father’s old shoes if he wins at the polls in 2023. The younger Lamido is the flagbearer of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the Jigawa State governorship election. If he wins, he’d be replacing the man that replaced his father at the Jigawa State Government House. And the governor’s seat wouldn’t be the first thing father and son have in common, as they also shared a prison cell in the past when they were both arrested over a ₦1.4 billion bribery case in 2015. 

    Erhiatake Ibori-Suenu, daughter of James Ibori

    Who can forget James Ibori? Not after he was convicted in the United Kingdom in 2012 for fraud and money laundering and served a few years behind bars. Erhiatake, the daughter of the former governor of Delta State and the current representative of Ethiope West constituency in the Delta State House of Assembly, has won the ticket of the PDP to contest to become the representative of Ethiope Federal Constituency at the Federal House Of Reps. 

    Bello El-Rufai, son of Nasir El-Rufai

    The children of Nigerian politicians are starting political careers

    Nasir El-Rufai is pretty well-known in political circles from his years as the FCT Minister and later governor of Kaduna State, a seat he still keeps warm. His son, Bello will be contesting in the 2023 general elections as the flagbearer of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to represent Kaduna North Federal Constituency in the House Of Reps.

    You may remember Bello from one of his high profile Twitter controversies that involved threatening someone’s mother with gang rape and an ethnic-tinged attack on Igbos. 

    Marilyn Okowa-Daramola, daughter of Ifeanyi Okowa

    The children of Nigerian politicians are starting political careers

    Ifeanyi Okowa is a former senator and current governor of Delta State whose second term will end in 2023. But the Okowa name won’t leave public office if his daughter wins at the polls next year. She’s the PDP’s flagbearer to represent Ika North-East Constituency at the Delta State House of Assembly.

    ALSO READ: Time Is Running Out for You to Register for Your PVC

    Idris Ajimobi, son of Abiola Ajimobi

    Abiola Ajimobi was a former senator and former governor of Oyo State. He left the Oyo Government House a year before he died of COVID-19 complications in 2020. His son, Idris Abiola-Ajimobi, will take part in the 2023 elections as the APC candidate for the Ibadan South-West II Constituency election. 

    Umar Ganduje, son of Abdullahi Ganduje

    The children of Nigerian politicians are starting political careers

    The governor of Kano State, Abdullahi Ganduje, is perhaps most widely-known for stuffing his babariga with thousands of dollars paid as bribe from a contractor. He’s been governor of Kano since 2015 and will end his tenure in 2023. His son, Umar, will contest in the 2023 elections for the seat of representative of Tofa, Rimin Gado, Dawakin Tofa Federal Constituency.

    Olamijuwonlo Akala, son of Alao Akala

    Before his death in January 2022, Alao Akala was a one-term governor of Oyo State and previously served as deputy governor. At the 2023 polls, his son, Olamijuwonlo, is contesting to become the representative of Ogbomoso North, South and Oriire Federal Constituency.

    Joju Fayose, son of Ayo Fayose

    The children of Nigerian politicians are starting political careers

    Ayo Fayose is easily one of the most recognisable names in Nigerian politics, even if he cannot win one delegate to vote for him as a presidential aspirant. He’s a two-term governor of Ekiti State and a vocal critic of the Federal Government of President Buhari. His son, Joju, is the PDP flagbearer for the Ekiti Central Federal Constituency 1 election in 2023.

    ALSO READ: Lessons We Learnt from PDP’s National Convention

  • QUIZ: Which Popular Nigerian Parent Lie Will You Tell Your Children?

    “I always came first” or “Go and where your shoes, I’ll wait”. This quiz knows the lie you’d tell your children as per Nigerian parents tradition.

    Take the quiz to find out:

  • 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. 

  • 9 Things To Do When Your Child Tries To Disgrace You In Public

    Parenting is tough work and no one can tell you what or what not to do when you have children. Except us. One of the things you can’t control as a parent is whether or not your child is going to disgrace you in public which is why we’ve come up with a list of things you can do if and when that happens.  

    1. Change your name.

    Change your name so no one will associate you with that child.

    2. Disgrace them first.

    You get extra points when you disgrace them first. There’s nothing they’ll do that’ll take you by surprise since you’ve already done it and you know the blueprint. 

    3. Put them up for sale.

    Make sure you sell them to the lowest bidder, so the person can experience a bit of what you have experienced. Make sure you sell them at a price you are willing to pay back for them. 

    4. Buy them oversize clothes to fit their wings.

    Any child that tries to disgrace you in public has clearly grown wings and needs clothes that’ll be big enough to accommodate those wings. Suits are a more advisable option for children like that. They’ll fill into it and so will their wings. 

    5. Roll on the floor when you are out with them.

    Don’t just roll on the floor, add a few tears too. You won’t only disgrace the child, you’ll confuse them too and make them understand what you go through when you are out with them.

    6. Scream and beg strangers to pray for your child.

    Make sure the strangers are also as confused and afraid as you are, so they can bring a cane and some holy water to help the child get their senses back. 

    7. Tell the child to try Jesus and not you.

    Let the child know that Jesus forgives faster than you do and you won’t wait till the child is in heaven to pass your own judgment on them.

    8. Announce that they’ve been disowned in every Nigerian newspaper. 

    Make sure you buy a lot of copies of the newspaper and share it with everyone that knows the child. Let the world know you are ready to correct your mistakes and focus on other positive things. 

    9. Give them their inheritance with a note.

    e go be by the vunderkind | Encomium Magazine

    Make sure the note says “We’ll meet at Jesus’ feet” so they know you are very serious.

  • QUIZ: Decorate A House, And We’ll Guess How Many Children You’ll Have

    Will you have 3 children or 7 children? Decorate a house and we’ll tell you.

  • 9 Nigerians Talk About Witnessing Abuse In Their Parents Marriage

    The effects of an abusive marriage on the children should be spoken about more. To grow up in a home where domestic violence occurs frequently leaves a scar that takes long to heal or never heal at all. In this article, 9 Nigerians talk about witnessing abuse in their parents marriage, and how they feel about it.

    TW: Domestic Violence, Abuse.

    Image used for illustrative purposes. Source: Office On Women’s Health.

    *Lydia.

    Growing up, I witnessed a lot of domestic violence between my parents. They got separated just last year and we, their children, are very happy because it’s something that has been going on for over twenty-six years. The abuse was not a one way thing; it was mutual. My mum would hit my dad, and my dad would hit her too, and my mum would take out the frustration on us, the children, especially me.

    They had a misunderstanding when I was eight. My mother took the boiling ring on the table and hit him with it. He ended up with a broken rib. I still have nightmares about it. The fights were about random things. When I was a child, it was about him not coming home on time from his job as a doctor, or about his family’s interference in their marriage. When I grew older, it became about infidelity and sex. Sometimes even, it was about her beating and yelling at us. In these cases, he would try to interfere and it would end up as their own fight. Once, they had a very big fight, and the house almost burnt down. After that, my mother packed her things and left. But then, they still ended up together.

    Everywhere we went to, every compound we lived in, people knew about the fights. Even when we built our own house, the stigma of their fight hung around us. It was a very shameful thing to witness. Eventually, they separated. I guess they’d both had enough, but we all knew the marriage ended a long time ago and we kept begging them to go their separate ways before they kill each other.

    I am happy they are no longer together. We have peace now. My siblings are okay with it, and no one is calling us to judge anything or mediate between two parties. But even then, I feel a mix of sadness, resentment, and love. I am sad that they wasted three decades of their lives fighting each other instead of just moving on. I love them, but I resent them for ruining my childhood and making me hate marriage, because witnessing what went on in their marriage changed my view of it completely. I hope to be married someday, but I worry that something might go wrong.

    Priye.

    With my parents, it’s more emotional abuse and manipulation plus gaslighting. My father says things and when you talk about it weeks later, he’ll deny blatantly. It’s a family of six. Five people are telling you that you said something and you deny it. Once, he beat my sister with a broom. My mother tried to beg, but he didn’t even care that someone was there. My younger brother held him back and he turned on him, finished the broom on his body and went away. He never spoke about that incident, never acknowledged my mother. Once, he did something and my mum asked him. Asked, not confronted. And he told her she talks like a senseless person. Another time, he told her that he only intended to have one child but she kept on getting pregnant at will, as though the act was not something they both willingly participated in. There was this time my mum purged overnight. They stay in the same room, yet my father lied that he never heard her go to the toilet.

    He married her when she was twenty-one with an SSCE. Since they got married, she has been telling him that she wanted to go to school, but never at any point did he encourage her. Rather, he belittles her achievements. He would tell her, “Let me finish first,” and this is a man who has been attending school since 2002 and has never supported or pushed her. He complains that my mother never brings anything to the the family, which is a lie because the amount he drops for upkeep is very small compared to what my mother spends to make everything work out well. Recently, he asked my mum to cook soup for his friends and the same amount he dropped for upkeep for a whole week was the amount he dropped for the soup. And this is clear indication that he knows just what he ought to drop but is willingly choosing not to do it. Anytime my sister and I make it clear that we won’t marry someone like him, he says that my mother is turning us against him.

    Most times my mother cries because she’s helpless. He never listens to her. If you hear my father talk about my mother, you’ll think she’s a big fool and a thoughtless person. It’s why he prefers to table family matters to his friend and not her. And when when everything turns bad, he then returns home to listen to her advice. The gaslighting, manipulation and belittling are top notch. He once told her she’s a witch and her umbilical cord is buried somewhere so she needs deliverance. Now, my mum is considering divorce and we support her.

    Blog - Page 8 of 9 - Nigerian Parents
    Image used for illustrative purposes. Source: Nigerian Parents

    Ayobami.

    My dad was beating my mum before I was born. Even when I was a child, it continued, but I did not get a hint of this. He was always very careful about it. He hardly ever beat her when the kids were around and even if we were, I was never there to witness it. I was probably off playing somewhere while my brothers bore the brunt of the whole thing. Once in a while, they would stand up to my dad but rather than resolving things, it caused an issue between my dad and eldest brother. And as though the beating was not enough, he was also cheating on her with several women.

    When I turned seven, my mother took me and my brothers to stay with her family, and then she left the country. She was away for five years. My dad tried everything he could and finally got in touch with her. They started talking again on the phone and he convinced her to return to Nigeria, even though he was remarried with 2 other kids. She came back but refused to stay in the same house with my step-mother so my dad had to rent another house for my step-mother. And then, he resumed the abuse.

    We thought the going was good and since I never really witnessed any domestic violence when I was young, it didn’t occur to me that anything was going on in the house. Until one day when I was alone at home with my parents and my brothers were in the university. They started arguing about how my dad was cheating with the neighbour’s wife. Things got heated and my dad started beating my mother.

    He beat her from the backyard to the kitchen to the sitting room to her room, then back to the sitting room. The house was in shambles that day. The gas cooker was upside-down, food was upturned, and yet my father was not satisfied. I couldn’t do anything, he had already pushed me away a long time ago and I felt powerless in the face of the abuse. I was crying as I watched my mother, and she too was crying. And then he went to pick up a hammer and told her that he would kill her and no one would ask him about it. That was how the fight ended: my dad, raising a hammer over my mum, about to kill her.

    That was the fight that broke everything. My dad called his family members the next day and told them he wanted my mother out of his house. She begged and begged but they didn’t listen. My mum and I had to leave the house very early the next morning so the whole estate wouldn’t see us leaving with all our luggage.

    Kazeem.

    The earliest memory I have of my dad hitting my mum was when I was about four years of age. She had started a new business selling and packaging kunu for sale. He travels a lot, and was away when she started the business. When he returned, he saw the business and expressed his dislike for it by hitting her. He hit her in public, scattered her wares and broke everything down. She cried, we consoled her, and later at night, he came to beg her.

    The beating was frequent. Traveling helped a lot, but whenever he got back, especially after hanging out with the boys, and taking a drink or two, my mum would have to walk on eggshells or hand will touch her. Most times when he starts acting up and throwing things at her, sh would run outta the house. By the age of seven, I had learned how to run with her. We would take strolls to two bus stops away and walk back when things have cooled off.

    The most amazing thing was, my dad was the perfect father. He was caring, quite responsible and everything good a person would want in a dad, but he was a monster of a husband. With time, my mum became accustomed to his rage and she became fiesty and began to talk back. It cooled him off a bit, but when it gets to him, he would react. Even when he was above fifty, he would chase my mum round the house, trying to hit her.

    When we, the children, stand up for her, he also started hitting us and was shameless about it. But one thing was frequent: he would come back to apologize. He would tell us, too, that his weakness is anger. And yet, after apologizing, he would go back to doing the same thing. Where does one draw the line in that kind of situation?

    Family members that have stayed with us know what my mum goes through. The neighbours too. People rarely respect her. She never left because she had absolutely nothing to get back to. He prevented her from using her degree (he sponsored it after her third child), never wanted her to start a business, & always wants everything she owns to come from him.

    Presently, he works in another state, and we don’t look forward to when he comes home. It’s not like he still hits us, but we are all scared of it happening again. We, the children, all have strained relationships with our dad now, and he’s jealous of what we have with our mum. But the truth is the truth: it’s hard to love a father who treats your mother badly.

    8 Crazy Things Nigerian Parents Flog You For | Zikoko!
    Image used for illustrative purposes. Source: Google.

    Amaka.

    My mum herself was abusive to us, her children. But I feel that an abused person becomes abusive because of the things they have gone through. My father abused her. Every week, they had arguments, some about money, and these arguments degenerated into fights. Once, when I was about eight or nine in JSS 1, he beat her, ripped her clothes and sent her out of the house naked that night. Our neighbours had to take her in and give her clothes so she could go sleep at her parents house.

    Several times, I had to call the neighbours to separate fights. At some point, it became embarrassing. She left him, came back, and yet the beating never stopped. He gave her a black eye once, and the scar still remains.

    One thing that guides me now is that he is abusive, and I never want to be like him. He has married two more wives, and he beats them too. Recently, his third wife sent me a message to say that he beat her. I didn’t talk to him for a long time and our relationship is weird, and this is one of the thing that influences it. Eventually my mum left when I was fifteen. And we the children had to choose who we wanted to stay with. He disowned me when I decided to go with my mum. He’s the reason I don’t want to have children. I think I would be a shitty parent.

    Mildred.

    My dad used to beat my mum but I never saw it. I just saw the aftermath of it, like the time he pulled out a whole cornrow from her head and that part of her head had no hair, just shiny and bald. This was when I was seven. I would tell my mum to leave him even at that age but she didn’t. The only time I ever saw him hit her was once when he stomped her in me and my brother’s presence, that’s when I was eight.

    Even then I never used the words domestic violence. I knew what it was but it wasn’t until I was about thirteen or fourteen that I was able to use it and even then it made me uncomfortable because it seemed like an outside thing, not something that was happening in my own house. The worst part was my father once trying to justify it to me when I was sixteen, talking about how she didn’t respect him. That was the day he died to me.

    The day I saw him hit her was the day she left, but she came back after a year and then that cycle repeated itself two more times. Now she doesn’t speak to him unless they happen to be in the same environment and she rarely sees him because they don’t live together anymore.

    I don’t like my father and I try not to blame my mother for staying but the truth is that I do. As a child, I never wanted to get married but now my view on it is “If it happens, then fine.” I think it’s also made me the kind of person that’s very aware of the little things and any sign of anything that might lead to abuse of any kind, both emotional and physical. I’m out with a quickness.

    Temitope.

    The abuse robbed me of my childhood. It happened too many times, it became the single story of my childhood. When I think about growing up, the abuse is what comes up. My siblings and I hardly knew the cause. We just heard people screaming, and someone would come out, usually my mum. At some point, it became our playtime drama. We had fun times shouting, “Daddy please don’t kill mummy.”

    1,949 Black Family Fighting Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty-Free Images -  iStock
    Image used for illustrative purposes. Source: Istockphoto

    One incident I specifically remember is when my dad lost his job and he blamed my mum. He called her a witch to our faces. On some occasions, my mum’s brother would come to intervene. And when things ended, they ended because my dad refused to move in with us. Why? He didn’t want to live in a house “built by a woman.” Like I said, he’d lost his job and couldn’t get another. We got thrown out of the house we were living in. But my mum had bought this land. So she quickly put together some bungalow on the plot, but my father said he wouldn’t be moving in. End of. They separated.

    Tobiloba.

    My dad never wanted to marry my mum, but she had promised herself that anyone who deflowered her would be the one to marry her, and my dad happened to be that man. What was worse, she was pregnant. He refused to marry her. He said he did not know if my mum had slept with someone else and was trying to force a bastard on him. In the end, he caved in, and that was the genesis of the abuse.

    He beat her while she was pregnant, and this affected the first child’s ability to understand things quickly. And yet, the beating during pregnancy never stopped. It carried all the way down to the third child. After I was born, he would bring in other women and lock my mum out. There was a time he beat her so much and he hit a table on her leg. Till date, the scar remains. There was the other time he brought out a cutlass too.

    There are excuses that might be tendered for his behaviour. One of it would be that he came from a military family. All of them in that family, from my father to their last born, all of them with a history of violence. Once, I was in university, and my brother called to inform me that he had beat my mum again and locked her in the house. I left school, took a night bus, all so I could get home. Not that it would have stopped him anyway.

    He’s changed now. In fact, he is the president of the men’s union in church for two years in a row. But some things are unforgettable, unforgivable, perhaps? Sometimes, he blames my mum for my eldest brother’s ‘condition’, and says that he turned out the way he did because he is a bastard, not his child. He does not mention the beating during the pregnancy.

    My aunt too goes through the same thing with her husband (who is my dad’s youngest brother) and each time she comes to our house to share, my mum encourages her to keep fighting. Sometimes, I get angry and tell her it’s not worth it and she is lucky she did not die in the process. I respect my mum for fighting for us, and I love my dad. A part of me believes firmly that he deserves whatever bad things happen to him, but then he’s still my dad and he is trying everything possible to be the best dad he was not in the earlier years. I believe he could be better for himself, and for us, his family.

    Sarah.

    When I was younger, my parents used to have a lot of issues. I really didn’t grasp what was happening; I was about five. But I remember very clearly, one night my sister and I were making our bed to sleep when we heard a noise. We ran out and saw my my father hitting my mother. I remember us telling him to stop, leave her alone, but nothing could have prepared me for the punch my father gave me so I could get out of the way. I tell it as a joke now, but the truth of it remains that he was so blinded that he hit a five-year-old.

    There was another fight they had where he broke a mug on my mother’s head. He tried to take her to the hospital, but she screamed at him to leave her alone. She took herself to the hospital, but my father never went to see her throughout her stay there.

    Many of the fights didn’t make sense. Some of them happened because she demanded for school fees, or because he returned home drunk. I really believed she should have left him all those years ago, but she never did. They are still together. Sometimes when I ask my mother why she stayed, she tells me she did not have the choice to leave him. Leaving a man was not an option that was considered possible then. Where was the money, first of all? And where was the parental support to back you up when you did such a thing? The first time she tried to leave him, her mum told her to go back. And she had five kids. Even if she wanted to leave, where would she have put them? Now, she is almost sixty, and he doesn’t hit her anymore, so I guess they have found a way to make it work.

    *Names have been changed.

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  • QUIZ: Are You A Problem Child?

    Are you calm or you’re a problem disguising? This quiz will expose you.

  • 10 Reasons Why Kids Are Bad Vibes

    With the amount of bad publicity pregnancy has received, you’ll wonder why people are still getting pregnant and having kids. Kids are only cute for a short period of time before they start to show their true colours. Here’s a list of reasons why kids are bad vibes:

    1.They eat all your food.

    They can’t cook, they don’t contribute to anything around the house but they want to eat. They don’t even eat little portions, they eat large portions all the time. Kids spend 18 out of 24hrs eating for people who can’t farm or work. 

    2.They spend all your money

    From school fees to clothing, to feeding, it’s like they came to this life to finish your money. You can’t buy nice things for yourself without thinking of your child first. They don’t care that Nigeria is bad, they just want to chop your money.

    3.They don’t pay rent

    They don’t even know what a job is, talk less about paying rent. Kids take over all your life and take all the space in your house without paying a dime. You can’t even send them on errands till they are at least one year old.

    4.They keep you up at night

    Why don’t kids like to sleep? Serious question. It’s ok if they stay up by themselves, but no, they’ll want you to feed them and play with them. Don’t let those cute little giggles get to you please, avoid kids. 

    5.They don’t work but always want to buy things.

    First of all, there’s rice at home. The only money they have is the one their grandparents gave them, but they want you to buy them a new PS5. ‘Kunle do you have PS5 money?’

    6.They lack respect

    No one knowingly and unknowingly hurts your feelings like kids do. Well, except Yoruba men. Kids say things as they feel without sparing a thought, a very mean set of people. 

    7.They cry for no reason

    They soil themselves and start to cry like someone did the dirty work for them. They cry when they are sleepy too, instead of just closing their eyes and sleeping. Reason 1256816 why kids are proper bad vibes.

    8.They grow so fast

    They grow super fast, mostly because they’ve eaten all your food. You still have to be responsible for them regardless of  how fast they’ve grown.

    9.They take over your life

    Kids begging

    Oops, you can’t have too much fun, you have to be back home to that child. You can’t even party too much or be out too long without thinking of your child. 

    10.They only want to play

    Kids dancing

    Children don’t pay rent, don’t work, but are overall best at playing.

    Final verdict: User interface A1 – User Experience F9

  • What She Said: Choosing Enjoyment Meant Leaving My Husband


    The subject of today’s What She Said is a 34-year-old Nigerian woman who grew up getting everything she asked for. She talks about constantly pursuing enjoyment, and how that led to her leaving her cheating husband and raising her two children independently. 

    What was it like growing up? 

    I had a pretty happy childhood. I am the 12th child out of 21 and was the last girl till I was 12 years old, so I was kind of everyone’s favourite. I grew up with a lot of people in the house: cousins and aunts inclusive. I was never short of people to play with.

    The earliest memory of my childhood is from when I was about four years old. My daddy’s important friends came, and they gave me two bundles of five naira notes. I made my mum take me to the shopping complex to buy a red spaghetti strap dress with a fancy bolero jacket. 

    Your mother did not “hold” the money for you? Must be nice.

    Whenever I got money like that, I sometimes gave my parents to keep it for me, but I have always loved being responsible for my own money. 

    The downside to being responsible for your own money is that sometimes you’re deprived of things other people have. If I protested, my parents told me those people used their savings to buy it. There was a year I almost did not get Sallah clothes because I had used all my savings at the snack woman’s place. After crying for hours, they finally gave me the clothes. 

    The thing is, I was adorable, smart and liked. I was everyone’s little bride at their wedding, always the house princess for inter-house sports, and always represented the school at primary school events. I was spoilt, overindulged and was used to having my way with almost everything. I loved it, and it did a lot for my self-confidence and self-esteem.

    What’s it like being a confident adult? 

    I look at people who don’t like me like they don’t have good taste.  

    When I was younger, I did not handle being rejected well. There was a time a guy said he liked me but didn’t want to date me. I was stunned. Like how dare he? Why would he allow common sense to derail him from enjoyment? I am a big believer in enjoyment, so this did not make any sense to me. 

    LOL. What do you consider enjoyment? 

    Food is my kind of enjoyment, but I despise cooking. I love food cooked by other people. That was why when I started making money, the first thing I did was hire a cook. After a few months, I sent him away because he was doing nonsense. Now, I have someone that does well and cooks for the house. 

    The house? 

    The house includes me, my children’s minder, the help, my two children, and my nieces. 

    Tell me about your kids.

    They’re amazing children, and I love them very much, but I don’t recommend children to anybody. They take your body, your energy and your money. All for small hugs and kisses? The return on investment is poor. 

    But then you have not just one, but two. Why? 

    I was 23 and so very young and foolish. I felt that having children was expected of me after getting married, so I did just that. I got married and pushed out two children without putting much thought into it. 

    I had my first child for my ex-husband and the second for my first child because I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life entertaining her. Now they can entertain themselves and be friends. 

    Did that work? 

    Yes. They do everything together and love one another so much it gets me upset sometimes. The boy who is two years older than his sister said to me the other day: “I get upset when I see my sister crying, and I feel like slapping someone, but since you are the one making her cry, I will just go and tell her sorry.”

    She was crying because I scolded her for finishing some paper in the house and not letting me know to replace it. 

    The thought of them gaining power and throwing me out of the house has crossed my mind, but I know they love me too much. They also understand that sometimes I love one child more than the other, and they don’t mind. 

    One day, my children told me, “You can’t love two people the same way at the same time. There are times when you love my sister more, and times you love me more, but we don’t care. We know you love both of us and will always take care of us.” 

    Stuff like this makes me feel like I’m winning in the parent department. 

    Definitely. What about your ex-husband? Where is he in this picture? 

    Even when we were together, I was the children’s primary caregiver, so it’s not like he knows what to do with them.

    Why did the marriage end though? 

    We wanted different things out of life, and it was leading to constant conflict. He was 32 years old when we got married, and until then, he had never been responsible for anyone, not even himself. So, he struggled. 

    He also seemed unable to wrap his head around the fact that I didn’t want a mediocre life. So, he did not understand my drive to work, to make money. I want a BeachFront mansion, and I don’t mind working for it. Meanwhile, he’s satisfied with a bungalow in the village. He also cheated on me with close friends and associates and took advantage of people living with us.

    Wow.

    I once got a call around 4 a.m. from him while I was on a work trip. He was demanding the kids’ nanny leave because she woke the children up too early. I told him that was not possible, and it was too early in the morning. Then I went back to bed. 

    When I woke up, I found out he had already sent her away. I asked her what happened, and she said ever since I left, he had been trying to sleep with her. She said she woke the children up because she wanted protection. It was at that moment I knew I could not do it anymore. 

    I got home, asked him what happened, and he said it’s his house, and he could do whatever he wanted. He told me anyone who had a problem with that could leave, so I carried my children and left. 

    Damn, that must suck. 

    Yeah. After that, different women started coming to me with various allegations from pregnancy to rape. It was a whole mess. In fact, in the first year of our marriage, he got my friend pregnant. 

    I should have left then, but I felt like I had something to prove. When I got married, people told me that the marriage would not last long. I was desperate to make it work. 

    Was there a reason they thought it would not work? 

    My motto is, if he is giving you a headache, let him go. God did not put me on earth to be dealing with headaches from men. I am a very beautiful woman, and there are always men and women who want to be with me, so why will I be with someone who is stressing me? My response to stress is flight, and I am very happy and content with being on my own.


    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women like content, click here

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  • 8 Nigerians Talk About Being Disowned By Their Parents

    What does it mean to have your parents say they no longer want anything to do with you, their child? For this article, I spoke to 8 Nigerians who shared their story of being disowned by one or both parents.


    This was a difficult piece to write. And this is not just because of the number of people who responded, but also because of the diversity of the stories and the emotions contained in it. I am grateful to everyone who shared their stories with me.

    Emeka.

    TW: Rape.

    I grew up with my mother. When I was approaching 14, I became a full-blown truant and she could not handle it, so I was sent to live with my uncle in the same city. My uncle’s wife is late, but he remarried, and so the new wife was like a step-mom of sorts.

    In 2012, their youngest child raped me. He’s six years older than me. I was drunk when he did it, and I couldn’t speak up. I eventually told a cousin, but that one didn’t loud it, and I lived with the trauma for about 7 years.

    In 2019, I told my story on Twitter. Instablog and Linda Ikeji posted it on their pages, and it traveled so far that my family members saw it and called an emergency family meeting. Turned out I was not the only one. Some had spoken before, and others were speaking out. But the guy denied it all. It became a full-blown family affair. I was accused of trying to disintegrate the family, and after the meeting ended, I was excommunicated from everyone.

    Abigail.

    My father has disowned me and my sister twice. The first time was in 2018. We had a family meeting, and he wanted to report our mother to us, but we took her side because we knew he was wrong. We told him we were unhappy because of his stinginess and how it made everyone’s life hard. He called us ungrateful and said we should go and look for our father. A month after the meeting, he came back to say he has changed and is ready to do better, but my sister didn’t speak to him for a year, because even though he claimed to be a changed person, the situation at home did not change.

    A few weeks ago, he said we must be following him to church. My sister stopped in 2019, and I stopped in 2020. We did not actually stop attending church, we just stopped following him to his own church because he’s a pastor. Our refusal to follow him was the last straw. That Sunday morning, he said he ceased to be our father and we must leave his house, go and live anywhere we like. He beat us badly and even injured my sister, and we had no choice but to leave. We have now gotten a place. Once we buy a bed and cooker, we’ll move out.

    Tinuke.

    So, I used to stay with my grandpa. When he fell ill, baba knew he was going to die and decided to give me my own share of his money, as per wonderful granddaughter that I was. I was in 200level.

    As soon as the money landed, I told myself, ‘Money is meant to be spent.’ Besides, who would ask me why I spent the money given to me by my grandpa? I started balling in school. When my grandpa died, my souvenir was the talk of the burial party. See, there was money on ground, I had no worries. I had a make-up artist do my make-up and even paid for my mum’s make-up too.

    After 2months of spending on unnecessary things, the money finished. Even then, I wasn’t bothered. Until my mother asked me about the money. According to her, my grandpa told her what I was supposed to use the money for.

    Ha.

    Oya account for the money, I couldn’t. It was then I knew my village people were following me side by side. Next thing, my mother started asking me how I spend money and that she wanted a statement of account from my bank. I used to collect enough money weekly from home then, and according to her estimation, I was supposed to have a lot in my account.

    Right there and then, she calculated my pocket money, how much I was supposed to spend from it, and how much I was supposed to have in my savings account. She said bad as e bad, I was supposed to have nothing less than ₦300k in my account but I had just  ₦20k in the account. How?

    First of all, I chop beating, and then she disowned me, told me never to come to her house again or call her number. The only person who would have begged on my behalf was dead so I was truly done for.

    I was on my own for 3months. It was a crazy period. No pocket money, no mother to pity me. I even went to her friends but she didn’t answer them. I had to go to church to meet our pastor. I narrated what happened, and he brought other elders from the church and they started begging on my behalf.

    She sha forgave me, but I wasn’t given pocket money for about 6 months. She’d buy my provisions and foodstuff, then calculate transport fare for me. Now, I have learned to save first before spending. Being disowned really helped curb my lavish spending.

    Korede.

    I’m the only child of my parents. When I was about 6 months, they separated. My father went ahead to set up a new family with another woman and my mother did the same with another man, so I grew up with my grandmother.

    Once or twice a year, I visited my father and his new family for the holidays. I was about 5 or 6 years then, and as a child, I was always excited to visit for the holidays and have fun once or twice a year. Eventually, they moved and my grandmother thought it would nice be if I moved in with them. I regretted it.

    I am the first male child of my father, and perhaps my stepmother assumed I would be a threat because she made it obvious in how she behaved towards me. Funny thing was, the bad treatment wasn’t so obvious to me. Instead, I was grateful to live with someone else other than my grandmother. Looking back now, I see just how bad it was, and how heartbreaking it was that my father never paid much attention to me. He wasn’t always at home, and even when he was, he did whatever my stepmother told him. I lived with them for 4 years before my grandmother felt something was not right. When she came to pick me, I was covered in bruises.

    In 2004, I was taken to Lagos to live with my aunt. There, I completed secondary school and university. My father wanted me to come back, but it didn’t work. After I left Akure in 2004, I never spoke to him, his wife, or their children. He tried to reach me but my aunts kept information away from him, and I kept my distance as much as possible too. I’m not very spiritual, but I know my step-mother fears that I’ll shorten her children’s ration when it’s time to share the inheritance.

    Finally, after all attempts to connect with me failed, my father called to say he has disowned me, and that I should never bear his surname again. It was an easy thing for me, because even me I don’t want to see him again. And no, I don’t hate him. Honestly. If I’m going to hate anyone, it would be my mother who dropped me and never looked back, and even at that, I still don’t hate her because I know she has her own side of the story too. My belief is that nobody owes me anything. I grew up learning to fight my battle myself and now I have grown up to be someone who doesn’t depend on anybody. Call it toxic behaviour if you want, but some of us didn’t have the luxury of growing up in a family with both parents present.

    Evelyn.

    The first time I was disowned, I was 13 in a boarding school, and I got raped. When my Dad heard about it, he called me a prostitute for being raped. He said I was no longer his daughter, and called me a disgrace.

    Even at that, I still went back home to him. I was 13, with nowhere else to go. My mom was holding forte for me, pleading with him on my behalf. Isn’t it funny how one parent disowns you and the other still claims you as their child?

    The second time, I got a second piercing for my ears. It was as if the Lord came down that day. My mother shouted, and my father beat the hell out of me. He said, ‘I curse you, you are not my daughter anymore, find your own parent elsewhere.’ I was 18 then. I am 20 now, and I no longer live with my parents.

    Azeezat.

    I am from a Muslim home. My dad and mum are separated and my dad would always tell us that we can’t be Christians. Unfortunately, I didn’t live with him while growing up; I lived with one of his siblings who married a Christian. She goes to church with her kids, and I had no choice but to go with her. With time, I fell in love with the choir department and joined them. I became so committed that within years, I was made the choir coordinator.

    Back in secondary school, I practiced Islam in the littlest way: I’d observe the Ramadan fast but pray like twice a day because I wasn’t just comfortable with having to perform ablution five times a day. I covered my hair as well. By the time I finished secondary school, it was glaring to everyone that I wasn’t a devoted Muslim. My lack of interest was obvious. Once, I visited my dad and was told to pray, and I was unconsciously praying in Jesus’ name. I felt so embarrassed but I couldn’t help it. I was used to the Christian way of life and I was interested in almost everything I’d seen them do.

    My dad had a series of conversations with me about this interest in Christianity. Sometimes, the conversations came out as threats, but I was far gone. And then I was disowned.

    It happened during a family meeting, and even though I had been warned by other family members to listen to my dad and just do his will so I could make him happy, I was stubborn within me. I knew what I wanted and although it hurt me more to disobey my dad, I was committed to following that path. After everyone said their bit during the meeting, I told them I couldn’t change my mind.

    My dad announced openly there that he disowned me. He is a responsible father, I’ll give him that credit. He caters for my all my needs even though he had to struggle to make ends meet. He even made sure I attended one of the best schools. But because I held on to Christianity, he told me to forget I have a family and he warned my siblings not to call or have anything to do with me. I was sent out of the house that night.

    For three years, I was on my own. I struggled with depression, low self-esteem, hatred, and many other things. I was broke too and very lonely because my closest friends broke up with me within that period. Many people blamed my dad for wanting to change a girl who spent almost her life living with a Christian family. Some of them told him that he shouldn’t have allowed me to stay with the family if he didn’t want me to be like them.

    I was the one who made the move to reconcile because it is believed in Yoruba land that the younger should apologise to the elderly. I traveled down to his house and he welcomed me openheartedly without mentioning anything about religion and all.

    Ugochukwu.

    I was disowned by my father on Saturday. I’d been angry with him for a couple of years and everything just burst out that Saturday.

    He said I was being disrespectful to him, and he doesn’t want it to get to the point where he would insult his child. I flared up and shouted at him. I wanted him to tell me how I was being disrespectful to him. At first, he threatened to hit me. And then he actually tried to. I held him off and warned him that I would hit mine back.

    If I were to describe my life with him, APC’s government is child’s play. He chose the course I should study. When I got admitted, he expected me to ‘thank’ him. I was like, ‘Did you write the post-UTME for me? Or did you do the interview on my behalf?’ I have no life because of this man. He had this elite level expectation for me, and basically, he controlled my life to fit into that expectation. I have no real-life friends because of him. In trying to live up to his expectations of me, I lost myself and this made me resent him.

    I know I have lost him. I won’t apologise to him, neither will I accept his apology. I’m thinking of moving out.

    Olumide.

    I am gay. At first, nobody in my family knew about my sexuality and life was fine. But then I met up with someone online, and I was set-up. They tied my hands with the shirt I was wearing and beat me up until I was bloodied. My father was informed, and he was told to ‘bail’ me out with ₦700K. Originally, they set it for ₦2m, but they kept going back and forth until they settled for ₦700k.

    My mother nursed me back to health. She thought I would kill myself and sometimes, I’d catch her watching me closely. When I was considered well enough, we had the conversation. She asked me, ‘Are you gay? Did they lie against you? Was it a one-chance incident?’ I couldn’t lie my way out of that situation so I told her the truth.

    After that conversation with her, she took me to my father. Apparently, they had been talking, and the conversation was an attempt to get the truth. Now that it had been confirmed, my father said so many nasty and negative things to me. He called me a disgrace, placed several curses on me. And then he told me to go back to school.

    When he told me to go back to school, I took it at face level. I didn’t know it meant something else. I was in school when I found out that my father called the entire extended family from my mother’s side, and outed me to them by saying that my mother had brought a disgrace to his house. He then told them that he was disowning me, even though he never told me to my face. He told my siblings too, everyone else except me.

    It became so chaotic that my mother was caught in the crossfire. She was torn between her husband and her son, and at some point, she had to leave the house. But then she returned to him because she had other children too.

    My father stopped sending me money at school. When it was time to pay my school fees, he didn’t. Even when I had an extra semester and needed to pay, my mother and siblings pooled resources to pay for me. When I graduated from university and wanted to come home, my father refused. He said that if I showed up, he would blow my brains out. And no, it’s not an empty threat. My father owns a gun. I had to move to another city where I started squatting with someone. Later, my mother’s family took me in until I was able to do my NYSC and get a job.

    I am grateful I have my mother on my side. Despite my father’s refusal to associate with me, my mother tries everything to maintain her relationship with me. We don’t get to see each other often, but we try. Because of her, I have gone home twice. The first time, she was really sick and I had to be there. The second time, it was her birthday and I couldn’t miss that either. In both instances, my father wasn’t at home, but when he called during my mother’s sickness, he found out I was home and he began to yell over the phone. “WHO LET HIM IN? ANSWER ME! WHO LET HIM IN EVEN THOUGH I GAVE A STANDING ORDER THAT HE MUST NOT ENTER MY HOUSE?!” He has people on our street to monitor me and report to him if they sight me on the street. I could sneak in and the family members would not mind, but the people on the street will definitely do their work.

    Yes, my father is not the best father, but when he was present in my life, he was fully present. I have been disowned for 4 years now, and I feel his absence a lot. I see him do things for my siblings, things that would have made my life easier if he did that for me too, but he withholds that support from me.

    I needed to pay rent at one time, and I didn’t have the means to. Once, my mother and siblings sent me money and when I asked the source, they said it was my father who sent them a large sum of money and they decided to give me a part of it. I was sad, and even in that sadness, I was angry. I told them not to ever do that again. I don’t want the money they have to sneak to me. He is also my father, why not send me money too? Why not call me? He knows where I am, how I am struggling and he doesn’t make any attempt to reach out. Everyone keeps saying I shouldn’t stop reaching out to him, but he is not meeting me halfway. My hands are stretched out, but he is not taking them and pulling me close. Last year, something broke in me and I said, “You know what, fuck it. I don’t care anymore.”

    But it’s hard to suddenly shut down that part of me that yearns for him. I am a carbon copy of this man. I look like him, sound like him, does it not mean anything at all to him? Do I not mean anything to him? I admit I made a mistake by getting set-up, but why is he holding it over me all these years? Why refuse to forgive me?


  • What She Said: I Love My Children, But I’ve Never Liked Them


    The subject of this week’s What She Said is a 54-year-old woman who has three children she doesn’t like. She talks about  how they felt like distractions and how her relationship with them has only gotten worse with age. 

    Let’s start from the beginning. How old were you when you got married? 

    I was 26. I wanted to get married, but I wasn’t really sure who I wanted to marry. I had a number of options. I was sleeping with one of these options — he was a colleague in a different department. 

    I got pregnant. Abortion wasn’t an option. I was Anglican then. Even though I’m religious now, I won’t judge anyone who aborts a baby. Back then, I couldn’t even think of it. Also, I was scared of dying.

    My parents too would have killed me if they found out I had an abortion. So when I found out, I was worried about what to do. Then I came up with a plan to tell my parents I was engaged, so that once I started showing, the pregnancy would not shock them.

    You didn’t tell the father?

    That was the next step in the plan. After I told them I was engaged, I went and told him I was pregnant and that my parents said we had to get married. 

    Truthfully, that wasn’t a problem because he was ready to marry. I just wanted to rush the process. I had to do a lot of people-management to ensure that nobody spilled what I had told them. 

    How did your parents react?

    They didn’t want me to court for long. You know how mothers are. My mother, God bless her, just wanted us to have a really big wedding as soon as we could. We got married three months after. I wasn’t showing, so my parents didn’t know. They began to suspect when I started showing within a few months of being pregnant. 

    Did anyone catch your lie? 

    Oh, not at all, but I eventually told my husband that my parents never forced us to get married. I’ve always been the kind of person to sneak around. As a young girl especially. Although I’ve changed now, I do think I enjoyed the thrill of doing that. My husband didn’t feel duped. He wanted to get married. He was much older, I should mention. He was in his 40s. 

    So what was that like? Getting married so fast? How much of him did you know?

    Quite a lot from working together and going out together. But we were not necessarily in love. I was a romantic then. I wanted to marry someone I loved, but he wasn’t all about that. He was the opposite, a strong-head. People were not marrying for love as they are today, but I was optimistic that we would eventually fall in love. And we did, sooner than I expected. 

    How did that happen?

    I had a stillbirth. That was the first real traumatic experience I had in my life. I had never experienced grief like I did. I was just crying and gnashing my teeth. I said God hated me. 

    That should have pushed us away from each other, but it drew us together. I say that it should have pushed us away from each other because first of all, he really loved that child. Second of all, it was the foundation of our marriage. When it happened, we became so close and started protecting each other. That was simply how we fell in love. 

    That’s sweet. I’m sorry you had to go through that.

    Thanks. We went a few more years before trying again. I felt that our relationship had become monotonous and didn’t have any ideas on how to make it better. All we did was talk about work. Even though we no longer worked together, we still worked in the same industry. We were both very career-oriented people. 

    Unfortunately, getting pregnant this time was war. We simply couldn’t get pregnant, no matter what we did or how we tried. The doctor said we were both fine, that we just had to keep trying. 

    When I turned 32, I got pregnant. I decided I was going to resign and be extra careful because I was scared of miscarrying or having a stillbirth. The doctor said I was okay to work way into my third trimester. I said I didn’t want to. I had a very easy pregnancy, but I was in bed almost all through. I took up sewing and would make many things for my baby. I wasn’t excited because I was scared, yet, I was expectant. 

    When my baby girl came, I didn’t feel anything.

    What do you mean?

    I had assumed that I’d at least be excited that I got another chance to have a child. But I wasn’t happy. I wasn’t sad, and I’m not sure if I was depressed, but I wasn’t happy at all. I would spend hours staring at my child, expecting to become happy by just looking at her. Nothing happened. I faked happiness though. I faked the tears. Everyone around me was so excited; I just had to. And I couldn’t tell anyone. 

    That must have been hard for you. 

    Yes. Then child number two and three followed in quick succession. For number two, it was a difficult pregnancy. When I cried after giving birth, people thought it was tears of joy. It was, but it wasn’t because I was happy about my child. I was just happy I had gotten him out of my body. Once I had my third child, I told my husband we had done enough.

    What happened next? 

    He wasn’t thrilled about this. He wanted four children. He first tried to cajole me into having one more. Then we fought about it when I told him that if he wanted any more children, he had to either carry them himself or go and find another wife. Eventually, I made him understand that I had wasted five years of my life on having kids and would be wasting a lot of more time out of work if I had a fourth child. 

    You didn’t work all through the period of time you were having kids? 

    I tried to get a job when my daughter was two. My mum was staying with us, so she was going to help. I applied to different places but my application was rejected. I finally got a job, but a few months later, I got pregnant again. This time I didn’t quit because I wanted to protect my child from dying or anything, I quit because the workplace was hostile to me. People made jokes about my body that I was uncomfortable with. If I had to miss work for a check-up at the hospital, they would remove it from my salary. It was very rubbish. I left and didn’t bother until after I had my third child. 

    What did you do then? 

    I went to do my masters. I was 39 and was the third oldest in my class, but I didn’t care. If I was going to go back to the workplace, I felt that I needed an edge, and pursuing my education would give me that. My mum had basically moved in with us at that point. I didn’t even bother with my kids. She cooked their food and took care of them. She gave them the love that I simply did not have the time or care enough to give. She was with us until she died. However, by this time, they were old enough to take care of each other.

    Wait, during the time your mother took care of them, did you have any relationship at all with them?

    Not as much. I showed up for all the school events; sometimes, my mum or husband went. I was never excited about these events, as other mothers seemed to be. I tried to take them out when I could. I bought them what I thought they’d like. At some point, I thought they didn’t like me too, because they didn’t tell me things. My first daughter had her period, and it was my sister who told her what to do. I didn’t find out till a month later. I felt like a horrible mother. I still feel like a horrible mother. I took it out on her. I lashed out and that pretty much framed our relationship for years. 

    What do you mean?

    She went a few years without talking to me. Except it was necessary. She didn’t tell me things. She only told my husband or my mum. 

    Was going back to work the main factor? 

    Yes. It definitely did affect my relationship with my children. I was working seven days a week. My mind was on work because I really didn’t want anyone to make me feel left out because I have children. But I never really liked them from the beginning. I loved them, but did I like them? I didn’t. They felt like distractions. They demanded time and energy. 

    What about the other two children, what’s your relationship with them like? 

    Last born is my baby. I cherish her. That became a problem for my second child because he thought that I had favourites. They used to fight a lot when they were younger. And I didn’t help matters. I didn’t know how to mask my favouritism or limit the way I spoiled my last child. My mum actually warned me about it; I didn’t listen. Eventually I stopped spoiling her and that became a problem. She began to say that I hated her. She didn’t tell me this. She told my sister, who told me. My sister said I didn’t hate her, that I was just busy with work. She said she would pray to God to make me lose my job. 

    Child number two and three became wiser and formed an allyship that was against me. They realised I was the problem. I would scold the boy for being messy and the number three would tell me that I should leave him alone. 

    Wow. What was your husband like in all of these?

    Just as absent as I was. He was busy with work, but he seemed to have the parenting thing on lock. He was definitely a better father than I was a mother. 

    Then he became sick and died. That was quite the painful experience. I hadn’t experienced anything as traumatic since the stillbirth. But again, grief played an important role in uniting us, making us come together. But that lasted only for a short while.

    What’s your relationship with them today? 

    Nothing has changed. We just grew apart more and more. It feels like I am alone most of the time. My first daughter has moved out. She’s doing impressive work. We talk. I’m closer to her than the others. She says that maybe she had to leave home and get a well-paying job for me to start respecting her. I don’t fault that reasoning. 

    My son lives at home, but we don’t talk a lot. I think he’s trying my patience. 

    How? 

    Not going to church anymore. Dyeing his hair. Wearing earrings. He started it after I complained about someone in church who dressed like that. I haven’t said anything to him about it. Both us will continue looking at each other. But he is teaching me not to judge other people. 

    My last girl on the other hand is in university. She rarely calls, so I have to call her and shout at her to call. That path is still very rocky. I don’t like teenagers of any age.

    Lmao. Is there anything you’d do better about motherhood? 

    Maybe I’d have sought help. I was educated enough to know there could have been a problem. Also, I think not all women need to have children. It’s okay to not want them. They’re not just fillers in a relationship. They’re real people. I wish someone had told me this. 


    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women like content, click here

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  • 9 African Women Talk About Breastfeeding

    If you were on Twitter last week, breastfeeding was a trending topic, thanks to this video. It was an important conversation that I intended to continue, so I asked African women to share their breastfeeding experiences with me. Here’s what nine of them had to say. 

    Thelma, 28, Nigerian 

    I had a traumatic labour and delivery, so breastfeeding was not even at the top of my mind. When it was time to teach me how to get him to latch on, it wasn’t a problem. My son was so good at it they were cheering me on at the hospital. I didn’t have any milk so my poor baby was enjoying air. When I spoke to the midwife and nurse about it, they told me that I had lost a lot of blood and my iron level was low  and had affected my milk supply. They told me not to worry that they have enough formula to last my hospital stay. 

    While at home, I still couldn’t produce a lot of milk until 5-7 days later. My baby was on formula but I tried to get him to latch for 30 minutes every day. I wasn’t in a lot of pain but my nipples were cracked and disgusting. I ate different foods that were meant to help but I just didn’t feel like I had enough milk. My nurses were never worried as long as he was eating something. My child’s diet was 70% formula and 30% breast milk. Although I felt like I wasn’t doing enough, I was told everyone is different and I should not feel like a bad mother. That was reassuring for me. 

    Megan Ross, 32, South African 

    I breastfed my son for a long time —  almost four years. It was something I was happy to do as long as my son was happy with it. We weaned at a time that was emotionally good for him, and when I knew he felt ready to let go.

    I initially aimed to breastfeed for six months and then a year, but as time passed, it felt like the most natural and normal thing to do. I’ve travelled a lot for work so pumping and expressing was a huge part of my breastfeeding journey. I was pumping every two and a half hours on a flight from Frankfurt to Iceland and then in Iceland while I was away from my six-month-old for a week. It was intense but I didn’t want him to run out of milk and I was also trying to prevent mastitis. It was a lot of work and quite stressful but I don’t regret one minute of it.

    Tomi, 34, Nigerian 

    I have two kids —  a three-year-old and a nine-month-old. I breastfed my oldest child till she was two and a half. I stopped because she always wanted to suck at the same time as the younger one and never wanted to wait. I initially planned to breastfeed her till she was three. 

    I’ve been lucky in my journey. My husband and I attended breastfeeding classes before the kids were born. We learned proper positioning,  potential problems and potential solutions. I was able to put them on my breast almost immediately after they were born. For both births, my breast milk came in three days after delivery.  

    I remember being extremely sore when I was pregnant with my second child and still breastfeeding my first child. I had to remind myself that she didn’t ask me for a sibling. The pain eventually faded.

    I tried pumping out milk when my first child was about seven months old so my husband could feed her at night, but after all the pumping stress, this child would just take a sip and reject it. She nursed to sleep till she was about 21 months, and we mutually agreed to stop. The plan is to try for three years with my second baby. Breast milk is pretty much free, and formula is expensive plus the stress of boiling water and waiting for it to cool before feeding them. LOL. I just open my breast and throw it in their mouth. Hungry, take breast. Tired, take breast. Sad, take breast. Injured, take breast. It’s an amazing solution to everything.

    Bimbola, 28, Nigeria 

    I did a lot of research on breastfeeding when I was pregnant with my first baby. I had my son in a general hospital where exclusive breastfeeding was a must. I decided I wanted to breastfeed exclusively for six months. It was easy for the first few weeks but as the baby grew older, I noticed I was always hungry and cranky after breastfeeding. I also battled with postpartum depression so I was not in a good place. It was too much stress for me

    My baby was clingy as well. He didn’t allow anyone else to carry him. I couldn’t go out for too long. I didn’t even bother pumping breast milk because it was a lot of work. Funny enough, I made it through the six months breastfeeding him. I was 23, and I did not know how to fight back on societal pressures of what a ‘good mother’ should be. I’m older and more experienced now, so since I wasn’t lactating after I gave birth to my second child, I just gave him formula. That’s how I fed him, alongside breast milk. I weaned him around January this year. It was a win-win for both of us. I’m happy these conversations are happening. A new mum may see this and know she’s doing her best whether she’s bottle-feeding or breastfeeding.

    Funmi, 55, Nigerian 

    I didn’t know how to breastfeed when I had my first child. I was living with my husband’s family and my mother-in-law and sister-in-law refused to help because they didn’t like me. My baby survived on water for a week till my mother came on the day of my daughter’s naming ceremony. I wasn’t even eating well before she arrived and my husband wasn’t supportive either. My mother taught me to lactate and I eventually got used to it. 

    Sandra Solomon, 32, Nigerian 

    My breastfeeding journey wasn’t easy. On day one, my little girl rejected breast milk. I tried to force her but she wouldn’t swallow. I tried expressing the breast milk into a bottle, she didn’t take it either. I eventually gave up and started giving her formula. Sometimes, I would try feeding her with breast milk in a bottle but she knows the difference — she would spit it out immediately. I got shamed for bottle-feeding her. Most people didn’t understand how hard I tried.

    Fatima, 30, Nigerian 

    When I gave birth, my breastmilk didn’t flow because I was about six weeks early. I’d pump for two hours only to get like 30mls. This led to increased anxiety and postpartum depression so I stopped trying for a while. I had three different pumps, and I was like a maniac trying to get milk out. I bought lactation cookies, tea and granola. Those didn’t work. I drank fenugreek oil and licked the powder. I drank water like a drum. It was when I started drinking pawpaw leaf juice that my mother-in-law told me to give it a rest. If milk isn’t flowing, it’s not by force. When I relaxed, the milk started flowing. It never flowed in excess and couldn’t have been enough to breastfeed for six months but we dey okay. My body was always aching because breastfeeding was taking a toll on me so I had to wean earlier than planned. 

    Nnenna, 25, Nigerian 

    When I gave birth, I couldn’t breastfeed for three days because I had a Caesarean session. When I got home and started breastfeeding, it was the most excruciating pain ever. My baby’s mouth was like a vacuum cleaner, ready to suck my soul out through my nipple. 

    Feeding him every hour was so annoying because I was healing from the operation but my son didn’t care — all he wanted to do was suck, suck and suck. I always felt dizzy no matter how much I ate. I stopped breastfeeding him when he was 16 months because o ti sumi. I would have stopped earlier but it was convenient for me to shut him up with my breasts whenever he started crying. 

    Right now, he is 18 months and occasionally reaches for my breasts but all the milk has dried up. There’s also a pain that comes from stopping your child from breastfeeding and it’s worse than starting but that’s a story for another day. 

    Mido, 27, Botswana

    Breastfeeding was hard at first. My milk came out on the second day after delivery. I was sad at the hospital because other new moms were breastfeeding properly and I had to massage my breasts for milk to come out. It took a few hours and I was also expressing into her bottle lid so she could at least have something to feed on. I didn’t like how painful the process was but I got the hang of it eventually, and it was a beautiful experience for me. 

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  • What She Said: Motherhood Gets So Overwhelming, It Becomes Your identity

    The subject of this week’s What She Said is Karo Omu, a 29-year-old Nigerian woman and mother. She talks about almost having a miscarriage when she was five weeks pregnant, liking her daughter and the importance of giving women enough information about reproductive health.

    Did you always know you wanted to have a child?

    Yeah, but I don’t think I did consciously. I think when you’re a young girl, it’s normal to think that you would go on to start a family. I always thought I wanted many children, but I didn’t think about how I’d end up having them. I am from a big and close-knit family, so I wanted a big family too.

    What was growing up like? 

    I have four sisters and a brother. My brother is the last child, so maybe my mum favoured him a little, but my dad was really big on his daughters. In our house, being a girl or a boy wasn’t that different. My mum had nine siblings; eight girls and one boy. Her mum really wanted a boy, and I think my mum was conscious of this — having a boy. My dad on the other hand came from a family with many girls and boys and was more progressive, so he didn’t seem to care.

    So what was your pregnancy experience like?

    I think before our generation, pregnancy seemed like a normal thing: you’d get pregnant and have a child. Nobody spent time speaking about the journey; instead, they talked about the labour. I found out really early about my pregnancy — in about the 2nd or 3rd week. I had two near miscarriages. I took a trip when I was five weeks pregnant, and on the flight, I noticed I was bleeding. I didn’t know flying wasn’t good for someone who was newly pregnant. As soon as I landed, I was taken to the airport clinic. I remember someone saying, “She’s in her first trimester, this happens all the time. It’s just tissue. If it’ll stay, it’ll stay.” 

    Wow

    I was like, what the hell is happening? I went back home in Nigeria and had a similar experience. I went to the hospital and the doctor did a test and told me that my body didn’t recognise I was pregnant, so it wasn’t producing hormones to take care of the baby growing inside me. I had to start taking hormone injections; I had never heard anybody speak about this. I couldn’t fly till I was past my first trimester. 

    The rest of my pregnancy was uneventful. But because of the anxiety I developed in my first trimester, I was always worried; I would wake up every day to see if my baby was moving. It got so crazy, I bought a heart monitor to listen to her heartbeat.  That was something I wasn’t prepared for. When we talk about how people don’t talk about pregnancy, it’s mostly because everybody’s experience is so different that there’s almost nothing to go by.

    Fair enough. 

    Yeah. I didn’t have a physically tough pregnancy, but it was mentally tough for me as I was in a different city by myself, with only my husband. It was really lonely not having my extended family around. My baby was overdue for over two weeks, and my mum was like, this has never happened in our family, it’s crazy. My pregnancy journey was long, enjoyable, beautiful, but I was mostly tired of being pregnant.

    I can imagine. What has motherhood been like for you?

    Haha. Very crazy. I like my daughter, so the more I like her, the more I like being her mother. But, it’s so tough. It took me a while to remember that I am separate from my child. Motherhood gets so overwhelming, it becomes all of your identity. But now, I really like being a mum. I like being my daughter’s mother; that’s part of my identity. It took me a while to accept it, by removing myself out of it, then choosing it. Knowing that this is part of my identity doesn’t make me feel less of who I am.

    My daughter is three now. I went to work when she was seven weeks old because I felt like I really needed that. Then it got to a point where I felt I really needed to be at home with her; I did that. When the lockdown began, I realised that I have to be best friends with her because she’s an only child. She’s the reason I get out of bed on some days and that gives me a sense of purpose. 

    Compared to being born and raised in Nigeria, how has raising your child outside Nigeria been?

    Growing up, I had a lot of extended family and friends around, which meant everybody had an opinion about how you were being raised, and it was so easy for that to be projected on your parents.There was a lot of “what will people say?” even in the littlest choices. While my child may not have that communal feeling, I get to raise her with less thought to what people will think. But, I think children like mine miss out on that familiarity and safety I had growing up.

    What are some things you’re already worried about with raising your child? 

    I don’t know if it’s a Nigerian thing, but I hope my kid doesn’t have to hear a thing like, “What will you be doing in your husband’s house?” or “Let the boys go first.” I have always worked around social change, and my motivation is that I want my daughter to grow up in a better world.

    When I was a child, I would wait till 4 p.m. before watching TV because that was when it came on. But for my kid’s generation, there is so much information they have access to, and I am conscious of the fact that it’s my responsibility to filter what my child is exposed to.

    Also, she didn’t ask to be here so it is my responsibility to make her life work while also respecting her autonomy as a person. It’s very interesting and often challenging to navigate.

    My parenting journey has made me even more passionate about women having adequate reproductive health information and resources. Children shouldn’t have to be born as a consequence to parents who don’t want to have them.

    This makes me wonder about the work you do with Sanitary Aid. Is there a personal story there?

    Just before I turned 10, my parents asked how I wanted to celebrate my birthday. That year, I had just found out what an orphanage was. I told my parents I wanted to take my cake to an orphanage, and they were so excited that they ended up letting me throw three parties: one at home, another in church and the third at an orphanage. It was almost like I was rewarded for that thought. 

    I became a volunteer teacher when the IDP camps started and gradually started getting involved in social work. My bishop then had adopted kids, and they became my friends. I would teach them, and whatever project I had begun with them.

    I liked how it made me feel when people I worked with were happy, so it was almost like a selfish thing for me. 

    How did all of these lead to creating Sanitary Aid? 

    Sanitary Aid was a Twitter conversation about donating pads versus condoms. I remembered when I was in secondary school and my pocket money was  200 or 300 naira. There was no way I’d have been able to afford pads if they were sold for their current prices. 

    I had always thought about the issues affecting women and how we could make our lives better. Sanitary Aid was an avenue to help. Women having dignity and information was an agenda for us. It opened my eyes to how different experiences shape the things we do. I’m a feminist; to me feminism means equality because women lose so much to gender inequality. We lose so much time, respect, dignity and money to not being equal. This is one of the reasons I joined the Feminist Coalition, and the focus has been on how we can create more opportunities for women. I am very committed to conversations and work that promote women’s rights and give them visibility and help underserved communities.

    This was how Sanitary Aid started, and a few weeks after that, I found out I was pregnant. I didn’t know what I was getting into when it just began.

    How were you able to manage Sanitary Aid while pregnant?

    It’s just kudos to my team and family because they have always supported the project. We have grown into a full blown organisation and have public support. So, people who want to help do it on behalf of the organisation. That gap existed and all that was needed was a conversation to be had, which we did.

    It would have succeeded with or without me because there are always people willing to do something about the problems we have in the society. 

    What challenges do you and the organisation face?

    Some of the challenges are that some things, such as getting approval, take so much time. Then there is financial constraint. It’s important for me to create spaces where women can talk and be heard and question why we find things more appealing when we hear it from men than from women who are the ones experiencing this thing.

    One thing that always happens in this kind of work is that there is always going to be somebody else, and I’m totally not against so many people doing the same thing. If I wake up tomorrow and realise that there is no more period poverty, I’d be so happy regardless of who made that happen. As long as people are making change, that’s great. But, it’s also important that we question ourselves on why we are not listening when women are saying the same thing.

    What does success look like for Sanitary Aid?

    It’s a lot of things: it’s getting to the point where we have our social enterprise that will fund Sanitary Aid. Currently, we rely on partnerships and donations, which aren’t sustainable. I am very big on sustainability because so many people depend on us, and we can’t afford to crash and fall out of what we are doing. Success will also be having policies that tackle period poverty, even if it’s the government giving out free pads to girls. Also, we want to get to a place where we have funding for research in Nigeria on women’s reproductive health and reaching more girls and women. Success for us is a lot of things, but it’s mostly us being able to fund ourselves, more girls and women having access to sanitary pads and hygiene education. Period poverty is a by-product of poverty, so without tackling poverty and the issues that stop women and girls from having access to sanitary pads and makes them choose less hygienic means, we are never going to get to where we need to get to as a country. 

    We need to tackle poverty head-on. Not having access to information on Sexual and Reproductive health has a long term effect on women’s lives. I hope we get to where even the government is talking about the importance of menstrual hygiene and having access to quality and affordable products.

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women like content, click here

     

  • 4 Nigerian Women Share Why They Regret Having Kids

    After asking some Nigerian women to share why they do not want children, we asked some that do have children if they regret the decision. These four Nigerian women share why they regret having kids.

    Abimbola, 44

    Maybe regret might be a strong word because I absolutely adore my children, but since I turned forty, I had found myself asking a lot of “what ifs”. I got married when I was 23. By 25, I had my first child. 28, I had my second. 30, I had my third, and 32, I had my fourth. I spent over a decade of my life birthing and raising infants and toddlers. People say that the twenties are the best time of your life, but I spent mine changing diapers, birthing children, and breastfeeding.

    My thirties weren’t any better. I had to deal with those small children, school runs, teething, all the other things. Now, I am in my forties and I am dealing with rebellious teenagers. I wonder if I will ever be free from being a mother, and just be an individual. I wish I had forged a career path, done more than go to the University in terms of my education. and just lived. All I really wish, is that I got the chance to live. If I never had any children, I would have probably been able to do more things for me.

    Fadeke, 37

    I have just one child, and she almost killed me. I got pregnant three years after marriage, at the age of 30. The entire period through the pregnancy up until the birth of my daughter was hell. My husband tried his best, but he could not take the pain away. Nobody could. I had gestational diabetes while pregnant with her. Now? I have type two diabetes. I wonder what my life would be like if I never had her. Being sick for the rest of my life is not something I envisioned for myself. Sometimes when I see my daughter, I feel a type of resentment towards her. I know it is not her fault, but I just get angry and cry. I feel like she stole something from me.

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    Elizabeth, 30

    I had my son when I was 22 years old, as an undergraduate in a school in Nigeria. It was a one night stand, and I forgot to use morning after pills. A month after, I found out I was pregnant. Till now, his dad is nowhere to be found and I’m honestly not bothered. I love my child, but I often wish I didn’t have him. It’s been tough raising him alone with little help from my parents. I often have to split my income into two, with him getting the larger portion. I also haven’t been able to be in a successful relationship for a while now, as most men do not want to be associated with a single mom. Having children in my opinion isn’t really necessary. I can’t make plans without considering him and it’s tiring, exhausting, and painful. I’m at a point in my life where I’m not sure if I’d want to have more kids. Sometimes, I just want him out of my sight and very far away from me. I cry most times and I snap at my son a lot. I often regret doing it, but I can’t help it.

    Chidera, 32

    When I got married, all the women in my family spoke about how children are a blessing and I thought so too. What they don’t tell you is how children rob you of your dreams. I did not even realise until my seven-year-old asked me what I wanted to be, and then it dawned on me that I was not even close to achieving that dream. When I was in my 20s, I wanted to be an Economics professor. I never got to do my Masters because I became pregnant, then I had to wait for two years to reapply because of breast feeding and nursing. By the time she started school, I got pregnant again. I love my children, but I realised I sacrificed everything for them and that made me resent them just a little bit. I keep wondering what life would have been like without them, and that life sounds more like the dream I had when I was younger. Talking to my husband about it was useless because he could not understand it. He did not have to drop everything in his life to raise children. I did, and I really wish I didn’t.

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  • Some Nigerian Women Share Why They Do Not Want Children

    We live in a society where having kids is expected of every woman, but there are some that do not want them, and will never want them. So, we asked some Nigerian women why they do not want children.

    Olamide, 34

    When I was a teenager, I always told everyone that I was going to be a rich aunty because I do not want children. My parents told me I would grow out of it, but a decade or two later, and here I am. I adore my nieces and nephew, and they adore me in return. Whatever their parents do not want to buy for them, they ask me and I do it. They spend weekends at my place and we go out and have fun. This arrangement works so well for me because I get to return them. Once I have important work to do, or I am too stressed, they get returned. That is why I do not want any of my own, because they cannot be returned. This is one of the best decisions I have ever taken, and I regret nothing.

    Anu, 20

    Honestly, fuck them kids. What can they ever give me that I cannot get somewhere else at a cheaper rate? All the money I would use to train them can be used to enjoy the baby girl life I deserve. When I retire, I will pay to stay in a nice nursing home where I can be around other old people. We will laugh, trade stories about life and just relax.

    Ada

    I’m old enough to know myself and I’ve always known, from the time I was about 11. Not wanting kids is as natural to me as my identifying as a straight woman (obviously, people feel the same way with different identities as well). I was born this way. Being a woman is not a path, function or identity defined by what organs I was born with, or what society has historically/dangerously stated women should do with their bodies. The reason for my not wanting kids is – the desire does not, and has never existed. I was simply born without the inclination for such.

    Theresa, 24

    I don’t want children because they’re a lot of work and I’m a lazy person. You can’t do anything alone once you have them. They’re noisy as well, and you can’t give them back and can’t even take holidays from being a parent.

    Bolu, 21

    After I removed the lens of having kids because of family pressure and as a backup retirement plan, I just didn’t see the point. From a practical view, kids just don’t make a lot of sense.

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    Odion, 42

    I love myself too much to want kids. This is not saying that people that have them do not love themselves, it is just that I love myself a bit too much. I love life, I love living, and I want to do all of that for myself. Kids make you live for them. All the money you earn goes to them. All your time, energy, love, them. I do not hate kids, I just am not selfless enough to have them. My husband is all the companionship I need and I love it. I am very lucky that my husband holds the same view I have, so he did all the fighting when family started causing trouble.

    Halima, 24

    I’ve never really dreamt of having kids. In fact, seeing the way my nephews and nieces have put their mom’s lives on hold has solidified my stance. Not everybody has the resources to hire many hands to help them with their kids. Even if you did, Nigerians would judge you for that. Let’s not even talk about the permanent changes to the host’s body. I also don’t want to bring anybody to this world to come and suffer. I can’t tell my mum though, she’d run mad. So I had always secretly hoped I was barren so at least when I got married everyone would understand that my not having kids was not my fault. But recently I got pregnant (and terminated it) so I’m not barren after all. I hope I find someone that doesn’t want kids as well and I live happily ever after.

    Linda, 35

    I do not want children because life is too unsure to form strong emotional attachments to people. What if something happens to them and they die? Or something happens to me and thy have to watch me die? That is too much to ask of anyone. I watched both my parents die, and I know how much it hurt. I do not want to go through that again.

    Anna, 20

    Kids are not only biological leeches, they are freedom and wealth stealers. When I think through my checklist and picture my future, I don’t see myself drinking wine in Ibiza and worrying about some kids. I have all sorts of ambitions, and none is directed towards procreating. I didn’t have this conviction till later years though. Growing up, I just did not want kids because of a pregnant woman in my neighborhood that lost her legs. It made me see pregnancy as a thing of pain. Asides that, I have an autistic cousin who was hated by his father. It gave my Aunt so much pain and I just felt “their problems” would have been avoided if they never gave birth. There’s also so much harm and hatred in the world and it is extremely selfish to expose another soul to all of that.

    Elizabeth, 23

    Call me selfish, but I’m not about to have a weight gain pre or post a baby. Postpartum depression and stress too isn’t something I think I would have time for. I’d actually say fuck them kids if it’s going to mean me maintaining my youthful glow and shape. Asides all these, I have actively never thought for long about the thoughts of birthing any child. I’ve thought and fantasized about having dogs more times than I have about kids.

    Fatimah, 20

    I don’t want kids because space and quiet are my top priorities. Noise makes me extremely cranky, and we all know noise is children’s entire brand. Plus, I’d like to enjoy my life without the responsibilities of kids. At the mere thought of life as a mother, I can already see myself feeling trapped and regretful. I don’t deserve that, and no child does either.

    Ruth, 22

    I don’t want them because life is uncertain and sad. I blame my parents for bringing me into this mess, and I don’t want that for anybody else because of me

    Jacinta, 25

    I don’t want kids because I have underlying health issues, and I don’t want any kid to go through what I go through every day. I grew up a sick child, and spent half of my childhood between hospital beds. That’s my life, and I cannot handle the stress that comes with training children. I can’t be trying to live and have a child hold me back.

    Esther, 23

    I don’t want kids because I think existence is a horrible phenomenon. No matter how good life is, you’re either going to die or live long enough to watch the people you care about die. Why bring an unsuspecting child into this world to suffer either of those fates? They’re better off wherever they are.

    Itunu, 31

    I don’t want kids for a few reasons. I’m kind of getting too old for it, and I don’t know how my body will react to the whole process. Secondly, kids disrupt your whole life. You stop thinking about you for like 18+ years. I don’t know how they’ll turn out. I know one can only do their best, but kids will turn out however they want. What if my kids become assholes, or homophobes? My mum does not know I feel this way, and I think she might collapse if she finds out. At the end of the day, she will be alright.

    Cynthia, 20

    Since I was younger, I’ve not liked babies. They eat your life, while they just cry, piss, and shit with no regard for you. I have depression and sometimes I don’t want to speak to anyone, but you have to be there constantly for a child. You can’t just pack your bags and travel, or check into a hotel when you need a break from your wife. Your life is now for them and it makes no sense. Then when raising them you don’t even know what you might do that could cause problems. My parents were always at work trying to get money to better my life, yet it’s what I have to deal with in therapy. They were always at work and hardly around. Pregnancy is giving up yourself, your life, and your body. I am barely in control of the life.

    Bimbo, 37

    I do not want children because I enjoy life. I have travelled round different parts of the world with nothing but a backpack and my camera. Children do not allow for that to happen. I do not want to put my life on hold to care for another human being. I have my husband, my plants, and our dogs and that is a good enough life for me. His parents at first thought I was a witch, but they have come to accept it. I am an adventure junkie, and I consider children limitations.

    Chisom, 22

    I’ve seen and heard stories of women dying at childbirth and I’m scared of that. In fact, it is not just dying. It’s also the way pregnancy changes your body (loss of teeth, brain fog, vagina tear etc). Also, children bind you to a marriage somewhat. If things go south, I want to be able to up and go without it affecting the kids.

    Tobi, 25

    I never wanted children, because the idea of it doesn’t appeal to me. They are expensive, and there’s a lot of expectations on both ends when you commit to child bearing. Also, it’s a painful process and you can just opt out of having to go through. I chose opting out. Everyone thinks it’s a phase, and I’d change my mind when I’m older. A few years ago, I said I didn’t mind one child, trying to be accepted by my partner and family members, but after deep social searching, I don’t see the long term benefits of kids. I made a firm decision at 24, and I’m in the process of taking out my womb so I’m free of any accidental babies.

    Mary, 23

    I don’t want kids because I don’t see the point, have you seen pregnancy? Also because I’m afraid I’ll fuck them up. For every me, there are like 10 people that want kids. They’ll repopulate the earth just fine. If somehow people like me are more, then humanity may go extinct and that’s fine. My mum knows because at the time it was tied to me also not wanting to get married. We fought, there were tears, and it ended with me saying I will do whatever she wants since her happiness is more important than mine. Obviously I was lying, but I had to say it to keep her off my back. She has three grandchildren already, why is she stressing me? My stance has changed on marriage or at least a life partner since then, but children? Still a no go area.

    Chioma, 31

    I do not want kids because I just do not want them.

    Hafiza, 20

    I do not want kids because I have never really understood the concept of having them. Apart from the subtle influence of the society as to what should be and what shouldn’t, I find myself looking for something beyond that stereotype. Plus, I do not think I am capable of a long term relationship with anyone, especially if that person would be around all the time. I’m the type of person that could decide one day I want to be alone and by myself for months. I cannot simply commit to having kids of my own.

    Janet, 19

    When I picture my future, I never actually see kids and I think that’s reason enough to not being a whole human being into the world. Especially because I need to have conviction about parenthood so as to not mess them up for life. I also know that I won’t love them unconditionally. Imagine bringing someone into the world and they’re a supporter of Bubu. God forbid.

    Martha, 25

    I realized I just wanted them cos it was like a rite of passage, and I don’t feel strong emotional connection to kids. I just don’t see them in my future. Since I realized that I actually didn’t want them, it’s like a huge burden has been lifted from my shoulders.

    Amaka, 18

    I don’t think I would be able to live with myself knowing that I contributed to someone’s childhood trauma. I don’t have a good relationship with my parents, and that has made all the other relationships in my life suffer. The possibility of my kids feeling the same way I feel towards my parents is not one I think I can handle. Also, not enough people talk about how kids are bad vibes. They are. They can’t speak, can’t form coherent thoughts, and they’re essentially useless. I’m a very impatient person and one day my intrusive thoughts might kick in and the next thing you know, I’ve drop kicked my 3 year old

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  • 7 Ways To Handle Stressful Children

    When Adam and Eve sinned against God, he was so pissed that he decided to burden humans with some crackheads called children for the rest of our lives.

    First, you are forever attached to your children, from birth till you die. For the first two years of their lives, you have to constantly take care of them and wipe their butts when they leave smelly gifts inside diapers for you. After that, they just generally stress you for the next six to seven years. It doesn’t have to be this way. We can fight back against these little menaces. Here are a few ways you can fight back against them

    1. Chain them to a chair

    These little people have insane amounts of energy and you and your 30+ back cannot keep up with them. Just chain them to a table till they sleep.

    2. If they bite you, bite them back

    God gave all of us teeth for a reason.

    3. When you go out, handcuff them to your hand

    They are notoriously good at getting missing in public spaces. They can’t runaway if they’re handcuffed to you.

    4. Feed them eba for breakfast

    This way, they can sleep all day and give you peace of mind.

    5. Put them on top of the cupboard

    Let them rest there for a few hours.

    6. Give them chores

    They can’t stress your life after a long day mopping the compound.

    7. Cry and beg them

    If all of these fail, you have no choice but to cry and beg them to give you small peace of mind.

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  • 7 Strange Things That Were At Every Children’s Party In The 90s

    1) Appetisers consisting of soft Cabin biscuits and undiluted Tasty Time.

    The biscuits were soft because they’d been set out in the open for long and the juice was undiluted because fuck diabetes.

    2) Candy so strong it’ll break a few of the children’s teeth.

    In the absence of rock hard candy, there was always candy so sugary that it rot their teeth instantly.

    3) A fucking terrifying clown

    I don’t understand how children like this shit.

    4) People cosplaying as severely malnourished/strung out versions of popular cartoon characters.

    Barney the Dinosaur was the common one.

    5) Dancing competitions where the kids dance to absurdly explicit songs for a chance to win worthless prizes.

    Children would stomp the yard and each other (these things always involve small violence) for the grand prize; A Maths Set.

    6) Terrible pictures of all the kids.

    Have you ever tried holding a child’s attention during picture time? The worst.

    7) Party packs full of even more useless stuff.

    Goody Goody, Barbie pencils that snap in half if you hold them with more than two fingers, a glass pencil sharpener, etc.

  • 6 Nigerians Tell Us Why They Absolutely Hate Being Around Kids

    1. Eniola, 22

    Children ask the most irritating questions, and they don’t mind their damn business. They’re always poking their noses in things that don’t concern them. For example, I have a little cousin who’s always looking into my phone, even when I’m not there. I wonder what will happen if one day, I leave my porn tab open. She’ll just be scarred forever.

    2. Teslim, 27

    Look at it carefully. Kids are never associated with organization. All they do is take down and destroy. And then they get away with a lot of shit. I’m a very organized person, so when I have someone’s kids over and they just come and start jumping on my bed it’s extremely maddening for me. And no matter how many times I say, “Hey, get off my bed”, they’ll be back on it in the next few seconds. Sometimes I wish I could fight children.

    3. Glory, 21

    I hate to say this, but children are dumb, they’re annoying, and they have “coconut head”

    4. Ayo, 19

    If there’s one word I’ll use to describe kids, it’s “annoying”, and there’s a couple of reasons for that. First of all, they make too much noise. Way too much noise. And I hate noise. And it doesn’t make it better that taking care of them is such a struggle, like an uphill task.

    5. Bayo, 25

    Maybe I don’t hate them so much anymore, because I found out that some uncle I had used to hate me as a kid and that didn’t just seem fair. But I used to hate them because they just feel entitled to all forms of pampering.
    Even from people they do not know or are not related to.

    Ii’s just like “Who are you, and why do you feel like you deserve this”?

    6. Aisha, 23

    I don’t just hate kids, I despise them. But I feel like God might just hear me and refuse to give me kids.

    It doesn’t just sit well with my spirit that I have to put my entire life on hold because of one child. I keep asking myself questions like “Why do I have to think of another person my entire life?” You literally toil over them your whole life and at the end, they just become their own person? I might sound selfish, but that’s just not okay.

    Then you’ll now have to pack shit and vomit when they’re toddlers. I can’t pack someone else’s shit or vomit. I just don’t see myself doing it.

  • What She Said: What I Learned From My Mother’s Failed Marriages


    The subject of this week’s What She Said is a 32-year-old Nigerian woman who grew up resenting her mother for marrying and divorcing three times. Now that she’s older, a feminist and has been divorced once, she says she understands.

    Let’s talk about growing up. What was that like?

    We moved a lot. It was a bit adventurous, but it also didn’t feel good. I never felt rooted in something and I still don’t. Not friends, not places, not things. One minute we were in the North, the next, we were in Oyo, then we came to Lagos.

    Why were you moving around a lot?

    Hmm. We were moving for or because of men o.

    Let me start from the beginning. My mother married early. I think she was 18. The man she married was twice her age. This was way before I was born. She was a Muslim then and lived in the North with her husband. She had two children for him. Then she converted to Christianity and the extended family said that she can’t be married to their son and be Christian.

    The man too did not defend her. They divorced and she moved to another town. They didn’t let her take her first two children though and that really broke her. I was born about 8 months after she moved to the new town. Immediately after I was born, she moved to the South.  

    Now, here’s the thing, I don’t know if I was conceived before she left her first husband or if she was seeing someone after she left him. I don’t think that she herself, she knew. So, where did I come from? 

    You don’t know or you’re not sure who your father is.

    My dear, I really don’t. Sometimes, I just tell myself that I fell from heaven. That one is sweeter to hear. 

    LMAO. Did you ever ask your mother about this?

    A ton of times. She’d say I should leave her jare.

    But that’s not even the problem. The problem was that she was always seeing or marrying someone new and each time, we’d have to move for them. I don’t remember much from before I was 5, so I can’t say if there were any male figures around and there are no pictures to prove this, but I know that she married again when I was five. I know because she did a church wedding and I was the flower girl or something. 

    That marriage didn’t last a year. They used to fight about money. My mother used to sell gold and at the same time teach in a school. By some standards, she was rich. He used to ask her for the money in order to help her save it. Savers club. My guy spent the money on drinks and women. Sharp guy. 

    What?

    It pained my mother and she didn’t hide her pain. She was very vocal —   she’d say what was on her mind, so when she found out, she gave it to him rough. 

    My grandmother who lived with us didn’t want her to leave this marriage because she didn’t think that the problems they had were bad and because my mother was ‘getting older’ —  she was in her late 20s at this time o. My mother in addition to being vocal has strong-head. So she did what she wanted and left the marriage. We didn’t even have anywhere to go. One day, she just packed our things and we hit the road. 

    You know the plot twist? 

    What?

    My grandmother left my grandfather for something similar. She told me this recently. They were never married, but they lived together, and he used to sell stuff from her farm for her. He was typically supposed to remit the full money to her, but would only remit some and pocket the rest. My grandmother was okay with this. She felt it was her contribution to the home. A few years later, she found out that he had another family elsewhere and that it was her money he was using to feed them.  

    Omo. 

    That’s the only reaction I could think of when she told me about it. 

    Did she leave him?

    Yeah. Not immediately. It was when my mother started having children that she left. She hasn’t turned back. She doesn’t even know where he is right now. 

    You come from a line of women who know their rights.

    Back then, this was known as ‘waywardness’.

    Fair point. 

    I can tell that my grandmother was trying to protect my mother from the public backlash that came with marrying, divorcing and remarrying. 

    And she did get a ton of backlash from the catholic church she attended because she was single. Then she moved to protestant and she got backlash there for remarrying. Do you know that this woman eventually just gave up on her religion. She still sent me to church, but I never saw her go to church except for weddings for the rest of her life. 

    That sounds reasonable. When did the third husband come in? 

    Ah before the third husband, there was a love interest. They fell in love in one day oh. My mother went to the market and came home to tell us that we were moving. We were still settling into life away from her ex when this guy came into the picture and carried us to Lagos. My mother was a beautiful woman, premium hotcake so I can see why these men didn’t leave her alone. He promised her the world. Gold oh, silver oh, diamond oh. When they got to Lagos, tell me where this man was living.

    Where?

    Face-me-I-slap-you. 

    NO. 

    This was the 90s self. Those houses weren’t so bad back then. The worst part was that he had four children and expected that my mother would take care of the children in their one room and parlour. 

    Wow. 

    This man did nothing but sit at home, watch TV and make demands of my mum. He was annoyed that my grandmother and I were in the picture, but he was generally nice to us. We didn’t have anywhere to go, so we stayed a few months before my mother uprooted our lives and took us away.

    This move particularly pained me (as a child) because I was finally among children my age and it was fun. Uncomfortable, but fun. I used to pray for us to never move. My grandmother used to pray for us to leave. When we finally left him, my grandmother gave serious thanksgiving in church. 

    During this time, my mother had a good job working in a school. We were somehow able to get a space in the school to stay. That’s where we went until she found husband number three. I told her that if we left, I’d kill myself. We had a big fight.

    Yikes. That must have caused a dent in your relationship? 

    If I’m being honest, we didn’t have a great relationship before or after then. So this one was just drama. On my end, it increased my resentment. It made me more inclined to believe what people said about my mother, that she was good for nothing.

    Was that her last husband? 

    Yup. He was emotionally abusive and used to threaten her a lot. Of course, I didn’t know this at the time. I just felt that my mother was the problem. I believed anyone who has left two husbands and couldn’t maintain stable relationships needed to examine themselves. I was too young to really understand the peculiar relationship between womanhood and marriage.

    What kind of things did he do?

    He’d compare her to other women, laugh at her, call her names — things like that. 

    That sucks. How long was she with him? 

    Quite a long time. The longest she had been with any man. Maybe 5 years. I know that I was about entering university when she left him finally. And it was because he called her a prostitute. She just packed and left with us again. She was able to afford to leave because her previous marriages had taught her to save. She moved into her uncompleted building —  a bungalow that she had been building for years —  when we left. I’m not even sure if she ever got officially divorced from him. But they separated and a few years later, my mother died. 

    Now that you’re older and you have more context, what do you think of your mother’s life? 

    She lived. I still don’t think that I like that her life revolved more around her men than herself or her career. But for a woman who wasn’t all too educated or empowered, she seemed to be quite knowledgeable. She made mistakes, but she didn’t let that determine her outcome. 

    You know the most import thing I learned from my mother? 

    What? 

    Don’t be afraid to say ‘no’ or to gather yourself together and move on after you fail or make mistakes. Life is too short to be doing anyhow. This was her outlook towards her failed businesses, her failed marriages and relationships. It was her outlook towards religion too. 

    Solid. What about you, how’s your love life? 

    Nonexistent right now. But I used to be married. 

    What happened?

    We were in love —  sometimes, I think I still love him self. One day though, we had an argument about something and he threatened to kill me. I realised, even though we forgave each other and move on from whatever caused the fight, that I became very scared of him and it affected my mental health.

    When I had my daughter, I was diagnosed with postpartum depression and was suicidal. I woke up one day and decided I had to leave. Even my grandmother was supported me too. She thinks that my mother’s marriages and relationships with men killed her. She doesn’t want me to die young. Me self, I no wan die. 

    What would you have done differently if you were your mother?

    I’m not sure if I would have done anything differently. I can only assume.

    But one thing is, I wish I had a better relationship with her. I wish I was more empathetic. I wish we spoke more and I had more context. I’m still unearthing several things about her life from letters, other documents and through my grandmother.

    Now I just do my best to be a good mother to my daughter. I’m not afraid to instill some of the lessons I learned from my mother’s life. Two major things I’m teaching her: it’s important to be a feminist. Secondly, you don’t have to get married or be into men. 

    Aww. How old is she?

    Three. If you don’t get them started early, you’ll regret it.


    If you’d like to share your experience as a Nigerian woman, send me an email.

  • 5 Young Nigerian Parents Talk Disciplining Their Kids

    Over the past couple of years, there have been a lot more open and honest conversations about the level of abuse a lot of Nigerians faced at the hands of their parents, all in the name of discipline.

    So, we decided to talk to a few young Nigerian parents who are trying their best to break the cycle of abuse. Here are 5 of the most thoughtful responses we got about how they are disciplining their kids.

    Sola, 34/Female/A parent for 4 years

    My parents had different disciplinary methods. My mum used to beat and verbally abuse us. She also used to slut-shame me — she called me an ashawo when I was only 10. My dad, on the other hand, mostly used his words. He only beat us on rare occasions.

    With how my mum’s methods affected me, I am really not a fan of spanking. That doesn’t mean I’ve never done it though. When my child was younger, I spanked him a few times. He never used to hear word before.

    Thankfully, as he’s gotten older, he’s learnt to understand the ‘Nigerian mother glare’, so I’ve stopped spanking him (for the most part). Honestly, it’s easier said than, especially if that’s how you were raised.

    From personal experience, I know how beating and verbal abuse can break a child, so I’m trying to be better. I talk to him when he misbehaves and it mostly works. When it doesn’t, I send him to the naughty corner or threaten to take away something he loves.

    As he is growing older, he is learning to apologise once he realises he’s done something wrong. I really hope it continues like that. If either of us is upset about something, we talk about it and make amends. That’s where we are right now. 

    David, 30/Male/A parent for 9 months

    I grew up with the typical Nigerian parenting technique, and that’s something I would never do to my kid. I find it really repulsive that parents can casually assault their children and people think it’s normal. I feel even worse when I see young people defending it. 

    I know from experience that it does not work. I was a very stubborn kid, so I got beaten a lot. All it did was make me resent my father. I remember beating my younger sisters because I thought it was normal, and I still regret it to this day.

    In my opinion, beating is the lazy parent’s way out. It’s just a thoughtless, short-term solution. Looking at my 9-month-old, I know how frustrating kids can be, but that’s why you have to be ready before taking the plunge. 

    Sure, I live outside the country and it’s illegal to beat your kids here, but I still wouldn’t have done it even if I was in Nigeria. You’re beating a child that cannot fight back. That’s just pure wickedness. You have to use your words.

    Sarah, 28/Female/A parent for 2 and a half years

    My parents beat me a bit when I was growing up. I am the first child, so I think they were still figuring out their parenting style. To be fair, they only beat us when we did something really bad, even though an “I am disappointed in you” would have had the same effect.

    For my kid, there’s still a lot of room for ‘misbehaviour’ at this age. I think of it in terms of behaviours that I want to encourage and the ones I would like to discourage or reduce. For example, I am okay with him yelling and running around, but in moderation.

    When the sound goes above a certain level, I calmly draw his attention to it. If he does something bad, I point at it, tell him what he did that was inappropriate, then I move on. If it’s really bad or insensitive, I give him a time out. 

    The time outs come in stages. There’s time out with the door open, which he doesn’t mind so much. It just lets him know that I want him to chill out for a bit. Time out with the door shut means mummy is angry.

    Honestly, it’s not very easy to uphold. It’s really difficult actually. The terrible twos are a nightmare and I hear that it gets even worse. I just try to keep a cool head and remind myself that he’s 2.5 and I’m 28.

    Segun, 31/Male/A parent for 4 years

    With my parents, it was a combination of verbal abuse and punishment. My mum spanked us a few times, but it was rare. My dad never touched us. He just gave us the silent treatment whenever we really misbehaved.

    I’ve been a parent for 4 years now, and I sometimes find myself yelling out of frustration because my child isn’t listening. There’s some light spanking too, but these days, I try to make that the very last resort.

    Now, I’m learning to have A LOT of conversations with my child about their behaviour. The challenge is that a lot of us learnt how to parent from our parents and while mine did their best, some of what they did just wasn’t right.

    If I’m being honest, it’s not easy to refrain from yelling and even spanking out of anger and frustration. Parents are people too. Still, I’m doing my very best to not be the type of parent that people on Twitter are always cursing.

    Ameh, 28/Female/A parent for 3 years

    My parents used both verbal and physical methods of discipline. I think based on their personalities, one of them was the “good” cop, always using words and advice, and the other was the “bad” cop, beating us whenever we went out of line. 

    I’m currently choosing to discipline with a lot of communication. I’m using consequences, not “punishment”. These consequences are usually related to the action. For example, if my child is being careless with a toy, I could issue one or two warnings and then take the toy away.

    The hardest part is how much concentration it requires. First of all, I’m choosing not to shout impulsively because our kids mirror our behaviours. We’ve never spanked her, but I used to say “I will spank you” as a threat. I stopped when she started mimicking it with us and her friends. 

    Also, there are not that many people around me using this parenting style, so there’s some judgement. They act as if we are betraying the upbringing we had, or as if choosing this style is us saying we are better than other parents. 

  • 7 Nigerians Reveal Why They Don’t Want Children

    Society has conditioned us — especially women — to think of procreation as a necessity. Thanks to the transparent conversations that social media has made possible, we now know that a lot of people don’t feel that way.

    So, we asked a bunch of Nigerians who don’t want children to share why they feel that way and the kind of reactions their decision typically gets. Here are 7 of the most revealing answers we got.

    Chioma, 30/Female

    I’ve known I didn’t want kids since I was 12. I’ve never had a maternal bone in my body. I’m not like a mean person or anything, but that’s just not me. I literally cannot picture myself being anyone’s mother.

    Those who don’t understand are quick to tell me that I’ll eventually change my mind. It’s been 18 years and nothing. They also say I’ll eventually get lonely and regret my choice, but I really don’t see that happening.

    Ebuka, 28/Male

    I was 25 when I realised I don’t want biological kids. I usually tell people the main reason is that I think it’s selfish and egomaniacal to have biological children, especially when you could just adopt. 

    The real reason I don’t want them, however, is my awareness of just how fucked up I am. I wouldn’t want to burden a child with my genes. Honestly, both reasons are equally true.

    My mother has accepted it. She initially thought it was just a phase, but knowing that I am open to adopting with a partner made her a lot more open to the idea. Everyone else I’ve told thinks I’m insane. 

    Tobi, 23/Female

    I’ve known I didn’t want kids for almost two years now. The main reason is that I’m tired of looking out for people and sacrificing my happiness for others, especially entitled family members.

    I also have keloids and there’s a high chance of it spreading after childbirth. I don’t want to hate my body because of any child, then end up resenting the child in the process. People have called me selfish, but I don’t care. 

    Obi, 29/Male

    I realised that I didn’t want kids about 3 years ago. I love kids, so It was painful to accept that if I really wanted to have a fulfilled and happy life, I’d be better off not having them. I’ve made peace with my decision. 

    I also can’t understand why anyone, especially a 3rd world citizen, would want to bring another human into this messed up world. How do you look at all the shit going on and think a child deserves this?

    A few weeks ago, my uncle called me selfish for not wanting to carry on the name of my father as his first son. Meanwhile, I have 2 brothers and my father is still very much alive.

    Bola, 30/Female

    I realised — more like accepted — that I didn’t want kids 2 years ago. I just don’t see the point in having them. I haven’t been able to answer for myself why I should have them. Like, what’s the purpose? 

    It doesn’t help that they are expensive. If I have a child that’s anything like me, I’d end up BROKE broke. Also, minus the legitimate fear of pregnancy, I don’t think I have it in me to be motherly.

    When I tell people, they usually scoff or get mad. People swear that I’ll change my mind once I’m older or in love. For me, having a child just to make a man happy would be torture, not love. 

    Maryam, 34/Female

    I’ve known I didn’t want to have kids (or get married) for as long as I can remember. It’s just not my calling. Not only am I not maternal, I completely freak out whenever I think of pregnancy and childbirth.

    I also think the world is an evil and scary place, so why would I want to bring a child into it? This pain? This suffering? There’s only so much you can realistically protect your child from. 

    I’ve been called selfish a lot. I remember telling one of my exes and he got really mad. He called me a witch and said I have a spiritual family, and that’s why I refused to marry and have kids with him.

    Funmi, 22/Female

    I’ve kind of always known I didn’t want kids, but I only started talking openly about it when I was 19. I feel it’s a lot of responsibility and I’m not sure I have the capacity to handle it. 

    Earth is already over-populated and reproduction feels like narcissism to me. Also, if I had a choice, I wouldn’t even exist, so why would I want to put someone else through that? 

  • The Nigerian Parents’ Guide To Being A “Responsible” Child

    See below the newly revised handbook of acceptable behaviour for you to be considered as responsible. At least by adultier Nigerian adults.

    1) Adults are always right.

    Okay?

    2) You must also allow adults disrespect you.

    Without any form of protest. Are we on the same page?

    3) Or cheat you.

    Only irresponsible children protest this. You lack home training.

    4) If you’re dying and an adult is carrying a bag, pause the dying.

    And carry the bag.

    5) Even if the adult is wrong, you must apologize first.

    Add a bit of display to it.

    6) The adult version of events is the correct one.

    Periodt.

    7) After sending you to school, your parents expect you not to think.

    At least not in their house. Their word is the law and whenever they talk, you must accept it.

  • 4 Nigerian Novels That Messed Up A Generation Of Children

    As any Nigerian who grew in the Nigerian school system knows, there were certain novels we were made to read in literature class. Some of them were clearly written for kids while others were adult books we had to read anyway. I always assumed these books were picked just because they had lessons to teach or whatever, but I recently realized that it was much more than that.

    The authors of these books seemingly aimed to teach lessons in the most horrifying ways possible. Some of them went so ham that the messages got lost in the horror. Here are a couple of offenders:

    1) Ralia the Sugar Girl

    Ralia is a happy-go-lucky village girl who everyone loves because she’s so…happy-go-lucky. At some point, she wanders into a forest and gets lost. While there, she runs into so much weird and scary shit. The worst of the weird shit is an evil topless witch with sausage boobs who threatens to dig out Ralia’s eyes and suck her blood, just because she trespassed on the witch’s property.

    Ralia eventually finds her way home and the book ends. But I’ve always thought of writing a sequel, set three years after the events of the first book, where Ralia is in an asylum because she had a mental breakdown and murdered her entire family. The epilogue would see Ralia get a visit from a mysterious woman offering to get her out in exchange for her joining a secret organization.

    The mysterious woman is Alice.

    Alice from Wonderland.

    2) A Mother’s Choice

    Mother’s Choice is about a boy named Ade. Ade has just graduated from primary school and his mother insists (despite her husband’s concerns) that Ade go to secondary school in the UK. As a weird form of foreshadowing, Ade’s father tells his wife that whatever happens to their son during his time overseas will be her fault. She agrees and lives to regret it because Ade goes to England, becomes an alcoholic, gets hooked on drugs, engages in orgies with prostitutes, gets arrested, and ends up in a psychiatric hospital. So much shit happens that by the end, you’re left wondering what lesson you were supposed to learn.

    3) A Chained Tomb

    The narrative of A Chained Tomb spans a couple of decades in the lives of a couple of people (most of them relatives) living separate lives in the same town. The main character is a boy named Uze, and he is the absolute worst kind of offspring. He joins a gang, steals, beats his mother to death in a violent rage, etc.

    By the end, Uze in prison for murder.. A friend of his named Jade comes to visit him. The warden informs Jade that Uze died two days prior. After asking to see where Uze’s grave, the warden takes her to a patch of land behind the building that serves as a burial ground for deceased prisoners with no family on the outside. Uze’s grave has an unmarked tombstone with a chain around it. Seeing the confusion on her face, the warden lets Jade know that chains are put around the tombstones of prisoners who died without finishing their sentences, to KEEP THEIR SOULS BOUND UNTIL THE END OF THEIR SENTENCE.

    And that’s how the book ends.

    TF?!

    4) The Gods Are Not To Blame

    You know what? I don’t think 12-year-olds need to be reading the Yoruba version of Oedipus Rex. I mean, the story’s themes of how free will is a myth, and fate is inescapable are awesome. But this story also contains patricide, incest, suicide, and self-mutilation.

    Your kids don’t need this.

    Damn.

    RECOMMENDED READING: 5 Nigerian Novels That Deserve Movie Adaptations

  • 11 Secret Ways To Punish The Last Born In Your Family

    Look, last born children are the devil’s incarnate. They talk too much, are often favoured by the parents and they almost always seem to get the best things. The worst part is that you can’t punish them. But all that is about to end today. We have devised 7 secret ways to do them dirty.

    NB: Know the kind of last born you will try these things with o. Some last borns get crase for head. Dem dey beat their elderly ones.

    A. THE FOOD PUNISHMENT: For adolescents, teenagers, and some adults who cannot joke with their stomachs.

    1. Buy something you know they like and make as if you’ll be sharing it with them or keeping left overs for them. Raise their hopes and expectations, but at the last minute, eat what you kept for them or give it to a total stranger.

    2. If they can’t cook, you’re in luck. You’ll force them to make their own food and if they try to report you to your parents, hurry to cook the food and then oversalt it. But pretend like it’s a honest mistake. You can repeat this several times with different level of wickedness. This week, add too much salt. Next week, too much pepper. Upper week, make it watery. They’ll get the memo.

    B. THE CLOTHES PUNISHMENT: For all ages.

    3. Soak their whites with coloured clothes and ruin their slay.

    4. Offer to iron it and maybe scorch the edges a little. Claim that it’s a honest mistake.

    5. Accidentally spill drinks or soup on them when they’re all peng and good looking. You get extra points if this happens in a public gathering. Don’t give me that look, please. We are both evil.

    C. THE ACCESS PUNISHMENT: For siblings of all ages.

    6. Simple as ABC: get access to their own key, misplace it by error so they are forced to depend on you. Now go out, lock the door and don’t return until nighttime. When they call you, don’t pick up.

    7. Another way: Keep the key in an agreed spot. When you’re sure that they’ve gone out, go back and remove it. Drive them a little crazy when they return and start looking for key.

    D. THE DIVINE TURNAROUND: For gullible last born children of any age.

    Forget the fancy name, this is complete emotional manipulation. Here’s how you can deploy it:

    8. Convince them to do something bad like take meat from the pot of stew or turn on the gen. You can even be the one to do these things, but you’ll make it look like you did it for them. When your parents start to complain, just remove yourself and offer them their favourite last born to beat. C’est finis.

    E. OTHER RANDOM METHODS.

    9. Delay their pocket money.

    10. Take them shopping and don’t buy a single thing for them.

    11. When their friends visit, find something you can use to disgrace them.

    It is what it is.


    How To Be The ‘Perfect’ Nigerian First Born Child

  • QUIZ: Which Dominant Trait Will You Pass On To Your Children?

    We’ve accurately predicted when you will have your first child with this quiz (you can request to speak to a manager if you don’t agree.) Anyway, we are moving on to something new; we will now help you figure out which trait you will pass on to your children with another accurate quiz.

    Let’s do this.

  • 15 Things You’ll Definitely Remember About Children’s Church

    If you grew up Christian in Nigeria, then you definitely have memories of children’s church. From the snacks that were always guaranteed to having to wait for your parents to pick you, this post will take you right back to those simpler times.

    1. How you dress for church when your mother picks out your clothes:

    Chai! See my life.

    2. When your parents drop you and you see your noise-making squad.

    YESSS!!!

    3. That newcomer that doesn’t want to leave their parents and come to children’s church:

    See this one.

    4. When you finally graduate from the first bible to the second bible:

    As a big boy.

    5. When you use your offering money to buy ice-cream from that seller at the gate.

    God, forgive me oh.

    6. You and the rest of the children’s choir, singing in adult church like:

    They will sha clap for us.

    7. When you’re the first child to read the scripture during ‘draw your sword’.

    WINNING!

    8. Testimony time in children’s church be like:

    What else na?

    9. When all the children have to stay in the adult’s church for a special service.

    NOOO!!!

    10. The children’s church choreography starter pack:

    Still don’t know what the gloves were for.

    11. When your teacher picks you to recite the memory verse for the day.

    Hay God!

    12. When you see them bringing out biscuits and capri-sonne after service.

    The best.

    13. When you’re already too old but you don’t want to leave children’s church.

    I’m not ready, biko.

    14. You, when children’s church closes service before adult’s church.

    You people should share the grace na.

    15. When your friends have gone and you’re still waiting for your parents to come and pick you.

    You know your parents are greeting the whole church.

  • 4 Nigerian Women Share What They Wished They Knew Before Becoming Mothers

    Here are some of the things no one tells you about becoming a mum:

    Elizabeth – 26.

    Nothing actually prepares you or warns you of what lies ahead in motherhood. It can be described as a rewarding experience, but very little is said of how overwhelming it really is. Especially if you have no help. The euphoria of being a first time mom soon vanished when the sleepless nights started. This was after the three months Omugwo. I should have eased into it you think…I got pregnant again when my baby was barely 3 months. So, I was battling with a crying baby and my pregnancy symptoms. Here is a list of what no one warned me about:

    1) “That I would cry when my baby is crying. This happened to me several times when I couldn’t ascertain exactly what my son wanted and had tried all I knew.”

    P.S: sometimes they cry when they are tired and want to sleep. Why can’t they just close their eyes you ask? sigh.

    2) “That effective time management is not an easy skill to come by. I wonder how some mothers get things done in that same 24 hours. Most times I just live by the day and try the best I can.”

    3) “You would feel guilty about dropping off your child at the daycare, but the guilt wears off when you are able to get other things done.”

    4) “That spontaneous smiles, hugs, and kisses from your child could
    lighten up your day.”

    5) “You are super excited when you experience certain milestones such as crawling, walking. For your child’s first words, you may even shed a tear or two.”

    Chi-chi – Undisclosed age.

    Nigerian mother

    1)”No one tells you that your nose would become approximately 125.75 times its original size during pregnancy. That would practically be the first thing people notice when they meet you. And wait for it – you’d probably look less beautiful. Yeah that too. Especially if it’s a boy…. so they say.”

    2) “The craving??? I am sure you were told about that too. What they failed to mention was that you will forgo the seafood okro in your kitchen in search of Iya Bose’s reaction ewa agoyin. The one whose kiosk is on a plank right above algae-filled drainage. So yeah! E be things.”

    3) “Lagosians are super nice to pregnant women. Even the crudest of conductors. Plus you get extra ‘fisi’ from market women and meat sellers. Be ready to have cars stop for you when crossing the road and definitely not because you are on a zebra crossing.”

    4) “You get asked some really Ph.D. worthy kind of questions from your kids. Like “why can’t God come down so that he would ask the governor to fix the bad roads?”

    5) “You get used to finding a spoon, a toy or some other random item (heck, might even be your very own underwear) in your purse at the oddest places…say like an important meeting. ATM cards are hardly found when you need them.”

    6) “Your phone is never yours. At some point you have to become nonchalant to the gazillion times when your phone would be smashed on the hard floor. Plus your kids will become your unemployed P.A willing to take your calls and inform callers that you are doing number two. They might even bring a video call while you are bathing. Sigh.”

    Bidemi – Undisclosed age.

    Nigerian mother

    “No one tells you that shoe size increases per childbirth. I have two kids and I can’t explain why or how I moved from size 40 to 41 after the first child. Then, after the second child, it became size 42🤷‍♀️.”

    Toyo – 25.

    Nigerian mother

    1) “Postpartum depression is very real. The vibes you get around you when you’re pregnant and put to bed is very important. You have to guard your mental health even if you appear selfish.”

    2) “Being induced during childbirth is really painful. There’s no nicer way to say it.”

    3) “As a new mom, Google is your best friend. It’s safer than taking advice from everyone.”

    4) “Breast milk might not flow immediately. You might also find it difficult to produce enough milk.”

    5) “Your vagina might not go back to the way it was pre-pregnancy.”

    6) “You’d monitor baby milestones in the first year like you’re being paid. Every milestone crossed is usually a big deal for most mothers. Some people won’t be able to relate with your baby craze.”

    If you enjoyed this, you should read this next: What She Said: Becoming A Housewife Was Not The Plan.

  • Sex Life: Rediscovering Sex After 3 Divorces And 6 Children

    Sex Life is an anonymous Zikoko weekly series that explores the pleasures, frustrations and excitement of sex in the lives of Nigerians.


    The subject of today’s Sex Life is a woman in her 40s who has been divorced three times. She talks about how not using protection and the lack of safe clinics for abortion in Nigeria affected her Sex Life. 

    When did you have sex for the first time?

    Ah. That was a long time ago. Maybe when I was 16. I can’t remember. I had just finished secondary school and I didn’t know what came next. So I went to stay with my aunty in another state for a while. Then I met this guy in the neighborhood. Every day, after me and the other children finished our chores, we would hang around in the neighborhood. That’s how I started hanging out with him and before I knew it, I was pregnant.

    Wow. Did you have sex with him more than once?

    A LOT. In a day, maybe 3 times. We were having sex every day except maybe weekends. That one I’m sure of. That guy had a sweet mouth oh. He’d promise to buy me this and buy me that. I think the very first time, he promised to buy me biscuit* if I let him touch my breast. Me too, I asked myself, what’s the big deal? But from breast touching, it led to something else and we had sex for the first time inside one uncompleted building. 

    Wow. Lol. What did you think about sex before this experience?

    Nothing much. I grew up with my father and his own was if you’re having sex, just don’t let him finish inside you. He told me and my brothers this — they weren’t to ‘finish’ inside anybody. That it’s not easy to raise a child. That he won’t have had us if he had sense.. Then I had an aunty that used to call it the forbidden fruit when gisting with her friends. But other than these, nobody was talking to me about sex. 

    So how did sex become regular between you and this guy?

    Once I had sex that first time, walahi, I didn’t know how to stop. It was so sweet, I went to look for him at his house the next day. The only thing was that we had to be careful, so  other people didn’t find out. It wasn’t good for a young woman to be seen with men anyhow back then. Everyone would just conclude that they’re having sex.

    Did you continue to have sex in uncompleted buildings?

    Hahaha. We found other places. One time in the night, it was inside an old car parked on the street. Then another time, we went for one programme and before we knew it, we were having sex at the back of the building, near the toilet. In fact there’s no place we didn’t have sex. Although we had sex in his house and my Aunty’s house a few times, those were once in a while. We didn’t want to get caught by our family. 

    When did you discover you were pregnant?

    After about three weeks, I went back to Lagos and then I did not see my period. I started praying. That this period should better show its face. I had just started a job — I was so tired all the time. Somehow, my father found out and, well, he asked who the father was. I told him I didn’t know. 

    My brothers were ready to find him and beat him, so I had to protect him. My father asked if I wanted to keep it. I said yes. I didn’t think I had a choice. All the while, me and this guy had already started love. We would write letters to each other. He was going to move to Lagos. And when I told him I was pregnant, he was happy. He wanted to get married. 

    Did you get married? 

    Married? At a very young age. No oh. We were both young. He didn’t have a job, I didn’t have a good job. I said no, please. But I asked if he could support me and the baby. 

    Did he? 

    For a few months after I had my child. Then he stopped when he heard I was with another man. And truth be told, I was just sleeping with this other man for money. 

    What was sex like with this other man? 

    It was okay. But you see, I didn’t like him like that, so I think it affected the sex with him. The only reason I kept doing it was the money. He would give me money to buy something for myself, but I would use it to buy something for my baby. My father and brothers were supportive, but there’s nothing like having your own money as a woman. 

    Did the guy know you were just sleeping with him for the money?

    He knew. 

    Ah. Seriously?

    Yes. It’s not as if I told him but he knew that if money didn’t drop, there was no way I’d come to his house. And I didn’t feel bad. Why should I feel bad for something I will still do for free? Money is the principal thing in this life. 

    Can’t fault that. So how long did that go on for?

    For about two years, off and on. In fact, he even got married at some point, but he would still come to me for sex. Then he even promised he would marry me so that I would be his second wife. I was about 20 or so then, but I still didn’t want to be married. Talkless of being a second wife. So I ended it. The mistake I made was that I still wasn’t using contraception or condoms. 

    Why weren’t you using contraception? 

    I didn’t know anything about them to be honest. 

    What happened next?

    I got pregnant again. I found out after we ended it. I was going to abort, but an old classmate had just died from abortion. So I was very scared. And this time, my father said I should go and get married oh. That he doesn’t care if I’m the second or tenth wife. 

    I’m sure it wasn’t funny then.

    It wasn’t. I didn’t want to get married, so my “forbidden fruit” aunty intervened. I started to live with her with my daughter. Because I was living with her, I started to learn more about sex and knew that I could use condoms. She would buy me a lot of condoms sometimes.

    Did she tell you about birth control?

    No. But I knew about them when I went to a clinic for a checkup. A nurse was talking about it and that’s how I knew.  But when I came to get one, they didn’t give me. They said I had to come with my husband. Another clinic said the same thing —  they didn’t even allow me to see the doctor. I told them I was not married and the woman, an old woman — I think she was a nurse —  said that I should just stop sleeping around. 

    Wow. 

    Yes and because I had two children without being married, people said all sorts of things about me. That I was a prostitute, and if they said it when I was passing, I would ask, “and so what?” They said I would never find a man to marry because no man wanted to marry someone with children from different men, and I carried face because who needs men? All they know how to do is sleep, eat and have sex — and they never want to use condom. 

    People don’t know how to mind their business. 

    People ehn. Eventually, I met a guy that I really liked, we dated for a long time because I didn’t want to rush to have sex and then get pregnant. But one day, I went to see him in his house and I couldn’t hold it anymore, so we had sex. 

    How was it?

    It was sweet. He knew how to do things that the other men I had been with didn’t. I really enjoyed it. I was really blinded by this, so we ended up getting married. He was my first husband.  

    First husband? 

    Hahahaha. Yes. First husband. We didn’t last. I’ve had the misfortune of being with men that are somehow. This one was a drunk. At least that’s better than husband number 2 that was a beater. 

    Wait. Two husbands. 

    Actually, three. 

    I have a lot of questions.

    Oya. 

    Were you legally married to all of them? 

    Yes. Traditional wedding. 

    And divorced legally from all of them? 

    I carried my things and walked away

    Haha. Energy. Did you have any children for them?

    Two for the first and the second man respectively.

    What about the third husband?

    Having a baby just never worked out. I was so happy! He was the one that left me — said that my eggs have finished.   

    Still no birth control or condoms? 

    All the time I was married, I was begging them to use condoms, but they never agreed to it — that it was necessary for me to have children for them.

    Nawa oh.

    And that sex was better without condoms. I did not want children at all. I was tired. 

    In all this time, had your thoughts about sex changed?

    Sex? I had even forgotten what sex was. Marrying was just so that I look respectable in society. So that nobody goes around insulting me or my children. 

    Did it work?

    Somehow. But being divorced meant I still received the same insults. They don’t want to know why you left. As long as you don’t have a man around, you’re not a serious woman. 

    I wasn’t thinking about sex at all. The men I married, like most men, really liked sex. They wanted sex all the time and I would lie down there and let them do their thing. While thinking about other things like where is tomorrow’s food going to come from? When you don’t have plenty money like that, you won’t be thinking about sex as something to enjoy. The men too, they will just do their thing, four or five minutes and they’re done. No kissing, nothing. 

    How is your sex life nowadays?

    It’s hard for a woman my age to meet good men. But I met one man recently and it has been nice. I forgot what sex could feel like. But now I remember. There are things we do that I’ve never tried before, even when I was younger. He really takes his time with me. I feel like a young girl again. Importantly, he knows that he’s supposed to use condoms.

    I also have another man that is looking at me. This one has money and he buys me things. If he asks me to marry him, I probably will because I know he will take care of me. And I can take care of my children. 

    What about the first guy?

    He’s nice for the sex but not as a husband or father. 

    If you had to score your sex life, what sccore will you give it over ten? 

    Wo, maybe 5. I don’t really know. Sex is nice oh. But it’s not the thing on my mind at all. 

    What’s on your mind?

    Money. Going back to school to make something of myself. 

    If you could go back in time, what would you have done differently?

    I would have been more careful with sex and made the men I slept with use condoms. I love my children but maybe I would have had abortions if there were safe clinics.


    This interview took place in Yoruba and was edited and condensed for clarity.