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discipline | Zikoko!
  • 6 Nigerians Talk About Life As A Pastor’s Child

    6 Nigerians Talk About Life As A Pastor’s Child

    What does the life of a Nigerian pastor’s child look like? Beneath the church programs and the excellence, what do they really struggle with? For this article, I spoke to 6 Nigerians who shared their stories with me.

    Bolatito.

    Being a pastor’s child hasn’t been a completely good experience. Yes, there are good parts, but the whole thing isn’t my choice so it’s hard to totally love something you didn’t choose.

    I had to be in every single department in church. I also had to lead in whatever thing I was involved in because as a pastor’s child, I had to show an example by being the best. It was really hard for someone like me who likes to do things differently. I was beaten a lot. My father is extra; he demands perfection in everything. And now, as a pastor, that demand doubled. We had to put on a perfect front because the gaze of the entire church was on us and we could not afford to slip up.

    At a point, my friends stopped talking to me because their parents used me as a metric of perfection that they had to follow. I was the good example, and each mistake they made was compared to my ‘goodness’ and magnified so much that they felt corrupt. Can’t you see her? Can’t you be like her? Eventually, they turned against me. And it was stressful, because I was suffering the perfection. If I did anything that was considered imperfect, I became a disgrace, and I was severely flogged. My father was generous with punishment. He flogged, scolded, and would even reduce my feeding allowance. Yet, I did everything he wanted.

    I could not wear trousers, make coloured braids or use attachments. When I eventually left home, I began to do the opposite. It was a gradual thing. A pair of trousers, a coloured braid mixed with black. Even though I was no longer under his roof, I still had to do them in hiding. Whenever he was coming to school, my mother would call me to hide these things so he would not get wind of it. He caught me once with my hair tinted blonde and he almost killed me.

    The only good part for me, I think, would be the ability to speak to large crowds. It was a result of always facing the church from a young age. My mum made it bearable. She was my support and told me that it was a matter of time before I left the house.

    At home, I never really had friends too. I was the Pastor’s child; only a few people wanted to relate with me. Making friends in university showed me that I had the potential to write, sing and do other things, and I explored that side of me, but I was extremely careful. I got into freelance modeling, and my dad found out when a cousin posted a picture of me dressed in an outfit with a high slit. My father saw it, and went to print out a disownment letter and told me to sign it.

    Being a pastor’s child gave me the confidence to address large crowds: Children’s anniversary and choir rehearsals didn’t go in vain. But despite this confidence, there are days I am depressed about being unable to express myself to my father. Sometimes, I don’t want to go to church but I have to because I am at home. In school, I don’t go regularly. I want to feel what it is like to be an ordinary church member, free from all the responsibilities and the scrutiny.

    I still have this desire of wanting to be first in everything because it is what was drummed into me. I want to be listened to, but I don’t listen to others. I want to be in front and lead, and if I don’t get the chance to be first in something, I feel the urge to destroy that thing entirely.

    David.

    The thing with being a Pastor’s child is that you get to see the human side of your parents, their blunders and mistakes and so this creates a disconnect in your head as you try to reconcile the holy, Christian part of them with the flawed, human side of them. The way I dealt with this was understanding that they were humans first of all and were trying to attain a high level of faith. Once I accepted this, the rest fell in place. Of course, this means you start to question a lot of things and this can lead to a crisis of faith. I think this is why a lot of pastors’ children go through a rebellious phase.

    The part I struggled with the most, was the expectations people have of you. I still struggle with it now. I try to do things a certain way just so that I don’t bring disrepute to my parents. It can be crushing, and at some point, you reach a boiling point where you just can’t pretend anymore, and this is where you feel the urge to go overboard and want to try all the vices at once. This happened to me while I was away from home on IT in another state. There was no monitoring, I had my life to myself for once, and I decided to explore. Thankfully, I didn’t grow a taste for all my explorations.

    Another stressful thing about being a pastor’s child is the constant morning devotions and vigils too. Good God! The problem with this is that because you aren’t the ones making the decisions, it starts to feel like a tiring chore and you just want to be done so you can get on with your day or sleep. It doesn’t help matters that you can’t even eat or watch TV until the family has had morning devotion. And then on Sunday, just know that you are spending your entire day in church as your parents move from service to meetings and meetings. Thank God for one woman like that that used to bring food for us to eat in church.

    Also, there was usually a lot of uncertainty in terms of finances. Even though my parents tried their best to keep this from us, I knew the church usually owed salaries and my parents would have to take on some jobs here and there to make sure everything evened out. And of course there’s bad reps for pastors, but a lot of them are really passionate about the church and their members. My parents sold their car and house to support the church that he was planting in a community.

    But being a pastor’s child is not all bad A good part that usually made me happy was Christmas period when we would receive lots of gifts and hampers. There was a year we received so many animals that the house started looking like a zoo. But not for long though. My parents gave out the gifts we received to needy people. It’s their habit.

    Gloria.

    I hate being a pastor’s child and I wish I was never one. Being a pastor was a good idea for my dad because it helped him get out of the ancestral stuff done in his village. If he hadn’t been a pastor, perhaps my sister and I would have been involved in the ancestral things too, but by being a pastor, he escaped that and got us an escape route too.

    I never really got the chance to be close to my father. By the time I was born, he had become so invested in the ministry that he had little or no time for me. My father is the type of person who would favour his church members over his own family, and I did not like that. It was as though all the love he had left in him was reserved for them. They took higher precedence in his list of priorities, and I hated that.

    I went from one member’s house to another, and eventually, I was molested, but I couldn’t tell anyone because I was too young to understand what happened. When I grew older and understood it, I blamed my parents for not being there for me. If they had, I probably would not have been in that situation. But they had the ministry in their heads and forgot their little daughter at home.

    Oh, my father loved the church members. He would be lacking school fees for me, but would have money for the members. Sometimes, I didn’t even see him as my dad, just the pastor.

    As a pastor’s child, too much was expected from me and I hated it. I was to be involved in every children’s program, do Bible recitation, sword drill and so many things I was not interested in but still had to perform the best. Whenever I fumbled, I was scolded by my father for disappointing him and embarrassing him before the whole congregation. My siblings were in school or married, and I was the only one at home, so I had nobody to cry to, except my mother.

    I was also punished for things that had nothing to do with me. For example, when deacons had issues with my dad, they’d come to flog me. I was the scapegoat for all the punishments they couldn’t dole out to my dad, all the things they couldn’t say to him. I didn’t get it at first. But I spoke out to my mum and she put two and two together.

    What I enjoyed the most about being a pastor’s child was the food that came in from members. I also got connections that went a long way in life. But to be honest, I feel that I could easily get some of these things as an ordinary member.

    There are misconceptions about pastors children being the most spoiled. I’ll tell you the truth: I think I fit that bill. There are so many things I have done and still do that, as a pastor’s child, will make you shocked. Back then, I couldn’t do any of these things because the pastor’s child identity hung over me. I couldn’t talk to boys because people would report me, and I couldn’t talk to the girls, because they didn’t want to make friends with the pastor’s child.

    There was also the constant transfer from church to church. I changed schools so many times and couldn’t even keep permanent friends. I didn’t know where I belonged. I could have a friend, and in 3 months, we’d have to move and I would have to start the whole process all over again.

    If my dad wasn’t a pastor, I think he still would have been a terrible father and husband. Perhaps being a pastor just helped him manage it. He has terrible eye service, doing things for people to see and praise him, but doing the opposite at home. I think my life would have been a lot better if he wasn’t my dad at all. It’s just him as a person, I guess. And I’m not the only one who feels this way. I guess my mother did too, and that was why she left him eventually.

    Lolade.

    I grew up in a very conservative home. The kind of conservative that focuses on spiritual wickedness, etc. And while it might seem tough, the advantage is that I grew up with people who knew the Lord, had a solid foundation of the Bible, and who gave me a moral compass for my life as defined by the tenets of our religious doctrine.

    As a pastor’s child, I saw how my family had to bear the brunt of sacrificing. If your parents have the heart for gospel or church, you’d sacrifice personally. Money that could have been used to do stuff at home was used to meet the need of a member, and we had to bear the consequence of this sacrificial giving. The complaint was always that there was no money, no money. Now, as an adult, I see that it had to be done and that there’s no sacrifice that goes unrewarded. God always rewarded our labour of love.

    And yes, I am aware of the misconceptions. Some people have unrealistic expectations of how upright you should as a pastor’s child. Some others believe that we are the worst pretenders because we are spoiled. I have had to deal with both sides of this narrative. I think that at the end of the day, we have to find our path regardless of the misconception and what people project on you.

    For starters, I had to find God for myself. I had been a pastor’s child for so long and yet didn’t know God until I was twenty-one. I’m currently twenty-four. I left religion and found a relationship with God, and by doing this, I got answers to questions that religion could not and did not answer for me.

    At the end of the day, the pastor is a man, and the pastor’s children are just like every other person who has to deal with every other challenge life throws their way. But the advantage for us is this: we have a solid backing from the Bible, a solid scriptural foundation, and we have a worldvew that is framed by the gospel which can be a good thing or a bad one, based on how your home was, growing up. But yes, I am thankful for the family I was born into.

    Chidi.

    I thought I had it worse as a pastor’s child. I should know better than to say mine was more than someone’s or less because trauma is trauma. My dad is a pastor and my mum a deaconess, so people have always expected perfection from my siblings and me. I soon learned that being called “pastor’s child” is more of an insult than a  good thing and I hated being called that.

    My dad was never the type to force us to do anything in church when I was younger, I did all that on my own. I taught toddlers’ class, was in the choir, drama team and I think to a degree I even loved doing those things. Until I started to fully come into myself. That is, I’ve always been a sort of tomboy and queer, but in 2016/2017 I realized that I was gender non-binary. I wanted to be addressed with a different name because it didn’t feel like me anymore, different pronouns, I refused to wear dresses to church and I wanted my chest flat so I got a binder and my father started to lose his shit. To crown it all, I became agnostic. When you’ve seen how the church is run, the dirty politics that goes on, the irrelevant things people are punished for, the stealing, lies and manipulation, your sense will tell you to flee.

    Last year during the lockdown, my father told me that God said I should cut my locs. It’s silly but that was when I knew that there would be no going back to any god. When I’m at home and in a good mood I follow my dad to church and create stories in my head the entire time. Since last year, I only went to church once.

    I feel sorry for my dad because I know people talk and it maybe reflects badly on him but honestly, I don’t care anymore. He has the title, I am just the unfortunate sperm that has survived for way too long.

    Godwin.

    I was not born a pastor’s child. My dad worked as an accountant and earned a lot until 2008/9 when he said he got the call of God to be a pastor. He quit his job, went to pray on the mountain with 14 days of dry fasting. He came back very haggard. After he recovered, he went to Abuja to see a pastor who has the biggest influence on him. He spent two/three days there, and returned, ready to take on the duty ahead. And as his child, this meant that my life and my siblings’ lives would have to change.

    We were held to a higher standard than the other children. “Pastor’s children” was a title that was held over us. I felt like I was not in control of anything. I was a child and could not be in total control, but even then, I was not allowed any control at all. My entire life was like being tethered to a rope. At first I felt loved by the community of members and the way they asked questions and cared for us, but when I became a teenager, the whole thing felt stifling and the community itself seemed intrusive, especially with regards to certain questions they asked and their attempts to crack my privacy.

    Whenever we were reported to him, my dad would discipline us. He feared what people would say and he tried to keep us in a straight line with the cane. Once, he sat us down and tell us a Bible story about Dinah, Jacob’s daughter who kept the wrong company and was lured and raped. When he was done, he prayed with us. After the prayer, he brought out the cane and flogged the living daylights out of us.

    An illustration of Dinah from My Book of Bible Stories.

    Day after day, I felt more resentful of him, and of the community. I had fallen out of love with doing things in church, but I kept doing it to keep up appearance. Finally, he moved to Abuja and it felt like a huge load was lifted off me.

    But this relief was not enough to stop my religious apathy. When I got to university, the ship of my interest towards religion had already sailed. I cared very little. My dad still believes God has destined me to be a pastor and I anticipate future disagreements with him, because, after university, I don’t know when I’ll step into a church, especially now that I am even questioning God.

    To be honest, it was nice to have the huge church family at first. But at some point, I had had my fill. I now felt restricted and oversaturated. Also, there’s something about how people respect pastors and place them highly, but you as their child who lives at home with them sees how very flawed they are. My dad makes judgements about people, he gets angry, and this is the same man people hail, the same man who preaches against those things. The images do not align.

    Another thing I find impossible to overlook was how, when my father quit his job to become a pastor, our income went down and living conditions changed. We used to live very comfortably, all of a sudden we began to manage because of one decision by one person. The entire thing has made me tired of religion and my dad. Maybe as I grow, I will understand the motivation that led him to those things.


  • 5 Young Nigerian Parents Talk Disciplining Their Kids

    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. 

  • Sex Life: BDSM Is The Way And The Truth

    Sex Life: BDSM Is The Way And The Truth

    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 this week’s Sex Life is a 30-year-old bisexual woman who discovered BDSM (Bondage / Discipline / Dominance / Submission / Sadism / Masochism) in her early 20s and has vowed never to have any other kind of sex. 

    When did you first become curious about sex?

    After reading one nonsense Harlequin romance book. I was in JSS 3 and we had just finished Junior WAEC. I was bored all the time, so I started reading my sister’s romance novels. From reading her novels, I discovered porn and I couldn’t stop watching. Anytime I read or watched, I’d feel a little tingling between my legs. Then one day, I was watching this American movie. Can’t remember the name. But there was a scene I replayed like 100 times. By the 101st time, there was a pillow between my thighs and I was masturbating. 

    Lmao. With a pillow?

    Omo, I’ve used weirder things —  remote controls, just over my underwear on my clit, not inside oh, books etc. Anything that gets the work done. 

    You had never masturbated before? 

    Nope. 

    And you had no prior sexual experience?

    None at all. But from reading all those books, I knew what masturbation was and it felt so freaking good. Jesus Christ. I was crying when I finished — I didn’t know anything other than ice cream on a hot day could make me feel that good. Later that day, I told my sister and she laughed at me because I said I used a pillow. 

    You were comfortable talking to her about it? 

    Perfectly. After laughing we actually had a conversation about it and she told me I could use my fingers. But I didn’t know how, so I fashi-ed. I didn’t do anything for a long time, until I was in SS 3 and I went to an all-girl’s boarding school. That was when I started thriving, because I went full-on. 

    Explain ‘full-on’?

    First, I discovered I was attracted to women. Then some girl taught me how to touch myself properly. Then, I had sex for the first time. It was great! 

    What were your thoughts on sex before then? 

    My parents have always been open about sex. And in my old school, sex education was a big thing. So I knew that I had to have safe sex. I knew about diseases. I knew that you didn’t get pregnant by sitting on a man’s lap. But I wasn’t in a hurry to have sex. The romance novels ruined me, so I dreamt of ‘giving my flower’ to a boy I loved. And as I didn’t now find anyone, I didn’t have sex until 16. 

    Did you love the girl?

    A lot. I was almost obsessive. She was my first-ever partner — so it was good vibes at first. We sat down together in class. We would finger each other under the table, make out in the toilet, sneak into each other’s beds after lights out. It was really nice. But I couldn’t stand her being with someone else. And it became worse after we had sex  for the first time. I was really just a learner. She taught me what to do and it was the most natural thing ever. But the next day, I saw her talking to another babe and I got sooo livid, I could have burst. Imagine a cartoon character’s face going red and exploding? That was me. 

    Just because they were talking?

    There was some touching that bordered on flirting. I admit I was overreacting. But yeah, teenage girls are evil. So I went to accost both of them and the other girl hissed while my own partner told me to calm down. Lol. I was so mad. I did the next best thing. Stormed off to the hostel mistress’ room to report that I’d seen them kissing. 

    Ah.

    I told you teenage girls are evil. When the hostel mistress called them in, a lot of accusations and lies flew around. So the hostel mistress punished us by telling us that we would all sleep outside on the basketball court until 12am. I think she didn’t believe my accusation and assumed that it was just a good-natured girl fight, hence the punishment. In hindsight, it’s a stupid punishment, but omo, that’s not the point. Three of us made out on the court that night. There was some oral sex too. It was wild. 

    And you weren’t caught? 

    Yeah. Luckily we weren’t. 

    So what did you do next? 

    My partner and I broke up, but after that we would hook up occasionally, sneak around and make out. At the same time, I became a ‘mouth prostitute’. That’s what people used to call me because I gave the best head. Sometimes it was compensation for something someone had done for me. Sometimes people bought me food just so I could give them head. If I say I did it on less than 20 girls in a month, I’d probably be lying because it was a lot more.

    Then we finished school and went our separate ways. Before that though, my sister came for visiting day and I told her some of what had happened — leaving out the sex and she called me out and said I was too controlling. I was offended ehn. So after we graduated, I really didn’t want to get with anybody. I focused on university and all. It was all good until my second year when I met this guy that wanted to destroy my life. 

    What?! 

    Lol. Maybe I’m exaggerating. But yeah, he wanted to destroy me with sex. We weren’t dating. We met on a social platform and started hooking up. He lived in a nice apartment close to campus, so I was with him a lot. Cooking his meals — like an idiot — and having sex with him anytime he felt like. Sometimes, I feel like he used jazz on me because what the actual hell? I think I washed his toilet once sef. 

    I washed his clothes. Cleaned his house. The fucking ghetto. Just because of ordinary sex — he wasn’t giving me much else. That went on for a whole semester. My grades dropped. My mum told my sister to talk to me, that they can’t be paying that much for school fees and I’ll be failing. My sister spoke to me and because I’m very putty around her, I told her it was man o. She told me that it wasn’t right and my eyes opened. I did my best to stay away from men. 

    How long did that last for? 

    Pretty much all through uni. So what happened was that I started having a streak of bad luck with men and women. Mostly men sha. They were either awful people or the sex was just terrible or I wasn’t physically attracted to them. So my sex life really went down. I went back to my first love, masturbation. I bought toys to help and all, so I wasn’t bothered by this. 

    Did that replace human touch? 

    Nope, but my pillow did. Haha. Just kidding. It especially didn’t replace all the kinds of things I could say to a partner, all the ways I could objectify or cause sexual pain to them. Ah, that’s the one that pained me. 

    Just curious about the pain part. 

    Sometime towards the end of uni, I went to my sister’s house and she gave me the ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ book and that’s how my life changed. 

    Just like that?

    Just like that oh. But in a way, I feel I’ve always been like that. The book just helped me discover a part of me that I had been repressing. I know there’s no way to rationalize my obsessive and controlling attitude — I really should see a therapist — but once I read the novel, I knew I was the Dom, that I was destined for it. Nothing ever seemed appealing. Forget ice cream on a hot day. So after uni, I started seeking partners. 

    Was it easy?

    Surprisingly not hard. And maybe because in the beginning it was just like, I’ll spank the babes ass, or pull her hair. Or if it’s a guy, I’ll choke him and make him address me with “your honour” —  so cheesy, I know. But yeah, fantasy and roleplay are a huge part of the package for me. I wasn’t going all out and making BDSM a requirement in my sexual or romantic partners.

    Did it get hard as you began to experiment more?

    Yeah. I’ve been with people, especially men who claim they can take the pain, but they really can’t. A man has literally cried because of belt spanks after boasting that he’s used to it. Ah, moya carry my bags and japa. It’s not me the police will come and carry. Then there was a guy who I spat on in the heat of the moment, ugh. Cringing at the memory. Maybe I should’ve asked what he was comfortable with beforehand. That’s where the sex ended sha. 

    In my mid 20s, I experimented with polyamory. So what I did was that I dated two different people and was having two different kinds of sex with them. There was vanilla with the babe. And full-on BDSM with the guy. The dynamic wasn’t fixed. Sometimes I was the sub and he the dom; other times, I was the dom. 

    Did you love them both equally?

    I like to think so. I did. I treated them well. And they both had other partners. We had rules and all. It was nice while it lasted. 

    How did it end?

    My male partner wanted a threesome with my female partner but that had been off the table from the beginning. After I told him no, he became jealous of my relationship with the babe. He eventually said polyamory was not for him. Fair enough, even though he believes in polygamy, but let’s not go there. 

    Then with the babe, I realised that I didn’t like vanilla sex anymore. Like the entire thought of it repelled me. So I was cheating with this babe who loves BDSM as much as I do — she was entirely submissive. I don’t say cheating proudly because I regret it. A lot of people were hurt and it wasn’t worth it, but that’s what happened. Everything scattered after a while and I was alone with my hands and toys again — at least I know that they’re drama free. 

    Welp. Would you try polyamory again?

    Maybe. But I’m tired of drama. It just keeps following me. Is there anything that says I like drama on my head? 

    Lmao. 

    I’m serious. I just want peace and quiet. 

    But—  

    But if I’m being honest, sometimes, I see drama and walk into it.  

    What happened after the polyamory drama? 

    Oh. Nothing much. Just my mum walking into my room to see that there was a naked woman tied up on my bed. I can’t even begin to unpack the problems. But I’m at fault: why was I doing it at my parents house? Why didn’t I lock the door? 

    First, my mum didn’t know my sexual orientation. So I just had to lie that it was for a project. Lol. As woke as my mum is, she’s still homophobic, so she actually started talking to me and this woman who is a stranger I met on the internet. Counselling us and all. Preaching the bible to us — even though she hasn’t been to a church in years. I was so embarrassed. Afterwards, I had one of those talks with my sister and I decided okay, let’s give settling down a try. I had to move out first. For a bit, I was crashing in different places and was too broke for hotels. So no sex. 

    How long?

    Maybe a year. I swore off vanilla sex. So it wasn’t an option. It was either I got my sex the way I liked it or I masturbated. No in-betweens. 

    Did it get hard? 

    Yes it did. But yeah, I guess I can say I paid my dues because I soon met the love of my life and yeah, everything has changed since then. My relationship isn’t about sex. Sex is just one of the things that happen. And when we do it, it’s absolutely amazing. Forget icecream and party Jollof rice. It’s the real deal. We have rules around sex. Rules around safety and consent. Rules around knowing the limit. I never knew those were important. She literally schooled me. She loves pain, and so it was easy to settle into our dynamic. 

    How long have you been together? 

    2 and a half years. She calls me her god. Hahaha. I love it. 

    Lit! Do you think it’ll ever change?

    The sex or the relationship?

    Both. 

    Yeah. I do. But I’m prepared. There’s something being older does to your priorities. If we breakup, I won’t die, but it’ll hurt me. I understand now that not everything lasts forever and relationships don’t necessarily have to be till death do us part. But with the sex, we’re constantly inventing new ways to explore in the bedroom. We even have a feedback system where after every sex round, we fill forms to talk about the experience and discuss how to improve. So hopefully, if we break up, it won’t be about the sex. 

    Mad. How would you rate your sex life? 

    7?

    Why not more? I guess you have all you want. 

    Well I can’t marry my partner and be disgusting in public like I’d like to, so no I don’t have all I want. The sex is great, but there are a lot of things missing just by virtue of being Nigerian and living here. 


  • The 5 Most Outrageous Punishments Of All Time

    The 5 Most Outrageous Punishments Of All Time

    Let’s face it, there are punishments and then there are PUNISHMENTS clearly invented by people who hated children. It’s understandable that kids can be stubborn and that it’s important to discipline them once in a while. But, come on, why would you try to kill a child in the name of punishing them? Nigerian parents and teachers are at the forefront of meting out such punishments.

    We’ve listed some of these outrageous punishments here because we are patiently waiting for the government to ban them. Hopefully, this list won’t give you PTSD.

    Pick Pin

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    The worst on this list is perhaps the pick pin. When adults ask children to pick pin, what they mean is for them to hang one leg in the air and point one finger to the ground. They are to remain in that position until their hanging leg gives out or until the adult feels like they’ve suffered enough. This one will make you feel like your soul is entering the ground. The worst part is that if the adult is extra evil, they’ll flog you if you dare twitch. The government must ban this one first, and ensure that adults who mete out this kind of punishment get jail time.

    Frog Jump

    Up-down, Up-down, Up-down. Your thighs feel like they’re about to tear. Your heart feels like it’s about to explode. Your knees are about to give way. You’re crying and shouting, “I’ll never do it again!” When they finally “release” you, you’ll just go to sleep. Only God knows if you came to this world to be a frog.

    Okada

    Thinking about the possibility of being punished like this can make you desist from whatever crime you’re about to commit. You’ll be asked to stay in a “squat” position and ensure your back stays at a “angu 90” with your legs. Essentially, you’re supposed to ride an imaginary okada — as per, you’re now an okada man. This punishment is designed to kill.

    Suck Your Thumb

    This one isn’t as easy or straightforward as it sounds. You will be asked to stand on one leg, raise the other leg up, put an arm under the raised leg, and then suck the thumb on that hand. Try it and see if you won’t be singing, “Pass me not o gentle saviour” in 30 seconds.

    Kneel Down and Fly Your Arms

    This one will fuck you up. You think it’s just kneeling down, but it’s not. It’s probably the simplest of all 5, but if you do it long enough, you will regret making noise in class and calling Mayowa a mango head when he wrote your name on the noisemakers’ list

    If you know the person who invented any of these punishments, please let us know. We just want to tell them something.

  • How To Be A Nigerian Parent  

    How To Be A Nigerian Parent  

    All Nigerians are the same. There might be several ethnic groups and religions between us, but there are certain attributes we all share that make us similar. It’s even worse when you’re a Nigerian parent.

    We’ve concluded that there must be a school everyone goes to learn how to “parent” before they have children and we’re here to tell you everything they teach in that school. 

    Here’s a list of Topics in the syllabus of Nigerian Parents’ Schools.

    How to blame your child for the mistakes you made.

    As a parent, when you make a mistake, you must realise that parents cannot make mistakes. It’s simply impossible.

    What’s the next best thing? Finding a way to blame your child. I mean that’s what our parents do, right? Say you’re looking for your glasses and you become frustrated. All you need to do is shout at the top of your voice and ask your child why they can’t help you look for your glasses, even though they didn’t know you were looking for your glasses.

    When they protest with, “But I didn’t know…” Say something like, “So you could not think that I might misplace my glasses and help me keep it somewhere abi?” And when they point out you’ve been wearing your glasses all along, blame them for putting it on your face without your knowledge.

    How to shout at the top of your voice.

    It doesn’t matter if you look like this, just keep shout.

    If you don’t shout, you’re weak. You must shout even if they’re right next to you. Show dominance. 

    It’s always your child’s duty to get the remote next to you.

    After having a child and breastfeeding them, you should never work again. When there’s a remote beside you, and you need to change it from African Magic Family to African Magic Yoruba, please don’t pick it. If you’ve shouted for your child to come and get it and they don’t hear, pick up your phone from right beside the remote, and call them. When they get there tell them to help you pass the remote. Parenting 101

    Up your sarcasm game.

    Sarcasm shows intelligence, and you’re intelligent. There’s also no better way for a child to learn than fear. Say things like, “Come and put it on my head na,” when your child asks an innocent question on where to put something you’ve asked him to get. And when they tell you they’re hungry as you cook, say something like, “As you can see, I’m playing here.” Then there’s the classical, “Oh, so I’m stupid? ehn? Answer me, am I stupid?”

    Idle Hands are the Devil’s Workshop

    There must be a chore in the house for your child even when they’ve done all possible chores. So find something for your child to do. Work builds character. 

    How to beat children to the rhythm of their voice.

    When you’re beating your child for staring too long at a visitor’s food, make sure the beating rhymes with their voice as they cry. It’s nice to have some fun in this world of stress. 

    How to keep money for your children

    When your children get money from their uncle, tell them you want to help them keep it so that nobody steals it. Then proceed to steal it. When they ask for it in the future, say these words “All the food you’ve been eating in this house, did you pay for it”?

  • Twelve Odunlade Memes Perfect For Every Situation In Your Life

    Odunlade is easily the current reigning meme king in the whole of Nigeria. And these thirteen memes of him are ridiculously apt for every situation in your life.

    When your landlord sends you a letter that he’s increasing your rent next year.

    But salary hasn’t increased for the past three years.

    When you finally run into that Onigbese that has been owing you money for the past five years.

    One day for the owner.

    When someone wakes you up just as you are about to enter the sweet part of your sleep.

    This had better be a life or death situation.

    When it’s 5:05 pm on a Friday and your boss asks you if you would mind staying an extra hour to help with something.

    How you look at your haters when you are flourishing in life.

    All weapons fashioned against me shall not prosper.

    When you’ve been waiting for the puff puff to be ready for an hour and the person in front of you buys everything on the tray.

    The heart of man is wicked.

    How the bouncers look at you when you show up at an invite only owambe without your I.V.

    Oga please just respect yourself and go back.

    The side eye your mum gives you when you are doing something foolish.

    There’s no need for her to talk

    When you are sleeping but hear your mum come in and remember you didn’t sweep the place she told you to sweep.

    You better find a way to sweep it in 2.5 seconds.

    How you carry your shoulder up during salary week.

    When you know you won’t soak garri or cook indomie for at least one week.

    When you buy food, only to get home and realize that the person selling it forgot to put your meat.

    You bought three meat and assorted and they didn’t put anyone.

    When you don’t know the answers to all the compulsory questions in an exam.

    So what am I supposed to write now? These are just our favourite Odunlade memes. What are yours?
  • A Touching Story Of The First Time I Told My Mother I Loved Her

    A Touching Story Of The First Time I Told My Mother I Loved Her

    I love my mother.

    I mean, the woman gave me life, what’s not to love?

    But I had never actually TOLD my mother I love her.

    Until this particular day.

    I was bored and playing with her jewellery.

    Which of course she had warned me NEVER to do.

    As I was playing, one of her necklaces did “krin”

    I jejely put it back and started praying that she won’t find out.

    But of course she did. And the devil was looking at me like:

    Someone’s gonna get beaten reeeal bad!

    She beat me in stages. First the slap:

    Then she removed slippers:

    Then she beat me with the slippers:

    At first I thought I could chest it.

    As an odeyshi master.

    But when I could not hold it anymore I had to let it all out.

    That was how I started to shout, “I love you mummy! I will not do it again!”

    Thinking that she will feel pity and stop.

    She just looked at me like:

    Then she said, “I love you too that’s why I’m beating you”

    When she finished beating me she now asked, “Do you still love me?”

    I didn’t even know how to respond.

    I cried at the end of this story, but you will laugh at the end of this one:

    https://zikoko.com/story/nightmare-on-akure-road-my-worst-travel-experience/
  • Chukwuma’s Father Decided Not To Spare The Rod And He Almost Killed His Child!

    Chukwuma’s Father Decided Not To Spare The Rod And He Almost Killed His Child!
    There’s a saying “spare the rod and spoil the child” and Africans really believe in it. But sometimes, the rod really should be spared. Like in this situation!

    Kai! Just look at!

    This little boy’s name is Chukwuma Okafor. And he’s eight years old and lives in Abuja.

    Chukwuma was beaten to within an inch of his life by his father!

    He’s father beat him with a pestle and broke his arm and leg in the process.

    A Facebook user shared this:

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    WHO WILL SAVE LITTLE OKAFOR FROM HIS FATHER’S WICKEDNESS?Eight Years old Chukwuma Okafor is presently on admission at…
    Posted by IG Wala on Wednesday, March 2, 2016

    According to IG Wala, Chukwuma was dumped in school after his dad had dealt with him.

    Eight Years old Chukwuma Okafor is presently on admission at the Kubuwa General Hospital after a brutal beating by his own father. This child was taken to hospital by a Nun whom was said to have been contacted by his school teachers. Yesterday morning, his own father drove him to school in a bad shape and dumped him.

    He went on to say that this has happened repeatedly in the past.

    The school teachers confirmed that on several occasions, they made effort to intervene on the boy’s situation but the father proved stubborn and even threatened them. The scars on the boy’s head & back shows how long he has been maltreated by his own father.

    And that Chukwuma’s father justified his actions by saying he was a disciplinarian.

    THE FATHER IS JUSTIFYING HIS ACTIONS BY WAY OF CLAIMING TO BE A DISCIPLINARIAN AND HE SAID HIS ARREST BY THE POLICE IS AN EXAMPLE OF THE TYPE OF EMBARRASSMENTS THAT HIS CHILD KEEP BRINGING TO HIS FAMILY.

    Chukwuma’s father had no right to do this, no matter what the boy did! No right at all!! This is just too extreme!!!

    The sad thing is that this issue is rampant, not just in Nigeria, but in Africa. Which is just sad! [zkk_poll post=22131 poll=content_block_standard_format_10]