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Lagos living | Zikoko!
  • “He Always Watched Porn Without Headphones” — The Worst Roommate Experiences Ever

    After watching the movie Worst roommate ever, we had to find out what Nigerians sharing apartments or hostels have been through. From fundamentally crazy roommates to the deeply disturbed ones, seven Nigerians talk about their experiences. They make living in your parent’s house look glorious.

    “He’d pee without flushing and take a shit with the door open”

    — Chuka, 28

    In 2015, I lived in a three-bedroom apartment with three guys and one babe. The rent was about  ₦450k and we wanted one more  extra person so we could split the rent by six people — we were undergraduates looking to cut back on cost as much as possible. We finally got a guy after about three months. “Lucky us,” I thought. Mind you, it was already a nightmare living with five people and sharing one bathroom. I managed to deal with it until this guy came along. He was disgusting. He’d pee without flushing and take a shit with the door open. The most baffling thing was his smoking habit. 

    This guy was asthmatic but he smoked a pack of cigarettes a day. Clearly, he had some kind of death wish. The height of it for me was when he brought a dog to the house. Let’s note that he didn’t even ask anyone. The dog would piss and shit around the house. He had a babe that sometimes came over to clean up after him, but just imagine waking up to a house smelling of dog shit.  The day I confronted him about it, he just said “Bro, there’s nothing I can do. I’ve already paid for the dog.” I was so pissed. We quarrelled.  The next time we spoke, I was triggered by the pots he left piled up in the kitchen for almost a week. I was like, “Guy! Why the hell are you a fucking pig?” Next, he asked me how much money I made that gave me the guts to speak to him anyhow — On top the small influencer work he was doing o! We sha had to ask him to leave. When we started repainting the room, there were bed bugs everywhere. Cockroaches in the cupboards were literally falling from the door when we sprayed it. Talking about it now literally makes my skin crawl. 

    “She was always storing my used tampons for only God knows what”

    — Sarah, 27

    I’ve washed my hands from anything concerning roommates. I’d been looking for a roommate to share a one-bedroom flat at Surulere for a month. The girls who came along were either looking for something cheaper or not pleased with the rough road leading to the house. I didn’t have a car, so that wasn’t my business. When this girl came along — let’s call her Ada — she was interested and ready to pay on the spot. She didn’t ask me a lot of questions. Nothing about the light situation or the neighbourhood in general; she was just desperate to move in. In hindsight, I should have been bothered about that. Who rents a house without asking questions? 

    After a month, I noticed something off about her. She’d wake up at odd hours of the night and stand by the door murmuring to herself. I always assumed she was praying because sometimes she paced around. Two months went by and it stayed the same. Between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m., she was up by the door, mumbling inaudible things. As the weeks went by, I also noticed an odd stench in the room. Surulere is notorious for gigantic rats, so I thought one of them had died somewhere in our apartment. I searched but didn’t find anything. There’s no kind of diffuser or spray I didn’t try — nothing worked. My roommate wasn’t even bothered. But I found out why that evening.

    By 3 a.m., she was up again with the same late night behaviour. Look, I was living a Nollywood film and I wasn’t even aware of it. In the middle of her mumbling, she pulled out a tile from underneath our bed. I don’t know if she thought I was asleep, because the room was dark. That’s how she brought out a box from underneath with stored pads and tampons. 

    I was the only one using tampons so clearly, they were mine — she had been storing them. She had been picking them from the bin in the bathroom… that was the smell that wouldn’t go away. I didn’t make a sound while she brought them out. She squeezed one of them and rubbed part of the blood on her chest. Look, all I can say is, people dey this Lagos. Nobody told me to pack my bags in my uncle’s house. Nobody.

    “This guy tried to stab me”

    — Kunle, 34

    My roommate — let’s pretend he’s Emeka — tried to kill me. I had made some mad money from crypto and thought it was great to celebrate at the club with my guys. Little did I know that Emeka had other plans. On our way back, I needed to take a piss. I lived at Nyanyan, on the outskirts of Abuja, at the time, so the drive was too long for me to hold it in. It was 2 a.m. and the streets were practically empty. I asked one of my guys that came along to take the wheels while I got down. 

    Emeka decided to follow me as well. I wasn’t surprised because he’dd also had quite a bit to drink. We went into a bush. In the middle of peeing, Emeka pulled a knife on me. At first, I thought it was a joke, but he came closer and went for my stomach. I screamed for help. The guy was too big to push off. Thank God for one of my guys that came to check in on us. He dragged Emeka off and we left him there. I never asked him why he did that. Maybe I was too drunk to think that far at the moment. All I know is, that was the last time I stayed with anyone. In fact, the last time I talked about money with people. Silent moves all the way.

    RELATED: Four Months of Living Together and Hopefully We Don’t Kill Each Other

    “He banged my babe”

    — Simon, 31

    There’s nothing worse than finding out your roommate is banging your babe. Nothing! Let’s name this guy Andrew. I can’t even call him a roommate because I covered most of the bills and rent; Andrew was a squatter. My babe typically came by on the weekends to cook for us — I still miss that woman’s banga soup. Whenever I went on trips, she’d still offer to bring food for me. Her excuse was either Andrew might be too broke to buy food or she’d say something like, “Oh babe, you know Andrew would have finished the food.” God punish Andrew wherever he is. 

    On one of my trips back, I went over to her house to surprise her. She wasn’t home and wasn’t picking her calls. I decided to just head back home. I felt she might have even beat me to the surprise and wanted to shock me — well, she sure did. When I got back, I didn’t have to knock. I had my own keys. I got in, threw my bags on the chair and noticed my babes shoes in the living room. “She’s here,” I thought. I knew she couldn’t have heard me if she was inside the room, so I snuck in to surprise her. When I got closer, I heard moaning and that was it. The relationship ended and I moved out. I didn’t need an explanation from any of them.

    “I found my dick pic”

    — Yinka, 23

    I knew I had to move out when I found a picture of me naked on my roommate’s phone. I needed to send pictures from his gallery and I stumbled on the photo. It was only one, but it was still creepy. I asked him why he did it and he said it was a mistake. Things weren’t the same after that. I was too cautious around him, so I decided I had to move out. 

    RELATED: Why Don’t Nigerians Talk About Their Personal Income? — 7 Nigerians Tell Zikoko

    “She had horrible body odour”

    — Christal, 24

    My college roommate had terrible body odour. The weird thing was that she always took her bath. Morning, afternoon, night, she was in the bathroom. She also took things and never returned them, the most annoying being my Rubyroo lipstick.. Anyway, that wasn’t the reason I moved out. Imagine living in a tiny cubicle with barely any ventilation and having to endure body odour. I couldn’t stand it. When I tried to come back to the room and take a few things, this babe tried to beat me up, ranting about how I left her alone in the room. That was the last straw for me.

    “All he did was watch porn without headphones”

    — Adam, 23

    I and my roommate stayed on bunk beds. If it wasn’t the sound of FIFA keeping me up at night, it was porn playing at full volume from his Ipad. Like bro, get your headphones! He had zero self-awareness and made cingeworthy sexual jokes about breasts and penises. One day, he broke the bed and that was my cue to leave. Only God knows what he’d been humping.

    CONTINUE READING: 17 Things You’ll Relate to if You Grew Up in Ibadan

  • 7 Things You Must Always Carry With You In Lagos

    Lagos will stress you out. It will kill you and devour your bones. To prevent that from happening, here are some things you must always carry with you if you want to survive Lagos.

    1. Pankere

    For flogging people who walk anyhow in front of you without considering the fact that they’re on the main road and people are in a hurry. Just land them one fiam on their back and watch them fast forward like a DVD.

    2. Pepper spray

    Police reveals it is illegal to go about with pepper spray in Nigeria

    For people who try to grope you anyhow or assume that they can touch you inappropriately.

    Nigerian Pepper Mix (Ata Lilo) - My Active Kitchen

    You can also use blended pepper as an alternative. Just store it in a plastic bottle and pierce the cap. If anybody tries nonsense with you, just squirt it in their eyes. Their father.

    3. A bottle of your urine

    What is a Pee Bottle? | How to Use Backpacking 101 - Greenbelly Meals

    Same as the blended pepper recommendation too. Simply pierce the cap and spray away. Will be good for those car owners who splash mud on you and those danfo drivers who move too close to your car in traffic.

    4. Extra leggings

    Marvell College Female Leggings

    Fight can break out anywhere in Lagos. You have to be prepared to japa.

    5. Handbag to put your wig in.

    Big tote bag - Woman | Mango Nigeria

    Especially when you want to enter danfo. Imagine them stealing wig your wig off your head while you’re struggling for molue in Oshodi. Because of N150 bus, you lost N40k wig.

    6. Fake baby/pregnancy

    Fake baby doll silicone 20" sleeping newborn babies dolls cloth body real  baby dolls for children gift bebe alive bonecas reborn|real baby  dolls|newborn baby dolldoll for - AliExpress

    People are kinder to pregnant people in Lagos. You might as well cash in on that sympathy.

    7. Catapult

    African Style Slingshot (Catapult) - Ochulo

    For those traders in Yaba who are convinced they have what you want and won’t leave you alone. Since they want to be mad, convince them that nobody has a monopoly on madness. You sef get am plenty.


  • How To Have A Social Life In Lagos On A Budget

    Maintaining a social life can feel impossible when you live in a city as stressful as Lagos. Finding a balance between work and fun is basically an extreme sport, especially if you are on a tight budget.

    The struggle is real.

    To help you navigate this, we thought long and hard to create this list of 6 suggestions. If you no longer want to be a hermit in Lagos, only leaving your house to go to work, then this post is for you.

    1) Crash with a friend who lives close to your office:

    There’s a feeling of peace that comes with living close to your office — even if you have to squat with a friend. This way, you don’t spend most of your life in traffic, giving you more than enough time to catch up with friends.

    2) Attend free events:

    There are numerous ticket-free events in Lagos that give you a chance to mingle in a nice atmosphere. Some of these events include; Eyo festival, Fanti festival, Lagos Trade Fair, Adire festival, GTBank Food and Drinks and more.

    3) Splurge on Sundays:

    The best time to have a traffic-free and budget-friendly outing in Lagos is on a Sunday. Most people stay indoors and everything is slow-paced and serene, which gives you a chance to fully enjoy hanging with your squad.

    4) Go to parks with friends:

    Freedom Park and Jakande J Tinubu Park are some of the places to have fun with friends and family. To have a great time, just grab a book, some board games, cheap snacks, mats, sunscreen and some cash.

    5) Avoid public holiday outings:

    They are simply the worst. The malls, cinemas, parks, beaches and everything in between are often packed with people — mostly wailing children — and everything is so much more expensive.

    6) Be deliberate about parties you attend:

    It’s not every owambe you should attend, considering how expensive they can be. Having to buy an asoebi, sew new clothes, get gifts and all that jazz should guide you towards choosing the most budget-friendly parties.

  • Whether you’ve just moved into a new place or you’ve lived in your house for decades; we can guarantee that you’ve come across these typical Nigerian neighbours.

    The one who’s generator is always on. 24 hours a day. 7 days a week.

    Even if there’s light they won’t put it off because ‘NEPA will soon take the light’.

    The nosy ones who don’t even try to hide the fact that they are being nosy.

    Abeg sister that man that came to visit you last night, is that your brother?

    The ones that have the NEPA siren that goes off when there is light.

    If not for them you’ll just be wasting petrol.

    The ones who are always coming to beg you to charge their phones once you put on your gen.

    Oga you too on your gen now.

    The ones who block the street with canopies every weekend for party.

    Last week it was somebody’s naming ceremony. The week before that was birthday. This week it’s burial. And it’s not like they’ll even invite you for the party.

    The one who is forever knocking on your door to borrow something.

    If it’s not salt it’s broom. And before they return it, wahala.

    The ones who use their house for weekly fellowship and always asks when you’ll join them.

    Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

    The one who always corners you to give you gist that you didn’t ask for.

    “Did you know that Mummy Jamiu’s son impregnated someone? “

    The ones who will wake you up in the morning with prayers and keep you up at 1am with prayers.

    Because if their neighbours can’t hear them praying, God won’t answer their prayers.

    As if your prayer warrior neighbour is not enough, there must be a church on your street too.

    Sometimes even two or three. As one id finishing their service, the other one is starting.

    The ones who will appoint themselves as street or estate chairman.

    They’ll also take it upon themselves to start collecting monthly dues.

    The one you’ve never seen in your life.

    You can be living there for ten years and never meet them. You’ll only be seeing the light in their house going on and off.

    The one who has a bigger family than Abraham.

    Every day you will see a new face coming out of the house.

    The resident baby boy or baby girl.

    They don’t have any stress at all.

    So answer with your chest now; which neighbour are you?