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long distance relationship | Zikoko!
  • The #Nairalife of a Couple Dating on Unstable Freelance Incomes

    Every week, Zikoko seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it’ll be revealing.


    Nairalife #259 Bio

    What was the first money conversation you both had?

    Michelle: Shortly after we started dating in October 2021, I took ₦14k out of the ₦60k I had saved up to replace my phone to buy him a surprise gift for his coming birthday. He knew I was saving for a phone and would have objected to my plan. Honestly, it wasn’t exactly a conversation. I used my strong head to decide on my own.

    LOL. What was the surprise?

    Michelle: I wanted to send him a pair of sneakers since we’re quite a distance apart. He lives in Aba, while I live in Keffi. But I had issues finding vendors, so I told him to find me one.

    JC: I found a vendor, and she paid for it. That was the first birthday gift I ever received from anyone.

    That’s sweet. You guys were long-distance right from the start?

    Michelle: Yes. We met on a mutual friend’s Facebook group. JC and I were both admins of the group, and we progressed from exchanging banter on the timeline to talking every day. We’ve been talking every day since.

    What’s navigating a long-distance relationship like?

    JC: To anyone reading this: Don’t do it. Sometimes you just want to be with your person, but they’re several miles away. We have to rely on video calls, emails and virtual dates to keep the romance going. It’s tough.

    Michelle: We’ve only seen each other physically twice since we started dating. The last time was in 2023. I visited, and we stayed together for about two months before I returned home to Nasarawa.

    Who pays for these trips?

    JC: We both do. When she visited for the first time in  2022, I was running a part-time university program which was taking the little money I had. We were both terribly broke, but she insisted on coming. She’s really the type to sacrifice everything she has — or doesn’t have — for me. So, we just ended up gathering what we had to cover the roughly ₦30k travel cost.

    What about dates during these physical visits? Do you both pay for it too?

    Michelle: We always have big plans about where to go when I visit. But we’re both introverted, so we end up not going anywhere. Plus, we hardly see each other, so spending all the available time together makes sense.

    JC: Most of the time, we cook and have indoor dates. I’m the host, so I take up the cost for those. But we make up for our few dates by celebrating our anniversary every month.

    How does that work?

    Michelle: Sometimes, we exchange love letters and emails. At other times, we do virtual dates. We choose a meal and cook it on both our ends. Then we do a video call and chat about the past month. He once published a chapbook of 30 poems and dedicated it to me. It was so romantic. We’re just spontaneous like that.

    I’m curious. Is it work keeping you both in your respective cities?

    JC: Kinda. I moved here in 2017 to work as a graphic designer at a pharmaceutical company, but I quit in September 2023 because I kept getting owed salaries — which was just ₦50k/month. When they didn’t owe me, they’d deduct up to half of it for flimsy reasons. 

    I now offer freelance graphic and web design plus writing services. I have two consistent clients and a few occasional ones, bringing an average of ₦180k – ₦350k in a good month.

    It’s not my first time in Aba, though. I first moved here when I was 10 years old. My family was forced to leave Kano in 2001— run is the correct word here — because of increased religious violence that became widespread following the infamous Reinhard Bonnke-Kano crisis of 1991. I’d experienced violent riots before and even lost friends to them, but I think another one happened in 2001, and my pastor dad decided enough was enough. 

    Oh my. What was it like starting afresh?

    JC: Quite traumatic. We left with no properties and stayed in our family house in the village for seven months to figure things out. Fortunately, my mum worked in NIPOST, so she resumed work after her formal transfer request to a city nearby was approved. My dad also got transferred to a branch of the church there. We soon became financially stable and got our own place. 

    I’m glad there was a happy ending. How about you, Michelle?

    Michelle: I’m a freelance writer, but I’ve been living in Nasarawa since 2016. Actually, let me start from the top. I lost my dad at five years old, and this affected the family’s finances. My mum was going to hold it down, though. She was a big-time seamstress in Lagos and had a huge foodstuff store, but she died nine months after my dad. 

    I’m terribly sorry to hear that

    Michelle: Thank you. After her death, my siblings and I were passed around different relatives’ homes till I travelled to Zaria to write post-UTME in 2016.

    It turned out that I had the wrong information and had travelled far ahead of the exam. So, I decided to stay with my elder brother who lived in Nasarawa with a relative in the meantime. 

    My brother had a sickle cell crisis shortly after I arrived, and I picked up a ₦6k/month restaurant waitressing job so I could care for him. I didn’t even write the post-UTME because the university eventually used JAMB and WAEC grades to decide the cut-off aggregate. 

    When I got the admission, I couldn’t go because I’d used all my money to take care of my brother. I tried JAMB again a couple of times, but my brother’s health problems always came up, and I’d have to pause the process. He eventually passed away in 2018.

    Damn. I’m so sorry

    Michelle: I should’ve given an “emotional story ahead” warning. After his death, I did several things for money. I was once a sales girl for ₦5k/month, then I worked at a cyber cafe serving chicken and chips. I learnt how to use a computer there. Then I had stints as a receptionist, admin officer and front desk officer. My town is pretty underdeveloped, so there’s nothing here.

    I got my first real job in 2019. I started working as a secretary/paralegal in a law firm for ₦10k/month. In 2021, I moved to another law firm in Abuja for ₦30k/month in the same role. It was the same year I discovered I could get paid to write, and I started getting small gigs writing guides for a software product blog. That brought in an average of ₦100k extra monthly. 

    In December 2022, I took a risk and quit my law firm job to start my freelance business when the stress of moving from Nasarawa to Abuja every week became too much. I’ve worked freelance since.

    How has that been?

    Michelle: Really tough. I feel like I should’ve found my footing in the freelancing world before I left my 9-5. Right now, I’d say my income is zero. I haven’t had a constant gig in about seven months.

    You’re both freelancers with somewhat unstable incomes. How do you manage bad financial periods?

    Michelle: We don’t have bad financial periods at the same time, so we come through for each other. There’s no month that goes by that we don’t send each other money. I haven’t had a steady income in a while, but whenever I get anything from favours or random gigs, I send a token with a narration like, “I’m grateful that I’m able to love you with my money”. I get a sense of fulfilment from it.

    Is there an average amount for this per month?

    JC: No month is the same, really. It depends on how the month goes. I don’t even keep records. However, our bank did something like a 2023 summary of who you send money to the most, and we were each other’s.

    Love to see it

    Michelle: JC, I’ve been thinking we need to budget an amount every month for each other. Of course, we can go higher or lower depending on how much money comes in that month. But it’d also help us keep our expenses in check.

    JC: Sounds good to me.

    What does the future look like for you both? Say, the next five years?

    Michelle & JC: Oh, we’ll definitely be married.

    Michelle: I feel like our financial future is bright. I want to get into data analysis, and I’m currently taking Udemy courses. So, in the next five years, I should be working remotely full-time and contributing more to our finances. We’d have upped our game financially by that time.

    Have you both thought about how money will work in your home? How will the bills be managed?

    JC: We haven’t discussed this, but sharing responsibilities, depending on who has money at the time, has always worked for us, so we may continue that way.

    Michelle: There will definitely be more structure to how we plan our expenses. Like if we’ll need to save for our kids, or how much goes into taking care of the home. I think the major change will be creating a joint account. I’m the lavish spender in the relationship — I mostly spend on gifts — and a joint account will help keep my spending in check. We actually tried to open a joint account in 2023, but it didn’t work because JC had BVN issues.


    Psst! Have you seen our Valentine Special yet? We brought back three couples – one now with kids, one now married and the last, still best friends – to share how their relationships have evolved in the last five years. Watch the first episode below:


    How was the joint account supposed to work?

    Michelle: The plan was to send whatever we made there, and the goal was to use it to monitor our spending. He was still working his 9-5, and transportation was taking a huge chunk of his money, which bothered him. He wanted to clearly track how the money was spent. Plus, I mentioned I tend to overspend, so we thought it’d be better if he was the only signatory to the account. That way, I’d think twice before asking for money to buy something unimportant.

    JC: So before anyone withdrew money, we’d have to discuss and agree on why that particular expense is necessary. Unfortunately, it didn’t work, but it’s still something we intend to do when we get married so we can use it to handle bills together.

    When you eventually do, would it still be a “send everything to the account” arrangement?

    Michelle: I think it’ll depend ultimately on our earning power. For instance, if this person earns more, they contribute more and vice versa.

    JC: Also, I started learning about finance intelligence in September 2023 from one of the companies I freelance for. It’s the 50-30-20 method, where you spend 50% of your income on personal needs, 30% on savings and 20% on investment. I’ve been trying the savings and investment bit with a savings app, and I think it’s a good blueprint for how we’ll likely plan our joint expenses when the time comes.

    Nairalife #259 Budget Rule

    How would you describe each other’s relationship with money?

    JC: She already confessed hers. She’s a lavish spender. It’s not that she spends on herself; she’s just generous to a fault. She always goes out of her way to do things for people who don’t even value her.

    Michelle: Because the Scriptures say don’t pay evil for evil!

    I’m dying

    JC: She’s very accountable, though. She keeps track of every expense and shares them, no matter how excessive it is. I struggle with that degree of attention to detail, and I really admire that in her.

    Michelle: JC thinks twice before spending money. He evaluates everything; Is this important right now? Can we get a cheaper alternative? I’m not like that. Once a need arises and there’s money, I spend it on the spot before thinking of how I could have gone at it in a better way.

    Have these differences ever caused a fight, though?

    Michelle: Ironically, we had a slight disagreement about money earlier today. 

    Do share

    Michelle: You know how I mentioned I haven’t really had an income for a while? Well, I still get random money from my friends and siblings occasionally. As a Christian, I’m quite big on tithing. I’ve tithed since I was a child.

    So, recently someone sent me ₦20k, and JC knew about it. The plan was for me to take some time away from home and travel to spend some time with my big sister in Abuja. But this past Sunday, I used most of it to pay tithe — I accumulate my tithe and pay when it’s gotten to a tangible amount — and announced to him today that I no longer had money to travel. He was like, “I thought it’s money you earn you pay tithe with, and not money you’re given?”

    Haha. I see his point

    Michelle: It wasn’t a big issue, though. We talked through it, and he understood why I did it. I’ve tithed for years. It’s not just something I can just stop.

    We’re gradually embracing the fact that we’re different people. So even though we don’t always have the same attitudes to money, we know to talk through the faults we notice and accept that our differences complement us.

    Do you both plan to shorten the distance between you soon?

    JC: We plan to move together to a new state in the second half of 2024. 

    Have you thought about how much it’d cost?

    JC: With how the Nigerian economy is going, it’s difficult to be decisive on a budget. But we started a joint savings plan on a savings app this January so we can have something saved up when we’re ready. We didn’t set a specific amount to save monthly, though. 

    Michelle: He has a more stable income and will probably move first to prepare for me to join him at the end of the year. Hopefully, my income will be better by then too. But we have to bridge the gap somehow this year. We both can’t deal with the distance again. This year is our year.

    Amen to that. How would you rate your financial happiness on a scale of 1-10?

    Michelle: 2. And that is me being kind to myself. It should be below zero. Not having an income in this economy is crazy.
    JC: 5. My finances improved this year, which I’m grateful for. I’m looking to lock in two more consistent clients soon, and that could increase my income significantly. The future is bright.


    If you’re interested in talking about your Naira Life story, this is a good place to start.

    Find all the past Naira Life stories here.


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  • An Enugu to Canada Long-Distance Marriage on a ₦210k Monthly Income

    The topic of how young Nigerians navigate romantic relationships with their earnings is a minefield of hot takes. In Love Currency, we get into what relationships across income brackets look like in different Nigerian cities.


    Image Source: Unsplash (Actual subject is anonymous)

    Dinma* (27)  met her husband Nnamdi* (34) for the first time a few days before their court wedding in 2021. In this article, she tells us about Nnamdi asking her to marry him four months after they started talking, planning their wedding together online and how they manage the distance and time difference in their marriage now. 

    Occupation and location 

    Medical doctor living in Enugu

    Average monthly income 

    I earn ₦210k as a junior staff working at the hospital. 

    Relationship expenses

    Valentine gift: ₦50k

    Foodstuff: ₦20k

    Perfume: ₦33k

    Christmas gift: ₦50k

    How did you meet your husband? 

    In 2020, I had an online store while I was in med school. Sometime in December, I received a DM from a guy who wanted to get a wristwatch. He kept negotiating,  trying to bring the price down, and I sent him a voice note to ask him why he was pricing so much when he wasn’t even living in Nigeria. I knew this because I had checked his page. After nearly an hour of back-and-forth banter, we settled for ₦20k. 

    When I reached out to him the following day to ask for his delivery details, he told me to take the watch as my Christmas gift. We spoke briefly, and he asked some questions about me and what I did. 

    From there to love? 

    Oh no. The guy that texted me was the elder brother of the man that’d later become my husband. My husband texted the week after and said he’d gotten my handle from his brother. When I reached out to the brother, he confirmed it and said I didn’t have to continue the conversation if I wasn’t comfortable with it. But it wasn’t a big deal, so we started texting, gisting about life and making jokes — we really hit it off. 

    So you knew the brother was matchmaking you? 

    I’m an online vendor, so I try to be nice to people. It wasn’t the first time a customer had gifted me something, so I didn’t think much of it. 

    After texting for a couple of days, the trail went cold, and we didn’t talk for a week. The next time he reached out in January, it was to wish me a happy birthday. His birthday was two weeks after mine, but I forgot to text him. So he texted me again, and I felt bad for missing his birthday. After that, we decided to move to WhatsApp.

    Did that help? 

    Definitely. We started talking frequently because we enjoyed each other’s company; the time difference wasn’t even a problem because of my sleeping schedule — I picked up a habit of sleeping in the evenings and waking up at 2 a.m. in med school.  

    In the space of four months, things had gotten serious. We’d realised how much we had in common, and I’d even told my mum about him. He was sure he wanted to marry me, but I didn’t want to think of marriage until I graduated from med school. So I tried to keep things light. 

    Very valid 

    In April, he became more serious about his intention to marry me. He wanted his father to meet my parents since they lived in Awka. Although I agreed to this, I made it clear that I still needed to think about it and hadn’t committed to marrying him. After a month of thinking about it, I agreed to marry him but on one condition. 

    What was it? 

    I was going to be fresh out of med school and unemployed. I didn’t have any money to assist with the financial burden of the wedding. I needed him to understand what he was getting into, but he assured me he was sure about his decision and didn’t mind funding the wedding. 

    You didn’t mind the long distance?

    I’ve always been in long-distance relationships, so I honestly didn’t care about that. I knew he would visit, and I’d join him eventually. But in the meantime, video calls would have to do.

    Aww. How was the wedding preparation? 

    We did most of the planning over the internet, finding and vetting vendors together. My mum and sister did, the market runs. We spent about ₦6.5m on our wedding even though the initial budget was ₦4m. 

    It was an exhausting period because I was simultaneously planning for my final exams in November the whole time. My dad even called me one day to remind me I had never failed an exam before, so if I failed this, he’d know it was because of the wedding, and we’d cancel it. 

    Shame wouldn’t let me continue with the wedding if I failed because all my in-laws already called me  “doctor”. 

    LOL. Let’s thank God then 

    We had the court wedding in December 2021, a day before my induction. The traditional wedding and white wedding came three days and one week later. 

    Very interesting lineup 

    I also met my husband for the first time in November 2021.

    How did that go? 

    My mum called that day to ask me how I felt finally meeting him. If I needed her to come pick me up or if he was what I’d wanted because it wasn’t too late to call off the wedding. 

    Screaming

    I told her he was everything I had imagined and more. 

    God when. How did you guys spend time together? 

    We didn’t spend alone time together because we needed to prepare for the big day. He also had to return to Canada by January 2022, so we didn’t have much time. There’s really nothing to do in the city — just hotels, bars and lounges. So for my birthday, we went out for drinks with his friends. 

    What about gifts? 

    He’s typically not someone who buys gifts. So I usually have to tell him what I want, and he’ll send the money for me to get it. Also, his dad had passed a few days before my birthday, so it wasn’t the time for celebrations. 

    Do you buy him gifts? 

    I try to get him something whenever I’m shipping things to him. One time I bought and added snails to the foodstuff we were sending. This cost ₦20k. Another time, I got him perfume, which was ₦33k. 

    For Valentine’s in 2022, I reached out to his friend in Canada, who helped me buy a sweatshirt, a pair of shoes, jeans and a card. I selected the things I wanted via video call at the store and also sent him the message to be written on the card. Everything cost a little over ₦50k. And for Christmas last year, I made him an engraved cufflink with his name and a customised Igbo traditional fan; they cost around ₦50k. 

    So you never go on dates? 

    Not really. Whenever he’s around in December, he’s always trying to visit everyone, so we spend most of our time with others. Out of 10 dates, only two would be solo, and I’d always ask for us to stay indoors, eat and just gist because I don’t like being outside. 

    Fair enough. Do you have conversations about money? 

    We do. We even agreed to open a joint account that he’d be funding mostly till I got a better-paying job, but we didn’t have time to go to the bank the last time he was around. 

    He knows I earn a decent salary, and can comfortably take care of my feeding, electricity and fuel bills, he assists with the heavy bills like rent and car maintenance. So whenever he doesn’t have money or has other financial commitments, he tells me, so I can prepare to cut costs for that period.

    Wait, what car? 

    Oh, he got me a car in May 2022 because he said he wanted me to learn how to drive before joining him in Canada. 

    Oshey. Is that happening soon? 

    Very. I should be with him in less than two months now. 

    What’s your ideal financial future as a couple? 

    Billionaire onye ji cash. We’re both hustlers, so apart from our careers, we’ll have a business bringing in money — maybe an importation business.  

    Do you have a financial safety net? 

    My husband’s money is our money, and my money is my money, so even though I enjoy spending his, I’m very prudent with money. I save ₦50k every month from my salary as an emergency fund. I’ve been working at the job for a year, so I have ₦600k in the account.


    ALSO READ: What She Said: I’ve Been in a Long-Distance Marriage for 11 Years


    If you’re interested in talking about how money moves in your relationship, this is a good place to start.

  • A Long-distance Relationship in Ibadan and Lagos on a ₦30k Salary

    The topic of how young Nigerians navigate romantic relationships with their earnings is a minefield of hot takes. In our Love Currency series, we get into what relationships across income brackets look like in different Nigerian cities.


    Gomoney simplifies money for everyone. Learn more


    24-year-old Feyi* has been dating her boyfriend for six years. They met in 100 level in 2017 and survived university as a couple. In 2022, they have limited incomes, but Feyi is confident they’re set for a comfortable financial future. Read her #LoveCurrency below.

    Occupation and location

    Hairstylist in Ibadan

    Average monthly income

    ₦‎30k salary. She also sells wigs on the side, and on a really good week, makes up to ₦‎50k in sales. Monthly sales can take her total earnings up as high as ₦‎250k. But on average, it falls closer to ₦‎100k. 

    Monthly bills and recurring expenses

    Data subscriptions: ₦‎18k 

    Food: ₦30k. She gets free food from her employer but has to eat out sometimes when there are delays. 

    Transportation: ₦12k

    Miscellaneous (includes black tax, vanity purchases, self-care, etc): ₦50k

    Boyfriend allowance: Minimum of ₦15k. He’s still in uni, and she’s already working

    *No rent because her employer provides her with accommodation

    How did you meet your boyfriend?

    We met on a group chat while we were trying to gain admission into university in 2016. He was always putting mouth in everything in the group. Me, I was always like, “What’s wrong with this one sef?” He slid into my DMs one day because my profile picture was a baby — he loves babies. We started talking, and I got to know he was at Yabatech and doing an internship. He wasn’t even expecting to get admitted into OAU, but eventually, we both did. We got along really well and started dating officially when we met on campus.

    How were your finances then?

    I’d already learnt to make wigs. I’ve always been a hustler, to be honest, so I’ve always had small change in my pocket. My boyfriend earned ₦7k from the internship, but he’s also into graphic design and did freelancing gigs, although his money wasn’t as steady as mine. 

    I also made wigs, which wasn’t as popular in 2017 as it is in 2022, and earned ₦3k in profit per wig. We didn’t have much, but we lived within our means, and people thought we did. When his ₦7k came in, he’d buy foodstuff, and when you have food, nobody will know you don’t have money. I’d also cook in my hostel and take to him. 

    Ahn ahn. Campus couple

    Yes o. Six years is not beans. I’ve left him there sha. My course was four years while his is five. ASUU is just doing him anyhow.

    So you don’t live in the same city

    No. I only recently moved to Ibadan because I was tired of all the Lagos stress. Plus, my current job in Ibadan promised the same pay but with free accommodation and feeding. Even when I lived in Lagos, we only saw three times. He’s currently on an extended industrial attachment at a startup firm in Magboro due to ASUU strike. I was living in Igando and working at Ikotun. It was still a long distance. 

    How did you guys run the relationship sturvs?

    I used to work six days a week at a hair salon and have my off days on Wednesday. When I wanted to see him, I’d give my boss an excuse to move my off day to that weekend. I’d tell him I was ill or having cramps or that I needed to see my parents.

    Lying to go and see man

    LOL. It’s not easy jare. And this “seeing” takes serious planning ahead because we couldn’t just stay indoors looking at ourselves after so long, but we also don’t have much money, and my boyfriend is extremely meticulous with spending. No penny leaves his pocket without being accounted for, while I know how to spend. That’s why I think we’ll make a good husband and wife.

    Tell me about the last time you saw him

    We met in August [2022], and he paid for everything. Of course, I had my money ready, but I didn’t even touch it. I was surprised because he only really spends on necessities. But he’d been saving for the last two months and really wanted to see me, so I lied to my boss as usual. I think that one knows it’s man I want to go and see sef, but he won’t say anything.

    My boyfriend also does interior decor, and earlier, he’d painted my boss’ salon and earned ₦25k from it, after transport and feeding expenses. When my boss opened a bigger salon, my boyfriend got the contract to paint it and received ₦150k. He renewed his rent on campus and invited me to spend the weekend with him in Lagos. He booked a hotel for two nights (₦10k per night) in Ogudu. The first night, we ate at The Place (₦4k). The next night, we went to dinner and spent ₦15k. 

    He took danfo back to Ikorodu while I took Uber (₦2,500) to Igando. It was the most expensive date we’ve had. Usually, we go sightseeing and do things that don’t cost much but still helps us make memories. The Ogudu stay was our last date before I moved to Ibadan. 

    How much does your boyfriend make in a month, on average?

    About ₦70k. Added to his monthly stipend of ₦20k, he does graphic design, charges about ₦5–7k per design and can get up to five gigs in a month. He also paints rooms (₦10-15k per room) and does interior design work (upwards of ₦20k).

    What kind of conversations do you have with your boyfriend about money?

    It’s usually about the way I spend. I can’t lie. I like nice things. I like to reward myself. Sometimes, I feel like he should understand because I don’t pressure him to buy me these things. He should be happy I’m spending my own money but he keeps telling me to save more. Sometimes, I agree with him sha; I’m trying.

    How much do you save on average, per month?

    I put ₦10k in a savings app. LOL, now that I say it, I’m not proud of myself. But I’ll start saving more now that I’m in Ibadan, since I’m not spending much on transport and my employer provides free accommodation and feeding. So help me God.

    Have your spending habits ever caused problems?

    A lot of times o. In fact, it’s even the cause of our major fights. I can’t count how many pairs of heels I have, but when I see another colour or style that calls my name, I’ll want to buy. He’ll now be saying that I should’ve saved the money. I dont like when he does that. I know he’s trying to look out for me, but I should be allowed to spend my money anyhow I want. It’s not easy to make it. 

    Anyway, sometimes, when I’ve squandered my money, it’s him I fall back on. I won’t ask him o, but he’ll know his girl is broke. So he’ll have to take out of his savings or deprive himself of some things just so he can come through for me. 

    How do you guys resolve such conflicts?

    I can’t bear to fight with him, so I usually apologise and promise I won’t do it again. And then, he’ll be like, ehn, he knows I’ll still do it o, but it’s not like he’s not telling me not to buy things, but I should buy things I don’t already have. That one is not even possible. Ehn, I have wig now, but what if I want another colour? I’ve tried to hold back, and I’m still trying sha. 

    The funny thing is when I give him random gifts, he doesn’t complain. Imagine o. If I see something I know he’d like, I’d buy for him. And they’re usually expensive because how much am I earning? If I spend ₦20-30k on a man, I count it as expensive. He won’t complain; he’ll collect it. If I now spend like that on myself, problem. 

    I think the reason he doesn’t like me spending so much is because he doesn’t have plenty money himself. He’s still in university, and it’s me who normally sends him money. But I feel like when he’s done with school and starts making more money, he won’t bother me so much.

    Do you have a financial safety net?

    Yes. I saved ₦120k last year in a locked savings app I can’t access until the next two years. I’m on track to reach ₦240k this year. I’m saving to open my own hair salon, and from my research, I need at least ₦500k. ₦250k should get me a room and parlour self-con in Ife for a year. I already have most of my equipment; I just need a salon chair (₦50k), washbasin (₦30k), mirror and interior decor. The money will get me started, and as time goes on, I’ll put more things in place.

    I also have kolo for rainy days. Anytime I sell one hair, I save ₦5k from my profit. That one, I can break it if I ever get stranded.

    What’s your ideal financial future as a couple?

    One where we’re both earning enough to comfortably sustain us. My boyfriend’s handwork promises to give him a lot of money. Mine is also promising. We don’t have to be stinky rich; I just want to be able to afford as many wigs and shoes as I want and decide not to go to work and not feel guilty.

    When my boyfriend finishes school, I know he’ll build something for himself. It’s just money to start that’s the koko. If he has a day job and an interior decorating company on the side where he can even open a store to stock decor products. It looks very lucrative and I see him as a rich man in future.


    READ NEXT: What’s Dating in Port Harcourt Like, on a ₦325k Combined Monthly Income?


    If you’re interested in talking about how you manage money in your relationship, this is a good place to start. We’re willing to keep your identity anonymous.

  • Love Life: It Took Us 7 Years to Have Our First Child

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.

    Ighodalo* (61) and Esohe (59) met at the burial of Ambrose Alli in 1988. After refusing to date him because he drank and smoked, they moved to navigating a long-distance relationship with financial difficulties and fertility issues.  

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Ighodalo: We met for the first time in 1988, at the burial of the former governor of Bendel state in Ekpoma, where I worked as a tax officer. 

    While at the burial to pay respects and be a part of history, I saw her. This woman was slim around the waistline with a big bumbum. Very fine shape. When I struck up a conversation with her, she found a way to bring everything back to God. I told her I wanted to date her. She refused, but we still kept in touch. 

    Esohe: It’s not that I didn’t find him interesting. He’s soft-spoken and tall, which is something I’ve always liked, but I wasn’t interested in a relationship then. I was too focused on school, family and God. 

    The next time I saw him was a couple of days later. I was looking for my school ID card so I went to his office to ask if I maybe left it with him. I didn’t, but it was nice to see him again. 

    Did you find the card?

    Esohe: Yes. On a bus.

    And did you see each other again? 

    Ighodalo: Yes, I found out where she lived. 

    Esohe: He was trailing me. 

    Ighodalo: At my office, we had a driver who took us around. She told me about the family she stayed with while she was in school, and I realised I went to school with some of her family members. The driver knew their house, and it wasn’t too far from the university, so I started visiting her once in a while. 

    Esohe: A few months after we met, I decided to start going out with him. He’s such a kindhearted and gentle man. Plus, my uncle in Benin kept talking about how I should give him a chance. The problem was he was into a lot of wicked things. He smoked, drank, slept around and was a cultist. But as we spent more time together, he willingly started to drop some of those habits. 

    Ighodalo: She was constantly preaching to me and trying to get me to change my ways. I started doing those things a lot less. She helped me see there was more to life than the things I was indulging in. 

    RELATED: Love Life: The Day We Started Dating Was the Day I Stopped Smoking

    And the rest of the relationship? 

    Esohe: Pretty smooth, actually. Well, save for when I went back to Lagos to I live with my brother and we didn’t see each other for six months. 

    In 1988, Babangida wanted to enact this economic policy called the Structural Adjustment Program (SAP), to tighten our belts while they kept having lavish events. People’s wages were brought down, and living conditions worsened, but government officials didn’t cut their own pay. Protests broke out because people were tired, and most of them were championed by university students. So, universities closed down. Mine was shut for six months.

    Ighodalo: We kept writing to each other, but letters across states took an average of a week to get delivered. By the time my letter got to her, whatever I was talking about might’ve passed. It was tough, but we encouraged each other through the letters. 

    After the riot, whenever long holidays came around, she’d go back to her house in Lagos. Sometimes, I’d go see her there, and sometimes, she’d come see me. The roads weren’t so bad, and you could travel from Lagos to Benin in 3-4 hours. 

    How long did this courtship last? 

    Ighodalo: We dated for six years.

    Esohe: We were on and off during that period because, sometimes, he’d do something to annoy me. When he did, I wouldn’t reply his letter. Eventually, his sister would beg me before I reply him. 

    Olden days ghosting. LMAO

    Esohe: But also, we thought it was wise for me to finish school, NYSC and start working before getting married. At least, that way, we’d have a stable life and could both financially contribute to the relationship. 

    Ighodalo: We lived in two different states, and I wanted to marry her before someone who lived closer could. I proposed to her at a resort with two of my friends present. She said yes, and I was so overjoyed. We got married a year later. 

    What were you doing for one year? 

    Esohe: Planning. We didn’t have a lot of money, so we didn’t want something large. In fact, we wanted to get married on a Thursday. Something low-key and intimate, but my elder brother was not having it. He asked me if I was pregnant because he didn’t understand why I’d want to get married on a Thursday. 

    In July 1994, we did the registry and traditional marriage in Ekpoma, where my father lived. It was supposed to be in June, but one of my uncle’s wives died and the burial was in June. After that, I stayed back in Ekpoma for a bit. Before I knew what was happening, my brother had started making plans for the white wedding. He’d printed the IV, secured a venue, and his wife’s mother was to cater the event. 

    Ighodalo: He did so much, so I spent my money on outfits for the wedding. I remember the shoe I bought cost ₦3,500. To put into perspective just how much I had to save for it, I was earning ₦2,800 a month. But it was worth it. The sole was made in Spain and the top was designed in Italy. I still have that shoe today.

    Esohe: We got married in August of 1994, and everything went great. It was small but very lovely. 

    Why so long between the traditional and white wedding? 

    Esohe: That’s how things were done then. People hardly did both in the same weekend. 

    Ighodalo: People could go up to a year between traditional and white weddings. 

    Esohe: After the wedding, I stayed back in Lagos, in the apartment I’d moved to while he went back to Benin to continue his job. I’d occasionally visit him, and he’d sometimes come here. During one of my visits, I saw a cultist regalia in his wardrobe. I was angry and confused because he’d told me he was no longer a cultist. 

    Ighodalo: And I wasn’t. I just never got around to getting rid of it. I’d lost interest in cultism when they started killing people.

    When we started, we had ideologies and principles, and at a time, I headed the movement to spread across academic institutions. But then, the deaths began, and I washed my hands off of it. That’s why when she asked if she could burn it, I agreed. 

    How did it feel to be married from a distance? 

    Esohe: We did long distance while we dated, so for the first year of marriage, I thought we could cope. But it was hard.

    After two years, I opened my gate one day to see him waiting for me with all his load. He told me he’d quit his job and moved Lagos. I was confused. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Broke Up Once But Still Got Married

    Ighodalo: She was earning over ₦3,000 a month, which was more than what I earned. I couldn’t ask her to quit her job and stay in Benin where she’d earn less. Especially because Lagos had more opportunities. I felt it’d be easier for me to find a job that paid well than if I’d stayed in Benin. 

    Esohe: I wish he’d discussed it with me, but there was nothing I could do at that point. I opened the door for him, and we started a new phase of our life together.

    Did he get a new job? 

    Esohe: It actually took a while before he could. He tried his hands at various businesses, but hardly anything concrete came out of it. We needed to take care of ourselves and my salary wasn’t enough, so I started selling ankara, ties, shirts and all, just to make up for it. I was a secretary in a finance company, so I sold these things to my coworkers. My husband would help me market my business to some of his rich friends too. That’s how we were able to hold body. 

    We had this small white bucket in our room where we kept all the money we made. Whenever anyone needed money to go out or do anything, we’d just take from the bucket. There was a lot of transparency when it came to handling our finances. 

    Ighodalo: I didn’t like how we lived, and it frustrated me, but she was always so reassuring. Whenever one person struggled, the other picked it up. 

    Can’t imagine how stressful that must’ve been. Were there kids involved at this time?

    Esohe: No. We didn’t have our first and only child till after seven years of marriage. We never wanted a large family. My mum had nine children, and his had eight. We knew what large families were like, so we weren’t interested. 

    Ighodalo: I was content with my wife and our apartment in Lagos, but she? She was worried. 

    Esohe: It’s not like his family members were mean to me. If anything, it was my own family that made weird comments. I remember one of my elder sisters came to Lagos and refused to visit me. When I asked why, she said she doesn’t visit women without children. It hurt, but what could I do except pray and cry?

    Ighodalo: That was a very trying period for us, and she cried a lot. It broke my heart to see her this way, especially because she’s too kind. She always puts others above herself, and they took it as an opportunity to disrespect her. It made me angry. 

    What did you do about it?

    Esohe: In 1997, we had a neighbour who always came to our house to collect oil, salt and other things. One day, she came as usual, and after I gave her the oil, she told me she doesn’t think I want children. That didn’t I read the way Hannah in the Bible cried to God? That I should beg God like that. 

    When she left, I started crying. He was in the room and knew our neighbour had come, but he didn’t know what she said to me. I refused to tell him so he wore his shoes and told me he was going to her house. She must explain to him what she said to make his wife cry. 

    I didn’t want a scene so I told him, and he forbade her from stepping foot in the house again. He always had my back and refused to let people use childbirth to stress me. 

    That’s so sweet. How did pregnancy eventually go?

    Esohe: It was funny and a bit scary. Funny because he fussed a lot. I started living with my elder brother after the first trimester because I almost had a miscarriage in my third month. There were some things the doctor recommended I eat, and my sister-in-law was very happy to make them. 

    Ighodalo: The fifth month of her pregnancy, I came to carry her from their house. I wanted to be involved in the process of raising my child, even while it was still in the womb. I grew up in Edo state. Amala is not something we eat regularly, so my mother never taught me how to make it. But I learnt how to make Amala the way my wife liked it.

    Esohe: I know I got on his nerves a lot while I was pregnant. In my eighth month, I wanted to buy clothes for the naming ceremony. I went with a friend of mine to Lagos Island, but I had told my husband I was in Yaba. If he knew I was going to Lagos Island, he wouldn’t have let me. 

    As we got to the bus stop closest to my house, on our way back from the market, my legs stopped working. I don’t even remember how I got home, but they dropped me off for my husband. 

    Ighodalo: I asked her what happened and she started crying. I just boiled water to help her massage her legs. She doesn’t listen. 

    LMAO. Y’all are so cute. And the baby? 

    Esohe: She took me almost a full day to deliver. I wanted a natural birth, but I had a fibroid operation two years prior that led to keloid growth. 

    Ighodalo: I wanted to be with her while she delivered, but when they mentioned surgery, I started crying. The doctor sent me out of the room. 

    Esohe: My husband might seem intimidating physically, but he’s an emotional baby. Anything makes him cry. When our daughter was going to boarding school, this man couldn’t follow us to drop her off because he kept crying. She was even the one consoling him. 

    Ighodalo: I’m sensitive. Plus, the women in my life are much stronger than I am. 

    Esohe: Eh hen, back to the birth. Once he signed the documents for the surgery, I was out in under an hour. 

    Ighodalo: I was so happy when I held our daughter in my arms. When I left the hospital to get some things, I was telling everyone on the road that my wife just had a baby. 

    What was marriage like after the child?

    Esohe: I won’t say it was difficult, but it certainly wasn’t easy. He’d started a transportation business, and it was doing okay. I had quit my job, so I became a full-time entrepreneur. We struggled, but we had each other. 

    Ighodalo: Eventually, in 2011, I got a paid job and that made everything so much easier. My salary was expected income and we planned around it. Anything extra we made was for wants. 

    Esohe: It was from his salary we’d get feeding money, school fees and rent. The other not-so-important things came from our businesses. 

    Now, we’re in a better place financially than when we started. And I’m grateful that as things got better, he prioritised my ease and comfort. He bought me a car I liked, buys me expensive clothes and anything my heart desires. 

    Ighodalo: I made a promise to take care of her, and I’m happy I can finally do it the way I’d like. I don’t want my wife or daughter to ever lack anything. 

    Esohe: The only problem is with this new job, we’ve not lived together for up to a year. He only comes during the weekends and calls every day. I can’t wait for him to retire. 

    Ighodalo: Technology is really amazing because I get to talk to my wife every day even though we’re not physically together. My daughter even taught us how to do video calls, and we try when the network allows it. We even take selfies. 

    You people are too cute, please. Are there things your partner does you don’t like?

    Esohe: When he got this job, he had to deal with people he shouted at a lot. Sometimes, he’d bring that spirit home. My daughter cleared him, but I was calmer about it. I told him I didn’t appreciate his tone, and he corrected himself. He’d shout sometimes because he’s so organised and time conscious, but I’m not really like that. 

    Ighodalo: She’s too kind. She constantly does things that cause her stress, but she doesn’t mind. As long as whoever she’s helping is happy, she’d break one of her legs. I keep begging her to be a bit more selfish. Also, she doesn’t like the cold. I do. Right now, she’s made me put off the fan because she’s cold. 

    Esohe: But the weather is cold, why do you need the fan on? It’s because he wants to freeze me and keep me in his house. That’s why my room doesn’t have an AC. So he won’t kill me. 

    LMAO. How’d you rate your love life on a scale of 1-10?

    Ighodalo: 9.5. Nothing is perfect, but she’s as close to perfect as I can get. If I could come to this life again, I’d marry her without thinking twice. 

    Esohe: A 9.5 here too. I’m grateful I married someone so kind and sweet to me. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Didn’t Need Phones, We Had Love

  • 9 Virtual Date Ideas to Keep Up With Your Long Distance Friends

    As we get older, it becomes more difficult to stay connected to friends that live far away. But it’s even harder to make new friends as adults because they’ll never know you like those crazy secondary school and university friends. So here are nine virtual date ideas to try with the friends you miss.

    Relationship card games

    It’s easy for long-distance friends to fizzle into the monotonous pool of “hello,” “hi” — or the most annoying recurring question, “how was your night?” And that’s how you become strangers. Set up a video call and play card games like Zikoko Ships to get you to ask meaningful questions that bring out real gist.

    Cook together

    Friends that eat together stay together. How about setting up a video call next Sunday to try out fun recipes or make crazy cocktails Chopist? Rumour has it that we know how to get you drunk on honey

    Lunch dates

    If cooking is the ghetto, there’s still a way to live out your foodie dreams with your bestie. Pick a cafe in your city, order something cheap if the Nigerian economy is stressing you and have a video call where you play card games. 

    RELATED: 5 Nigerian Men Talk About the Best Dates They’ve Been On

    Buy a pet goat

    Name him Astor like our little pet goat and watch it grow together, like your friendship.

    Take virtual tours together

    If your friend is abroad, there’s so much to explore in a new country. I’d suggest a cute museum tour or a walk around the park because that’s the closest thing to fresh air you’ll collect if you’re the one in Nigeria. Get on a video call and bring your friend into your experience.

    iMessage games

    Dear Android users, no vex. iMessage games are one of the most low-budget options if you can’t afford to do any other thing on this list. It’s cute to get a notification when the other person has made their move from a thousand miles away. Or try out these iMessage games alternatives for android.

    Read books together

    There’s nothing as amazing as buying a hardback book. It gives “I get money” vibes because they’re usually more expensive, but the virtual reading dates are also a way to start a mini-book collection with your best friends. Imagine giving that to your kids when they’re older. 

    RELATED: These 7 African Books Need to Be Adapted Into Film ASAP

    Movies and chill

    Zoom and Facetime are your real besties when you’re trying to stay connected to old friends. And sharing a movie works when you don’t really want to talk or have anything to say. Just pick a movie to watch maybe every last Friday of the month and unwind with a glass of wine.

    Write letters to each other

    If your long-distance friends are women, we have a cute corner called Letters #ToHER where you can send each other letters to read every Sunday at 2 p.m. 

    We’ve got the date ideas covered, but for things to last, you need to read these: How to Maintain a Long-distance Friendship

  • How to Survive a Long Distance Relationship as a Nigerian Man

    With all the rain that has been falling recently, I’m genuinely shocked people are still considering long distance relationships. Tunde, in this cold? Is your body not doing you like the rest of us? 

    For those of you stubborn men who want to date across state lines, here are a few tips from a former long distance relationship expert on how to make it work. 

    Have money

    Sir, this one is very very important. You need money to surprise bae once in a while with either your presence or lunch from their favourite restaurant. You also need money for airtime and internet because your phone is about to become your second partner. Do you think all of this will work if you’re wallowing in poverty? Go back to the drawing board. 

    Invest in firewood

    “Body no be firewood”, so maybe it’s time for you to buy a lot of actual firewood to keep yourself warm in the absence of your lover. 

    Attend every night virgil and revival in your area

    Prayer is the key to everything — including a healthy long distance relationship. To protect what you love, my brother, you need to be prayerful. That speaking in tongues? Master it. That anointing oil?  Buy it in bulk. Fight for your relationship in the spirit realm to make sure it lasts in the physical. Amen?  

    Read the news every day to prepare yourself for disappointment 

    To survive a long distance relationship, you need to understand that your relationship can end at any time. You need to catch up on Nigerian news daily, to practice how to handle the disappointment that is surely coming your way. 

    Small cheating here and there is not that bad

    We are not saying cheat all the way, but a little bit of hanky panky on the low to sustain morale is not bad. By the way, who knows what your partner is doing where they’re staying? Just make sure you know how to cover your tracks. 

    You need to learn how to lie like a Nigerian politician 

    It’s just a coincidence that this point comes right after cheating. It’s not planned. But, yes, you need to adorn yourself with the cloak of lies to make sure your relationship lasts. The truth may set you free, but it can also pour sand in your relationship garri. But if Nigerian politicians can get away with barefaced lying every day, why do you feel someone will catch you? 

    RECOMMENDED: All The Reasons Long Distance Relationships Are Amazing

    Learn how to enter your partner’s dreams

    Out of sight, out of mind. So if you want to constantly be in their sight and mind, you have to be the main character in their dreams. Simple maths. 

    Be prepared to ask, “What are you wearing?” 1,000 times in a month 

    Nine times out of ten, “What are you wearing?” is the question that will save your sex life in a long distance relationship. Don’t say I didn’t do anything for you. 

    Pluck out your eyes to avoid temptation 

    How will anyone seduce you when you can’t even see them? Your partner will understand that you did it for them, and love you regardless. 

    Be prepared to answer, “Where are you?” 1,000 times in a week 

    At some point in your relationship, “Where are you?” will replace “How are you?” and you need to make peace with that. This question is even worse when you’re with someone who doesn’t trust you. If you want your relationship to work, you need to become Google Maps that can tell exact locations in seconds. Good luck!

    Buy sim cards from every network 

    If there’s one thing Nigerian network providers will do, it’s disgrace you. You need to have a lot of backup SIM cards in case your network is not glowing with pride or  following you everywhere you go. 

    Know that heartbreak can come at any time (and prepare for it) 

    Some people can spot the red flags as soon as they start to pop up —  reduced banter, avoiding calls, airing, etc, but for those that need relationship glasses, just prepare yourself for heartbreak in advance so you won’t be shocked when they say, “We need to talk.”

    Avoid long distance relationships and know peace 

    Omo, a long distance relationship in the same city is dangerous, but you want to date someone in another city or state? You clearly like pain because it’ll end in hot tears. 

    ALSO READ: 7 Romantic Ideas For People In Long-Distance Relationships

  • Love Life: We Started Dating A Year After We Met

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.

    Imeh, 25, and Damola, 26, have been dating for two years. This week on Love Life, they talk about meeting on a dating app, spending over a year in a long-distance relationship before moving in together. 

    What’s your earliest memory of each other? 

    Damola: In 2020, we met on a dating app for lesbians called HER. I was excited to find a lesbian from Nigeria, a unicorn to me at the time. Once we connected, we started talking nonstop. 

    Imeh: I was supposed to be studying. In fact, I was sitting in the library, swiping through the app, when I came across your profile. Then, I just sat there texting Damola. She lived in Orlando and I lived in Saint Louis, but it didn’t matter at the time. 

    Damola: Until we stopped talking. I ghosted after a while because I wasn’t in the right place for a relationship. I was still hurt from being dumped by my ex, and I felt like I couldn’t put my shit on a girl in med school.  

    As months passed, I regained my confidence and began to develop my mental health. But I was too ashamed to reach out to her. I didn’t even know what to say. 

    How did you two reconnect?

    Imeh: In 2021, I finally reached out to her. I wanted to see how she was doing with COVID and everything. I sent her a text message and hoped she’d reply. 

    Damola: When I got her text, I was surprised. I almost crashed my car. One of her messages was something along the lines of “How is your mental health?” I’d never felt more seen than in that moment and I will forever be grateful for it. I responded to her and it was so easy to get back to talking every minute. 

    What did you two talk about? 

    Imeh: Any and everything. 

    Damola: For one, I told her how much I’d worked on myself since my previous relationships. I wanted to be with someone who understood that I didn’t want to come out to my family. 

    Imeh: Yeah. We used our talking stage to understand each other on a deeper level and that gave our relationship a solid foundation. 

    How did the relationship start?

    Imeh: I asked her on a date to get drinks. She said no one had offered to buy her a drink before, and I told her we’d go out after the pandemic. 

    Damola: We started dating when you came to Orlando. I was supposed to go to Saint Louis but we changed plans because of work.  

    Seeing Imeh for the first time was amazing. We waited at Papa John’s around midnight to get pizza. Imeh’s hand brushed over mine, and I felt electricity rush through my body. In fact, that week was incredible. 

    Imeh: It was supposed to be three days, but the weather was horrible — it had snowed to about ten inches off the ground. I couldn’t travel so I postponed my trip. First of all, it was really sweet that Damola brought me flowers at the airport. 

    Damola: I thought it’d be awkward to meet her after only ever talking online, but Imeh and I clicked immediately. I felt so comfortable in her home, like she’d been living with me forever. 

    Imeh: It was like a vacation. We stayed in your apartment, talking and watching movies. 

    Then, we went to the lake and got on a swan boat ride even though I was terrified as hell because Damola can’t swim. We did a bunch of other things together, and by the time it ended, we were a couple. 

    Nice! What’s the relationship like so far? 

    Imeh: Initially, it was difficult because we were a long-distance couple. Damola was shuffling between Orlando and Saint Louis every other week and that was expensive. I later gained admission into medical school and moved to Wisconsin. She was in my apartment all the time but I didn’t like the amount of money she had to spend to see me. 

    Damola: Since I was planning to do my master’s. I got admission to a school in Wisconsin, and we were like, why don’t we just move in together? I moved in with Imeh after one year of dating.  

    What’s that been like? 

    Imeh: So far, it’s been great. I think the biggest thing for us is transparency and talking about our emotions. It’s been difficult for me because I’d never been this vulnerable in a relationship before. But it helps us communicate with each other better.  

    Damola: Moving to Wisconsin was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made. Before then, I was always worried about how she was coping with medical school while I was away. And as Imeh said, we’re both learning to communicate emotions. I don’t like stressing her so if I can do it on my own, I just do it. 

    If Imeh is uncomfortable with something I’ve done, she tells me and vice versa. We don’t do the whole “don’t go to sleep angry” thing because we don’t even wait till that point. We try to deal with it as soon as it arises, and that’s good for us. I would say that our communication is top-notch. 

    Imeh: I agree. I appreciate how we can both handle things like mature adults.  

    Damola: I had to work on that and my mental health. I wanted to do better in this relationship than my last one. 

    Sweet! I’m curious about your biggest fight. What was it about? 

    Damola: My conspiracy theories. I don’t believe them but I love them. Recently, I went on Twitter and some people were talking COVID theories. I was so fascinated by it I went to tell Imeh. 

    Imeh: Being a medical student, I was like, “how is she reading this on Twitter? There’s research that proves the theory is impossible.” I didn’t understand how you could ever think that way. That’s how an argument ended up happening. We went back and forth for a while. 

    Damola: I was like, “I know you’re smart but I’m a Yoruba woman — I don’t want your research papers right now. I want you to confirm my conspiracy theories or not.”  I was seeking comfort and Imeh was using logic to approach the situation. Things got heated up but eventually fizzled out and we talked at length about it. 

    What attracts you both to each other? 

    Imeh: Damola is extremely charismatic. She can talk to anyone anywhere and make friends with them. My friends love her more than me because of this. 

    Damola: For me, it’s her intelligence. Imeh is wicked smart, and I’m so attracted to that. She grounds us and that’s an amazing trait. She’s also very beautiful. 

    Aww. Rate this relationship on a scale of one to ten 

    Damola: 9.9 and that’s because Imeh always makes me wear a seatbelt in the back seat. Other than that, our relationship is perfect. 

    Imeh: LOL. I won’t back down about safety. For me, Damola is definitely my soul mate. We bring out the best version of ourselves when we’re together. So I give us a solid 10. 

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill this form.

  • Love Life: Therapy Helps Us Be Better for Each Other

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.

    Salem, 26, and Precious, 26, have been dating for three years. This week on Love Life, they talk about meeting on Instagram, starting a long distance relationship and couple’s therapy.

    What’s your earliest memory of each other? 

    Precious: In January 2019, while I was still in the UK, my friend shared this video of a boy in a monochrome fit. I clicked on it to hear what he had to say because he looked cute. He talked about creating content. His voice was so smooth. I caught myself smiling and I was like, “Why am I blushing? Do I even know this boy from anywhere?” When I shared his video, he DMed me to say thank you and that’s how we started talking. 

    Salem: When I sent her the DM, I went through her profile and saw that she grew up in Abuja. Abuja is really small so I was surprised we’d never met, and I told her this. She said she felt like she should know me but she’d been to ten different schools. I had never met someone who had been to that many schools. I wanted to hear all about it. She said the gist would be sweeter on WhatsApp.

    Precious: I was using scope to collect his number. On WhatsApp, our gist started at 7 a.m. and lasted till 4 a.m. the next day. We talked about school, work and everything in between. We’re both from the north so we had similar childhood experiences. We bonded over how we grew up. We also talked about music.

    It felt like two old friends catching up. I found out that he was attending the same church I attended when I was in Nigeria. This meant we had a lot of mutual friends. At the end of the discussion, I said, “We’re going to be good friends.” I knew that I already liked him but I feared that I’d come on too strong so I just used the word “friends”. For me, it was love at first conversation. 

    Sweet. How did you two go from talking to dating? 

    Precious: We continued to talk everyday after that. I told him about my health. I’m a sickle cell patient and dating has been quite a journey for me because of this. When I told Salem about it, he said he wasn’t going to tell me he’ll be my ride or die because that’d be a lie, but he’d learn as much as possible about the disease. That melted my heart. 

    Salem: One day, she tweeted that the person she used to send memes and tweets to had a girlfriend now so she was looking for a replacement. I sent a DM asking what the position involved? 

    Precious: I told him there were some things I couldn’t laugh at publicly so I needed someone to send them to. He said he was down for the job. Some days later, he told me he liked me, and I told him I liked him back. It wasn’t too long after that he asked me to be his girlfriend. Our talking stage lasted all of two weeks. 

    How did you ask her out, Salem? 

    Salem: We were texting one day, and she said, “I’m not sure I can wait for seven months before I see you to be able to date you.” I told her I didn’t plan on waiting that long. 

    Precious: Then he called my full government name, “Precious Shekwonaknigami Gaza”, will you be my girlfriend? I loved how intentional he was even though he wasn’t right in front of me.  Of course, I said yes. 

    Salem: I said we needed a relationship plan since we were about to become a long distance couple. 

    Precious: I was supposed to come back to Nigeria, but for some reason, my trip got cancelled so I was stuck in the UK for seven months before we met. 

    Tell me about your relationship

    Salem: As soon as we started dating, we set our ground rules. We asked each other for dos and don’ts and set boundaries. It was clear to me that she knew what she wanted, which is something I had not experienced before. Some of the women I’d met would want me to read their minds. Precious was explicit about how she likes to be loved. 

    Precious: Yup, and so far, loving him has been an interesting journey. In September 2019, I came back to Nigeria, and Salem and I met. We couldn’t keep our hands off each other. I stayed two months before returning to the UK, and we resumed our long distance relationship. 

    Salem: She came back in 2020 for NYSC and we’ve been living in the same city since then. 

    What’s that been like? 

    Salem: It was almost like we were starting our relationship afresh. There was a lot I didn’t know about how she functioned in person because most of our interaction was on FaceTime. We had to learn each other’s lifestyle and we had a lot of fights while we were at it. 

    Precious: For example, he likes his space and I like to invade his space. Another thing is I love to go out to eat but Salem is a homebody. Whenever I say, “Let’s go to a restaurant”, in his mind, we’re going to pick up and go back home, while I’m thinking we should sit and eat. This could lead to a mini squabble. 

    Salem: Honestly, things changed when she came back. I thought she was like me because when she was in the UK, she used to cook a lot but maybe it was sapa. 

    Precious: LOL. The weather is cold — where am I going to? Plus, all your money will finish so I was being economical in the UK. But now, I’ve come back to Nigeria with my pounds, is it not time to enjoy? 

    LOL. I’m curious about how you people navigated the changes? 

    Salem: We’re still navigating it. We compromise a lot. We’ll go out and I’ll stay longer than I want because of her, and sometimes, she’ll stay at home because of me. So far, we’re doing good. 

    Another thing that has caused fight for us is my relocating to Lagos. 

    Ehn?

    Salem: I moved to Lagos for work. When I first had the conversation with Precious, it caused serious wahala.

    Precious: I was crying as if they beat me.

    Salem: To her, it’s like I wanted to leave her. I had to tell her it’s not about her. I love you and I want a bright future for us. It was hard to convince her but eventually she came around. One random day, she sent me a message saying, “Sorry, I wasn’t supportive when you needed me. Now, I see the big picture, I get it.” 

    We take turns to visit each other in our different cities. 

    Sweet. Can you tell me about the biggest fight you’ve ever had?

    Precious: One time, I fell sick and I wasn’t on my best behaviour. The truth is whenever I’m sick, my good morals go out the window because I get frustrated. Salem was doing all he could to make me comfortable, but I was snapping at him. 

    Salem: I got really mad about it. 

    Precious: My logic was that I was sick so I should be allowed to be irritable. I expected him to have some grace for me. 

    Salem: I wasn’t having it. I told her the least she could do was not snap at me. We talked it out and she apologised. Then, we decided to go to therapy. 

    Ou. Tell me about therapy 

    Precious: We’ve had four sessions so far and I think couple’s therapy should be normalised. 

    Our therapist looks at things from both our perspectives and finds a middle ground for us to agree on. It’s such an intimate experience having your flaws listed but it allows me accept that I messed up. It shows me how I can fix up. 

    Salem: She asks a lot of questions that help us reach a conclusion we know for a fact we wouldn’t have been able to by ourselves. She points out the ways in which we’re ask each other for too much, and we try to work on those aspects. 

    Precious: Yes, therapy helped me see the ways my blood disorder affects our relationship. 

    Can you tell me about that? 

    Precious: First of all, he’s an amazing caretaker. He went from not knowing anything about sickle cell to becoming one of my primary caretakers. I can’t imagine what it’s like for him to have the person he loves in constant pain. 

    Salem: But it’s been tough. When she was still in the UK, offering support via FaceTime was easier. With her in Nigeria, it became a different ball game. Nothing could’ve prepared me for what I’ve experienced as a caregiver. I never had to spend nights at the hospital until we started dating. 

    One time, she was really sick and needed oxygen so she was rushed to the hospital. I had only seen stuff like that in movies, and then, the first time I was seeing it in real life, it was my partner. It was stunning but I’m learning to live with it. 

    Precious: I, on the other hand, have learnt to not downplay caregiving. 

    Nice. What attracts you to each other? 

    Precious: I love that he speaks really well. I love that he is dark-skinned and tall. He also has a nice smile that I adore. 

    Another thing that attracted me to him is his lack of toxic masculinity. He’s confident in his sexuality so he’s not afraid to be emotional and vulnerable with me. It’s something I really appreciate. He’s also very flexible and always ready to learn. 

    Salem: I love that Precious is tenacious and strong. One of my favourite things about her is that she lives like everyday is the best day of her life, as if she’s not an adult with responsibilities and stuff. I always like to say I’m in her life just to be here for her so she doesn’t float into space out of joy and spontaneity, while she’s in my life so I don’t stay on the ground forever. 

    I also love that she’s ambitious. I work hard but I’m not trying to be Bill Gates, but Precious is actually trying to be president of the world. She goes hard at everything she decides to do and I’m a huge fan. 

    Rate this relationship on a scale of one to ten.

    Precious: 11 for me. I found my best friend and soulmate in one person. Apart from the romance in our relationship, there’s also a very solid friendship, and I love that about us. 

    Salem: 11 for me too because I can’t imagine life with anybody else. 

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill this form.

  • Love Life: She Fits Me Like a Glove

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.


    Jola, 25, and Oyin, 26, have been dating for a year. Today on Love Life, they talk about meeting on Twitter, becoming friends and talking for nine months before starting a relationship where they still haven’t had a fight. 

    What’s your earliest memory of each other? 

    Jola: I don’t remember how we ended up on each other’s timelines, but we used to interact in 2020. 

    Oyin: I took a social media break around that time. When I returned in May, it was her birthday so I slid into her DM to wish her a happy birthday. 

    After that, we started exchanging DMs. We didn’t talk about anything in particular — I’m a friendly person, and I found her interesting to talk to. 

    Some weeks later, someone made a tweet saying, “Send your man money for lunch.” I tagged her on the tweet as a joke and this babe actually sent me money. I told her I had to propose to her even though I didn’t have a ring. She laughed about it and we fell into an endless conversation. 

    That led you two to start dating? 

    Oyin: Nopes. I had just gotten out of a relationship in April 2020 and wasn’t ready to start dating again. My head wasn’t in that zone at all, but I liked talking to Jola. I made this clear to her and she was fine with it. 

    Jola: As for me, I already knew that I wanted to marry him. When he told me that he didn’t want to be in a relationship. I didn’t mind as long I got to talk to him. 

    We got quite close — we’d talk to each other every day until we slept off, exchange voice notes and call each other frequently. He’s a funny guy and we crack each other up, so I really enjoyed talking to him. In January I got a job in Lagos, so we promised each other we’d always make time to see on Tuesdays. He lives about 20 minutes away from me. 

    Interesting. And you two were not dating yet? 

    Oyin: Nopes, but I’d realised I was in love with her. I don’t remember the exact moment, but I found myself thinking over and over, “I really like talking to this person.”

    Jola: After nine months. . .

    Oyin: LOL. I got tired of the streets and she was the only one I wanted to be with, so I asked her out.

    Tell me how he asked you out. 

    Jola: One Tuesday in March 2021, I went to his house as usual. At the door, he told me not to take off my wig because he made a video and he wanted to record my reaction to it. I agreed. When the song, Unthinkable came on, I became suspicious because it’s a song we both like. The video was an animated play on the lyrics of the song. When the part, “I was wondering maybe,” came up, Oyin popped the question, asking if I’d like to be his girlfriend. I love that he took his time to plan the whole thing. Of course, I said yes. 

    That’s so cute. You two had been talking for nine months before you started dating. Did anything change when the relationship started?

    Oyin: Nothing really. Our friendship continued and we remain guys till today. The only thing that changed is that Jola left me in this country. I mean I knew she was going to move, but it wasn’t a big deal when we weren’t a couple. 

    Jola: Yeah. To manage the distance, we text all the time and video call as often as we can. Aside from that, everything else is perfect. We feel like we’re married to each other. 

    How so? 

    Oyin: We’re each other’s person and invest a lot into each other’s growth. We function as a unit — anything one person does makes room for the other person. I never feel alone. I know I have a dependable partner. Because of that, the relationship has been easy. I know people say relationships require a lot of work, but Jola makes it easy to be with her. 

    Jola: Yes. Oyin is the definition of sweetness. That’s how he’s been from the first time we spoke. I like that he’s always there, like my voice of reasoning. 

    Oyin: Voice of reason, babe. 

    Jola: You see, he’s also my English teacher. Being with him has been the best thing ever. In past relationships, conversations scared me because of how they could turn out, but with Oyin, that changed. When something comes up, we sit and discuss it like friends. 

    Do you know we’ve never fought? 

    For real?  

    Jola: Yup and I used to think it was abnormal, but now, I don’t think I have to suffer to show that our relationship is valid. It’s already bad enough that I’m Nigerian and the government is steady giving me gbas gbos. I cannot carry it inside relationship again abeg. 

    I feel you. 

    Jola: Oyin is my safe haven, and I’m very comfortable in it. He pushes me to be the best version of myself. Forget love oh, I really like him as a person. We’ve been through some changes together, yet our love for each other remains. 

    Tell me about those changes. 

    Oyin: When we became friends, she was a master’s student in France taking her courses online because of the pandemic. Now, she works in the UK as an account executive. I got a better job. I love that we push each other to do better. We’re always trying to do more for the other person. 

    So for real, no fights, ever? 

    Oyin: Maybe in the future, we’ll fight. 

    Jola: Please, let’s not foresee something we’ve not done. We currently argue about things, but it always ends in either a compromise or one of us doing whatever they want. 

    Does that work?

    Oyin: Yes, that’s the way we handle things. It also helps that we’re both open-minded so when we talk about things, we try to see it from the other person’s point of view. 

    That makes sense. What’s one thing that attracts you both to each other? 

    Jola: He’s very sweet. This is a quality I wanted in a partner before I met him. Oyin is sweet not just to me but to those around him. Even his friends say he’s a really kind person — he writes them these letters which I think are very cute. 

    Oyin: She’s also a sweet and kind person. I believe Jola’s personality was made for mine. You know when you go to the market and you don’t know what you’re looking for but you know you want something. Then you find it and it fits like a glove. That’s how I feel about her. 

    Sweet. What’s the best part of the relationship? 

    Oyin: LOL. It used to be being in the same space with her, but she lives in the UK now. 

    Jola: I miss that too. There’s this level of peace and contentment I feel when I’m with you. 

    Aww. Rate this relationship on a scale of one to ten. 

    Jola: I rate it 9.9999 because we’re perfect, but as everyone says, there’s always room for improvement. 

    Oyin: It’s a 10 for me because I wouldn’t have it any other way. 

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill this form.

  • Love Life: We Didn’t Plan to Get Lost in the Sauce

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.


    Yemisi, 24*, and Kelechi, 28*, have been dating for eight months. Today on Love Life, they talk about how detty December plans got them together, being in a long-distance open relationship where both of them are bisexual and how they learnt to argue better as a couple. 

    Love life: yemisi and kelechi

    What’s the earliest memory you have of each other? 

    Yemisi: We went to the same secondary school. He was in SS 1 when I was in JSS 1. I thought he was cute, but we never had a conversation until we found each other on Twitter years later. 

    Kelechi: In 2019, someone retweeted something she tweeted. Her name looked familiar, so I went to her profile. Puberty was definitely good to her. She looked fine as hell. I followed her, and shortly after, she followed back. 

    Who sent the first DM?

    Kelechi: LOL, wait first. Around the time we became mutuals on Twitter, I had just gotten out of a four-month relationship. My ex was moving to Abuja and I didn’t want to do long-distance, so we ended things. This was in December 2019. That Christmas, I asked my followers if any of them was interested in doing detty December with me, but as friends. 

    Yemisi: I was in Canada planning to spend Christmas in Lagos when I saw his tweet. That’s how we started talking. I wanted to party in Lagos and do whore shit, so it was nice to meet someone who also wanted to go to a house party, spend time at the beach and have dates at nice restaurants. We also talked about having casual sex. I told him I’m bisexual and he was cool because he is bisexual too. Everything seemed to fall into place. 

    I looked forward to seeing him, but I ended up not coming to Lagos that Christmas. 

    Oops

    Yemisi: I didn’t know I would need a transit visa to make the trip. I was so frustrated. We stayed in touch though, but it wasn’t the same as when we had feasible plans to hang out. 

    I told him that whenever I was in Nigeria, we would still do those things

    Kelechi: And we did when she came in April 2021. 

    Y’all were in the DMs for a year plus?

    Kelechi: LOL yes. I knew she’d still come, and I wanted to meet her so I checked in from time to time. 

    Yemisi: I got my visa in April 2021. The first thing I wanted to do when I landed was to see him. We hadn’t talked for a while, but I often thought about the plans we made in 2019. When I was settled, I reached out to him. 

    Kelechi: She sent me a text saying, “Guess what?” She had arrived in Lagos. I was so excited we were finally going to see. I asked her what she was doing the next day. I was ready to lie to work that I was sick so I could spend time with her. We went on our first date in April. 

    Yemisi: He picked me up from my house and drove us to the restaurant. It was a nice, quiet place. I can’t remember what we ordered because we spent most of the evening talking. We are both funny people so we laughed a lot too. Finally meeting and spending time together felt good. Towards the end of the night, I remember feeling a lot of emotions, like butterflies in my belly, and had to ask, “What’s going on in your mind right now?” 

    Kelechi: I was overwhelmed too, to be honest. We clicked so well. I knew I wanted to see her again.

    I asked what she was doing the next day. She had a date planned, but that didn’t faze me. I didn’t mind the competition. Have you seen this woman? She hella fine. Even today, I still deal with competition. 

    After her date, I went to pick her up and we went to get Indian food. Later that evening, we went to her parents’ house and had sex. 

    Hold up—

    Yemisi: And it was really good. It was better than I imagined. After that day, we went out again the next day and that’s how we saw each other almost every day for the next three months. 

    Kelechi: See ehn, I was lost in the sauce. Again, have you seen this woman? I was falling for her hard. 

    Yemisi: LMAO, me too. In my mind, I was like, this was not the plan. I came to Lagos to do whore shit for summer and be on my way. Yet, here I was falling in love. We clicked in so many ways. One time, we went to a bar with a stripper pole and danced around it. The bar was almost empty sha, but I loved that we could do crazy stuff like that together.

    Did you tell him?

    Yemisi: Not right away. I wasn’t ready to date people exclusively and was scared of getting into a long-distance relationship. 

    Kelechi: Me I did. I told this woman that I loved her.

    Yemisi: And I kind of freaked out.

    Kelechi: She gave me ela. 

    Yemisi: LOL, I was shocked at how fast we were going. One minute I was on the streets, the next, I was in love with him. Omo, I wasn’t ready. My last relationship didn’t work out because my partner moved to a city far from mine in Canada, yet here I was considering dating someone living in Nigeria. 

    Kelechi: LOL,  I wanted to find out where her head was at. If she didn’t feel the same way, I would have severed all ties and moved on so I’d heal, but if it was something she felt too, we could figure things out. 

    Yemisi: And we did. 

    How so?

    Yemisi: We talked about how we’d make the distance work. Constant calls and texts. Also, I’d try to visit as much as I could. We also decided to leave the relationship open because we both like sex very much and the distance would make it hard to cope.

    Kelechi: I was ready if she was ready. 

    Yemisi: After a few conversations, I decided I was ready. 

    What does being ready look like? 

    Kelechi:  Essentially, we’re in a long-distance open relationship. This means that while we are apart, we have sex with people we’re attracted to but don’t maintain emotional connections with them. 

    Yemisi: And we only get with people who understand we’re in a committed relationship and respect it. 

    Kelechi: Also, we close the relationship whenever either of us feels too insecure to continue. We talk about it until we get to a place of trust again before opening it again.  

    Love life: yemisi and kelechi

    Interesting. How has the relationship been?

    Yemisi: So far, it’s caused me to become more self-reflective. In the beginning, we had communication issues especially when it came to other partners. I had to deal with jealousy and talk about other hard stuff with him. 

    Kelechi: Yup. Being in an open relationship requires a painful amount of honesty. You have to communicate everything to your partner. That’s the only way to sustain the relationship. In the beginning, we struggled with that, but we’re a lot better now. 

    Yemisi: We’re so good at talking to each other and finding perspectives that work for us. We are also very understanding of each other. 

    Kelechi: Yes, I have a good example. In December 2021, she was in Nigeria and we went to a club together where we ran into a guy I had a crush on. He saw me walking towards him with her. When I got close enough to talk to him, he rubbed my chest and kissed me. I pulled away and he said, “Kiss me or don’t talk to me again”. I wanted to kiss him, but I had to respect Yemisi’s presence. I was offended that he didn’t respect my relationship. He just wanted to prove to himself that I was attracted to him. 

    Things are happening on the streets. 

    Yemisi: LMAO. He could have just said hi. 

    Kelechi: But he chose to be silly. What stood out for me in that situation was how understanding Yemisi was. She knew it wasn’t my fault and understood I was still attracted to kiss him. That’s when I knew I had scored gold.

    Aww, what’s the best part of the relationship?

    Yemisi: I love that we are constantly trying to do things for and with each other. Whenever I’m in Lagos, I spend every bit of my time with him. We are either chilling at his house or going out at night. 

    Kelechi: It’s the same for me. Whenever she’s around, my friends don’t get to see me for weeks. I just air their Friday night “Let’s hang out” texts. Eventually, they get the message. Any time I get to spend with Yemisi is fun even if we just lie down and do nothing. 

    I call her Ulo’m, which means my home in Igbo. Home is where you are most safe, which in Igbo culture is your mum’s place. I know I can always be myself with her. I don’t have to pretend or hide parts of myself from her because she just gets me. 

    This is the happiest I’ve ever been in a relationship. There’s softness, understanding and peace. Even when we argue, it’s from a place of love. Nobody is being petty or vengeful. 

    Sweet. Has there been a time your relationship was threatened by an external party?

    Yemisi: Ah, so the last time I was in Lagos, I went out with some of my friends. Kelechi was out with his own friends as well in a different location. While we were apart, he made a tweet about being satisfied after good sex. One of his friends quoted the tweet with a joke that implied he was cheating and he LOL’ed the tweet. When I saw the tweet, I asked him about it and he said he didn’t get the guy’s comment. I kept on asking until it became an argument. I was angry because I thought he was being dishonest with me. 

    Kelechi: I was a bit angry she thought I would do something with someone without telling her. 

    Yemisi: The conversation brought out a lot of insecurities I didn’t even realise I had. I was scared he’d have a sexual relationship with someone else and not tell me about it. The argument turned into a yelling match. It was very bad, but when we calmed down, we talked about it and promised never to yell at each other again. Since then, we have argued like normal people. 

    Love that for you. What attracts you most to each other? 

    Yemisi: I love how his mind works. He is so kind, smart and sweet. He’s also very warm and friendly. I could keep going to be honest.

    Kelechi: What I’m attracted to the most is her big ass and face. She’s so beautiful Lagos men won’t leave her alone for me. I can’t leave her side for five minutes without one man trying to collect her number. It’s not anybody’s fault. The beauty is blinding. I could stare at her all day. 

    Oya, let’s test that. If someone gave you a million dollars to leave your partner, would you take it?

    Yemisi: What does leaving entail? 

    As in, all forms of contact between you two will be severed, never to resurface again? 

    Yemisi: Ah, that’s a bit harsh. What do you mean I will never see him again? No amount of money is worth losing him. I don’t want. 

    Kelechi: It’s a no for me too because money has never been a problem for me. 

    LOL. Rate your relationship on a scale of 1 – 10. 

    Kelechi: 9.5. The 0.5 is space for the possibility of things getting better. 

    Yemisi: Right now, it’s 9 because I’m not with him and I miss him so much. When we see, it’s easily a 10. 

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill this form.

  • Love Life: I Thought He’d Be a Nuisance but We’ve Been Dating For Four Years Now

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.


    Olayinka, 24, and Emma, 24, have been dating for four years. Today on Love Life, they talk about meeting in university, navigating a long-distance relationship from Ajah to Ibadan and almost breaking up over a chat.

    Love Life: Olayinka and Emma

    What is your earliest memory of each other? 

    Olayinka: I met her at church in January 2017. I was with my cousin when I saw this fine babe. Her vibe was different from other women around. She seemed confident and I loved what she was wearing. My cousin encouraged me to talk to her, and I did. I introduced myself and asked for her number. 

    Emma: I remember this boy walking up to me and saying, “Hey, my name is Olayinka. Can I know your name as well?” His shirt, trousers and glasses made him look really young. I thought he was one of those boys that’d text you sup pwyty every day. In my head I was thinking, I don’t have time for these small boys, but I answered him.



    Asking for a friend: Olayinka, how did you get her to continue answering you?


    Emma:
    Let me just tell you. He asked if I lived around. When I said yes, he told me about the school fellowship he attended and offered to give me the direction. I gave him my number. He has been calling me every day since then. 

    What did you people talk about during these calls?

    Olayinka: Our respective days. Emma is expressive and easy to talk to. I didn’t have to think hard to carry a conversation with her. We could philosophise about life or talk about school. I think that’s what made bonding with her so easy.

    I also thought she was boujee. As a child, she spent holidays in America so she could list different types of pasta and cheese while I, on the other hand, grew up in Ogun state and the only pasta I had eaten was spaghetti. I found that fascinating. I only ever heard of certain things through her. 

    Emma: I loved getting to know him. He was an interesting person to talk to. He was smart and funny. I could tell him anything and he’d have the perfect response. That’s how we talked ourselves into a relationship.

    Gist me, how did that happen? 

    Emma: Well, first, he became my best friend. I already had a boyfriend whom I was dating because he was a really smart coursemate, and I needed to pass my courses. However, I started to feel Olayinka more than my boyfriend. I didn’t say anything about it to Olayinka and six months after we met, he left for his IT in Lagos. 

    After he travelled, my phone got stolen, and we didn’t talk for about two months. We found each other again on Twitter and resumed our everyday conversations. 

    Olayinka: I missed her in those months we didn’t talk. When I found her on Twitter, I was so happy. Our conversations picked up from where they stopped. We would text all day while I was at work and then I would call her at night. 

    Emma: And then those conversations became spicy. 

    Like atarodo?

    Olayinka: LOL, yes. It started randomly. I wanted to picture her in my head, so I asked what she was wearing. 

    Emma: I told him what I was wearing and asked what he was wearing too. Soon, it became a thing we did that progressed to other things. 

    I realised that I liked having those kinds of conversations with him. They were intense and made me feel all sorts of emotions. My boyfriend, on the other hand, wasn’t giving me this kind of energy. 

    You were still with your boyfriend?


    Emma:
    Yes, he was the only person I could live with in Ibadan during the holidays.  I didn’t want to go all the way to Port-Harcourt before another session resumed, so I stayed with him till December 2017.

    Olayinka, how did you feel about that?

    Olayinka: I knew she wasn’t exactly happy in her relationship and enjoyed talking to me more. Whenever I told my friends about her, they pointed out that I really liked her, but I guess I didn’t know how to make a move. One day, after she said something that made me laugh, I thought about how much I loved talking to her and never wanted that to stop, so I blurted, “Why aren’t we dating?”
    This was a year after we met each other. 

    And…

    Emma: I said, “I don’t know. Do you want us to date?” He said we could try and I was like, “All right then. You’re my boyfriend now.” When I returned to school, I broke up with the other guy and just like that…

    You two have been dating for four years now. How has your relationship grown in that time?

    Emma: I don’t think much has changed between us. We still text and call each other as often as we did at the beginning of the relationship. Spicy conversations are still our thing. We still have the same vibe — inside jokes, nonstop laughter and teasing. But we’re graduates now.

    Olayinka: Me too. We could talk for hours about nothing in particular, and it would still be an interesting conversation. We’ve had our bad days. For example, when I graduated, she was still in school and we had to be a long-distance couple for a while. 

    What was that like?

    Olayinka: First of all, we couldn’t see each other as often as we used to. I was in Lagos and she was in Ibadan. It got so hard. 

    Emma: This happened during my final year in school. My project was kicking my ass, and I couldn’t cope. Olayinka and I weren’t talking as much because he was also busy with work. 

    Olayinka: Yeah. I called as often as I could, but calls are different from being there physically. I also had work. I would leave my house by 7 a.m. and get home by 8 p.m. By that time, I would be too tired to talk. 

    I wanted to be there for her, but I wasn’t able to comfort her the way she needed.

    So what changed?

    Emma: At the height of all of this, Olayinka called me one day and said, “Where are you? I’m outside.” The moment I saw him, things started to make sense again. 

    After that visit, travelling to see each other became a regular thing for us. I would travel from Ibadan to Ajah to see him. That helped me get through final year. When I was done, I stayed in his house for three months before going to my house in Port-Harcourt. When it was time for service, I worked it to Ibadan. 

    Olayinka: Yeah, so we’re currently living in the same city. This means we get to see each other regularly and things have been great. 

    Aww. I’m curious about your biggest fight. What was it about and how did you resolve it? 

    Emma: There was one time I suspected him of cheating. This was in 2020, during the three months I spent in his house. At 1 a.m. one night, I saw a text from a girl he used to be intimate with. I wondered why she was texting at that time, but I didn’t check the message. I waited till he had read it before looking at the conversation. She had texted that she was horny and sent a bunch of porn gifs. He was laughing with her. He didn’t tell her to stop. 

    I refused to talk to him for two days. I didn’t even know how to address it. I thought about breaking up with him. 

    Olayinka: I was worried too. Initially, I wasn’t sure what was wrong but eventually, she told me what I did. My first reaction was to be defensive. I asked why she was looking at my phone without my permission

    Emma: And I apologised for that. 

    Olayinka: Yeah, but I was also wrong. I encouraged the girl instead of shutting down the conversation. 

    Can you tell us why? 

    Olayinka: I didn’t have any reason not to. She’s someone I had been intimate with, and I didn’t think anything was wrong with the conversation. After Emma and I talked about it, I understood where I went wrong. I was so scared I’d lose her over something as silly as that chat. 

    I acknowledged that what I did was wrong and promised to be more transparent with Emma. To show accountability now, she’s allowed to check my phone whenever she wants. 

    Emma: That conversation was very heated. At some point, we even cried, but we eventually resolved it. We went to bed cuddling.

    There’s this myth that says, “The longer the relationship, the more likely a couple is to open their relationship.” Do you see that in your future? 

    Emma: LOL. Please, nobody should open any relationship o.

    LMAO. Olayinka?

    Emma: He’s not opening any relationship. 

    Olayinka: LMAO, yeah. 

    Emma: I mean I get that we have fantasies and stuff, but I’ve watched a lot of movies, and read a lot of tweets about open relationships. I don’t want any of that in my life right now. Thank you. 

    Olayinka: I’m with you on this. It’s not something I want. I’m happy to keep reinventing my relationship with Emma without having to open it. I don’t think we need any extra body to keep things spicy. 

    Emma: I am atarodo enough for the relationship. 

    LOL, I hear you. What’s one thing you find attractive about your partner? 

    Emma: It’s how he low-key looks like a girl. His hair, his nails, his piercings. Ugh I’m wet.

    Olayinka: LMAO. For me, it’s her beauty. I’m always so happy whenever I wake up next to her. I’m also attracted to her intellect. She’s a very creative person, and I enjoy the conversations we have with each other. I could keep going, but let’s save time. 

    I said one thing o. What’s the best part of the relationship? 

    Olayinka: Our general vibe. She’s someone I can tell everything, and I love how we banter. Then there is the sex

    Emma: My mother might read this, but I have to admit that the sex is fire. I like how he also knows the positions that drive me crazy. But most importantly, I like how open and comfortable we are with each other during sex. I think that’s what makes it so good.

    Aside from that, just being in this relationship with Olayinka is the best part for me. Whenever I’m sad or overwhelmed, I look at him and think, “Wow. This is one good thing that’s going well in my life.” I really appreciate that. Also, again, the sex. 

    Noted guys, noted. If somebody gave you ten million dollars today to leave this relationship, would you? 

    Emma: If I take the money, we will do facial surgery for Olayinka so nobody will know it’s him when we resume our relationship. He’d also have a different name, and we’d move to a different country. 

    Olayinka: LMAO. Ten million dollars is a lot of money, but I don’t think I would take it because I know I will eventually make that money. 

    Emma: So I’m the bad guy? Fuck you.

    Olayinka: LMAO.

  • 7 Romantic Ideas For People In Long-Distance Relationships

    Navigating long-distance relationships can be really tough and figuring out how to involve your partner in your daily activities can also be a hard nut to crack. 

    We’ve helped put together a list of romantic ideas for people in long-distance relationships.

    1. Set up movie dates.

    Set up movie dates and sleep off during the movie. That’s what you’d have done if you were watching it physically with them anyway, so why not do it virtually too? Make sure you are on a call when the movie is on so they can hear the sound of your gentle breathing and feel like you are physically present with them. 

    12 virtual date ideas for long distance couples
    Image used for descriptive purpose

    2. Make playlists for each other.

    Making a playlist for your partner is a cheesy way to keep them thinking of you. It also lets them know the kind of music you are interested in and you guys get to share songs you both like. You can listen to the playlist together and do virtual karaoke.

    Listening to Music Mindfully | Greater Good In Education
    Image used for descriptive purpose.

    3. Virtually take each other to your favourite places.

    Virtually involve your partner in your favourite things. Take them to concerts with you, to art galleries with you, even the toilet. We know this doesn’t replace orgasms, but it makes them feel close and involved and that’s also nice. 

    4. Get random gifts and have them delivered to your partner.

    A random gift can involve a new child with the person you are sleeping with within your area code. A baby is a perfect “I saw this and thought of you”, after all, you kuku call your partner baby and a physical baby will make you feel closer to them. We all know children are a gift. 

    5. Reassure them that distance isn’t an issue and remind them of how much you love them. 

    Reassure them that even though you are sleeping with not less than 10 people in your area code, they are still the 1 for you. Let them know distance won’t make you stop loving them and many other people.

    6. Buy them sex toys.

    Buying them sex toys means only one person in that relationship gets to have sex with other people and you have taken up that very hard task. How are they going to love you less when they know you are doing a lot of heavy lifting? 

    TRYST V2 Bendable Multi Erogenous Zone Massager with Remote – Bliss for  Women

    7. Do a little prostitution to raise enough money to travel to meet up with your partner.

    Emphasis on a little prostitution. The level of the prostitution must not be high enough to make you catch feelings for the person you are prostituting with, you must keep the endgame at the back of your mind. Only prostitute to raise money to meet your partner wherever they are. 

  • Love Life: “We Make It Work Despite The Distance”

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.


    Chinasa, 26, and Ugo, 30, started having sex while they were in relationships with other people. Today on Love Life, they talk about coming together only to break-up, and the ways they have grown individually and as a couple. 

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Chinasa: We met on Facebook. I wrote a post complaining about people’s reactions to erotic posts, and he came into my comments to agree with me. That was the first time I noticed him. I clicked on his profile and saw that he was in Bauchi, where I was serving. I was looking for friends then, and to find someone in the same state seemed nice. I sent him a message saying I was in Bauchi and would love to meet up whenever he had a chance. We fixed a date to meet, he cancelled. We fixed another, and that’s where this whole story begins.

    Ah, you have told me the whole thing na. Ugo, please take the stage.

    Ugo: I first saw her on Facebook. She commented on somebody’s post, something about Bauchi. I clicked her profile and saw that she was serving in Bauchi — the same state I lived in. I sent a friend request, thinking we could hang out and be friends…

    Chinasa: My dear, please add that it was my bumbum you saw.

    LMAO. When you finally met, what was your first impression of each other?

    Chinasa: I thought he looked taller in real life. Quiet too. But the most exciting thought I had was that he looked corruptible. 

    Ugo: She wears glasses, so she had this quiet appeal. I didn’t think of anything else. I was busy doing my best to avoid her eyes. It wasn’t until I moved in with her shortly after that my impression of her became clearer, better formed. 

    We’ll address that moving in soon. Chinasa, when you say Ugo looked corruptible, what did you have in mind then?

    Chinasa: I was looking for someone to be my friend with benefits. I had just moved to Bauchi where I didn’t know anyone, and I wanted to rediscover myself after a tough relationship and a traumatic incident. After four months, I knew I wanted someone. But I got scared whenever anyone came on strong. So I was kind of looking for someone who would be a friend first, and the benefits part would be at my own pace. 

    Ugo had this gentle demeanour that made me feel safe having him in my house, and I thought the gentility hid a lot more things.

    So, how did the moving in together happen, and when?

    Ugo: We started hanging out and talking to each other a lot. Then I started leaving my things in her place one by one. It was a disguise sha, because I knew I liked her at this point. But then I found out she had a boyfriend.

    Ahan. Another revelation? Let me keep this in my left hand.

    Chinasa: Well, on the very first day he came to my place, I found that he had a girlfriend and they had been together for four years. So the gentility did hide some things.

    Ahhh. What’s going on here?

    Chinasa: Let me rearrange it for you. We texted; I liked him. We met up for the first time, and I was doing something with his phone when I saw someone’s name saved as Obi’m. I asked him about it, and he told me that yes, he was indeed in a relationship. Since he had a girlfriend, I started talking to someone that same month and a week later, I started dating this person online.

    Okay then. Ojoro cancel. 

    Chinasa: First of all, he did not “find out” that I had a boyfriend. I told him myself. Also, after I found out about his relationship, I told myself that we could just stay friends and if the sex came, I was down to get it. The sex was not dependent on his girlfriend. I didn’t care about that. 

    Ugo: My relationship with my girlfriend at the time was nearing its end. Rather unfairly, I’d checked out of the relationship mentally — it was a chaotic three-year relationship and I was exhausted — but I never made this clear to my girlfriend.

    When I met Chinasa and we started vibing, I felt that deeply satisfying feeling you get when you drink a glass of chilled water after running around a football pitch for 90 minutes. She was gentle with her words and touch, the sex was fucking awesome, and she listened.

    So the sex happened after all…

    Chinasa: And then his girlfriend showed up at my door with her friends.

    Hay God.

    Chinasa: It was a Saturday, I think. Ugo was at my place when someone knocked on my door. It was weird; I didn’t know anyone who lived nearby and could come visiting. When Ugo heard her voice, he went to the door. She claimed she wanted to talk, but it seemed to me like she came ready to create a scene. Ugo led her away.

    For me, I was confused. I thought he had made it clear to her that they were done. When he came back inside, I asked him what happened, and he said that she came with her friends to beg him not to break up. She thought the talk of splitting up  was a phase he would get over. 

    Ugo: I came out straight and told my girlfriend at the time that we were done the day she came knocking on Chinasa’s door. I wanted us to become a thing, so I had to act.

    Chinasa: That incident caused my first fight with Ugo. I told him to fix whatever issue they had because I didn’t want to be accused of snatching someone’s boyfriend and getting beat up on the road for something I did not do.

    Ugo: I understood her fear. She was in a strange land, didn’t speak the local language and had very few friends who didn’t even live in the same area.

    But Chinasa and I were never officially in a relationship until towards the end of her service year. Her boyfriend was in the picture for much of it, and she too wanted things to come to a natural end with him. 

    But wait first. Chinasa, how did you feel about being in a relationship with someone else and still having sex with Ugo? 

    Chinasa: I felt nothing. My “boyfriend” and I vibed a lot, but the sex was so terrible, it couldn’t even be remedied. Because I liked him as a person, I made the mistake of not establishing strong boundaries with him. When he started referring to me as his girlfriend, I didn’t feel alarmed; there was a long-distance between Enugu where he was and Bauchi where I was.

    When I count my relationships, I don’t count him as part of it. I knew that the relationship, or whatever I was doing with this guy, was not feasible and it was a problem to be dealt with so I could face Ugo squarely.

    Ugo: And I broke up with my girlfriend so I could also face you squarely too. I chose you. I will always choose you.

    Chinasa: And I choose you too. But I will be honest, the girlfriend coming to the house made me very anxious.

    I had no idea that they didn’t officially break up. The girl was living with someone, and I assumed she had moved on before they officially broke up. So, to see her come knocking was a bit shocking. I think it’s one of the reasons my relationship with Ugo didn’t fully take off till I finished my service and left Bauchi.

    How did the take-off happen?

    Chinasa: Two days before I left, I told him I wanted him to be my boyfriend.

    Ugo: And I said yes and went to meet her in Enugu. 

    Chinasa: The Enugu meeting was a mini vacation. We spent the weekend together, and I showed him a few places. His showing up indicated that he would make the effort to make this work despite the distance.

    And you were right?

    Chinasa: Yes, he was solidly there. But between my master’s and his service, things became crazy. I started my master’s, and he was posted to Taraba for his NYSC service. He later relocated to Jos. 

    I was going through a lot of changes, and I kept him out of it because I felt he wouldn’t understand. Wrong move.

    Ugo: We had to break up. 

    I’m sorry that happened. What led to the break-up? What changes were you going through? 

    Ugo: She didn’t care about my career. I started taking my writing seriously, and I wanted her to care about it as I did. I would send her my work, and it seemed like she wasn’t reading or paying the required amount of attention to it, and I felt hurt by this. I thought I could live with the hurt, but I couldn’t. And so I called her one day and asked that we break up.

    Chinasa: Leaving Bauchi threw me out into the real world, and it was cold, discomfiting. Before Bauchi and in Bauchi, I had done a lot more growing up. One of the things that happened was that I quit the church, which was a large part of my identity, because religion didn’t work for me and there was a lot of hurt I was dealing with. 

    Also, I didn’t get a job on time after service. It felt like I was floating, and there was no landing pad of any sort. 

    And in all of this, you still had to read his work and give comments… 

    Chinasa: But it was more than that, I’ll be honest. He had a lot of free time and was expecting more attention from me. He was used to seeing me all the time and thought it would continue like that. But I was in the east, grappling with everything, and it didn’t work. Whenever he complained that I wasn’t calling or texting, I would think, “Oh please, not now. Not now. Not with everything I am going through.” 

    Master’s admission came through and it was hell too. I felt like I was floating along, not understanding anything and trying my best to stay afloat. And in all of this, we were both broke. 

    When he called for a breakup, I felt like he was the most insensitive person. You knew I was going through this much and you chose to break up? Wow. But even with the hurt, I still felt the relief of no longer having to deal with the burden.

    And you people ended up cancelling the break up.

    Chinasa: After we broke up, we started talking more. He came to Enugu too, and it was easier to explain things to him without feeling judged. I owned up to my inadequacies, and I felt more equipped to name the things I was going through, more knowledgeable about what I wanted from life and how I needed him to help. 

    It would also be nice to mention that my master’s results came in around this time and it was all A’s. Other things started falling into place.

    How’s the relationship now? Where’s your head at?

    Ugo: I feel more secure now in our love than I used to be. There’s a kind of assuredness; a feeling that whatever happens, we will both always make an effort to genuinely understand each other. We are in a good place. The relationship is sort of open, if I can call it that.

    How did it become open?

    Chinasa: I told him I wanted an open relationship when we were long distance because I didn’t want to be sneaky about being with other people. I learnt fast that I wasn’t a monogamous person, and in the spirit of being more honest with my choices, I told him. 

    The first time, he rejected the idea. The second time, it felt like he was trying to please me. When I had my mental health episodes, my sex drive nosedived, but I met someone, felt a spark and told Ugo. He agreed I could pursue it.

    That first stint didn’t end well because we didn’t have boundaries. We realised we had shit we were avoiding and being with other people wasn’t going to fix it. So we agreed to focus on fixing our issues after some time. 

    We are open again, but for me, it’s just about honesty. For over two years now, I’ve just been meh about things. I live in a remote place now and make no effort to meet people, so it’s open in the sense that we are both open if it happens. But on my side, I’m not actively looking.

    Ugo:  It’s the same for me really. If anything happens I’ll let her know, but I’m not actively looking.

    What do you love most about each other?

    Ugo: That will be her gentleness, kindness and the effort she makes to try and understand my perspective. The latter is part of the reason we’ve come this far.

    Chinasa: Ugo is kind, steady and cares for me. Using care here is deliberate. I’m not good at saying what I need, but he’s patient enough to wait till I figure it out and also make things happen before I ask.

    Ugo: My heart.

    Chinasa: Being with him has been one of the highlights of my life. It’s the first time I’ve fully been myself without apologies in a relationship. People who know us tend to have this idea that he loves me more. I think it’s because they are not familiar with relationships that don’t fit gender stereotypes. For instance, he has moved cities more to be with me because I’m not domestic at all and usually forget to feed myself. He had to move some months ago, and it was hell for me to adjust. It still is. 

    But the truth is that he’s the one who truly anchors me and us. His steadiness calms down my own scatter-scatter attitude to life. And, Ugo,  you are home.

    What are the things you both do that you don’t like and would like to see improvement in?

    Chinasa: Our biggest fights used to be about ambition. He has a really laid back approach to life that I don’t understand, especially because I’m impatient. I love the thrill of pursuing things. So sometimes, I wish he was more assertive instead of waiting for everything to align first. His process works for him, so I’ve learnt to leave him alone. Doesn’t mean it’s not annoying.

    Ugo: Exactly this, but on the flip side. She sometimes forgets that not everyone is like her. There was a period I started to feel that she was on my back breathing down my neck even though I knew she meant well.

    She’s already improving on this though.

    How would you rate this relationship on a scale of 1-10?

    Ugo: 8. Most of our issues happen when somebody isn’t being completely upfront. I want us to reach a place of honesty where it isn’t hard at all to tell each other anything; where it simply comes.

    Chinasa:  I’ll say a strong 8 with room to be even better. We really grew this year, worked on ourselves and are working towards more things to help us be in the best capacity for ourselves and each other. I don’t intend to get married, but we are doing this long term so I believe we should have long term plans (building our finances, achieving our life and career goals, etc) in place.

    Subscribe HERE.


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  • Love Life: It Took Us Six Months To Go From Friends To Lovers

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.


    Chelle, 24, and Layide, 23 have been dating for seven months. Today on Love Life, they talk about striking a connection the moment they started talking, how their decision to stay friends changed and how long-distance affects their relationship. 

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Layide: She was in a car, and I was with a mutual friend of ours. We were looking at each other; we didn’t say hi. 

    Chelle: Mine would be touching her hair. 

    Wait, how did you people go from not talking to touching her hair?

    Chelle: We were at a games night organised by our mutual friend. When I came, she was on the phone outside. She was on that call for a long time. Eventually, she finished and I went to say hi to her. I told her I liked her hair and asked if I could touch it. She was quite shy — she blushed at everything I said or did. We flirted and later we exchanged numbers. 

    Layide: She was so excited to put her number on my phone. I loved her energy and knew I wanted to spend more time with her. She came with someone else, and I didn’t know the dynamics of their relationship so I didn’t intend to be pushy. When we started texting, she made it clear that she didn’t want to be in a relationship yet. I respected that and we remained friends. I wasn’t in a hurry, so I waited for about six months. 

    Chelle: I had just gotten out of a relationship where I felt like I was taking care of a dead plant, so I wasn’t looking to date anyone. I wanted to learn how to be alone, and I also needed to figure things out for myself. 

    Things like what?

    Chelle: I was supposed to graduate in 2020 but the pandemic delayed that. I also planned to start a food business while I was in school. Being at home for months destabilised my plans. I needed time to think about what I wanted to do next.

    I felt depressed. I was always crying. I don’t like talking to people about my problems because I feel like no one cares, but Layide was always interested in anything I had to say. She would always video call me to ask what’s wrong and how she could help. She would also ask later on if everything was fine. 

    Aww, that’s sweet. How were you feeling about this, Layide?

    Layide: I didn’t mind making those calls or checking on her. I liked her but I also wasn’t in a hurry to date. I was fine spending time with her. More than anything, I wanted her to know I genuinely cared for her . 

    As much as I wanted her to date her, it was also important to me that she was happy and in a good place by herself.

    What happened next?

    Chelle: One day in November, we went out together and she took pictures of me. She used to be terrible at it, but that day, she said she had gone to learn how to do it better on YouTube. That was the most thoughtful thing anyone had done for me. I cried for like five seconds when she said it. I spent the rest of the month thinking about whether or not I wanted to be in a relationship with her. I had decided to start my business while I was at home and after procrastinating for months, I did. That’s when I knew I was ready to date again. 

    In December, one of the days we went out together, I asked her to ask me out again. She blushed and asked me if I would be her girlfriend. When I said yes, she asked me if I was sure I wanted to be in a relationship. I told her I had figured things out and was ready to be with her. 

    How has the relationship been so far? 

    Chelle: We are in a long-distance relationship and I have never been in one before. Sometimes I get angry and ask her why she let me fall in love with her, knowing we’d end up here. 

    Wait, long-distance? 

    Layide: We always knew we were going to be a long-distance couple because when we met, she was schooling in Benin but was in Lagos because of the pandemic. One of the reasons she didn’t want to date me was because of the distance. I had never been in a long-distance relationship either.

    We try to see each other often though. I think the longest time we’ve spent apart is about eight weeks. 

    Layide: Asides from distance, our relationship has been great. I love our dynamic and how much we understand each other. She’s a talker and I’m a listener. We don’t argue unnecessarily, and we never go to bed mad at each other. We talk about everything and anything whenever we spend time together. 

    Chelle: Our heads work better together. We help each other solve personal problems. 

    Layide: Yup, plus the sex is great! I’m a sexual person and she matches my energy if not, surpasses it. Even though we are long distance, we still have a healthy sex life. Thanks to video calls. 

    Mad o. Oya, tell me about your fights.

    Chelle: I tend to pick fights with her when I feel lonely. There was one time she was supposed to come and see me in school. We had talked about it and made plans, but when the day came, I didn’t hear from her. She didn’t talk about it, so I didn’t say anything. She eventually made the trip to Benin a few weeks later. That’s when  I told her I was mad at her. She apologised and we settled it. 

    Layide: Like I said, we don’t argue a lot. Most times, when she’s angry, I am able to talk to her and we work through it. Even when she is angry with other people. She is the kind of person that would change it for you when you try her. Sometimes, though, I have to step in when I think she is overreacting. I try to point out that whatever happened might not be the person’s fault. 

    Chelle: LMAO. She has saved a lot of people with those speeches. 

    What’s the best part of the relationship? 

    Chelle: I love spending time with her. It’s the best part of the relationship for me. 

    Layide: We are not always together, so those few moments we spend with each other are precious. 

    What have you learned from each other?

    Layide: Patience. 

    Chelle: But I’m not a patient person. 

    Layide: I learned patience from having to be patient with you. 

    Chelle: LOL. She helps me not procrastinate. Whenever I decide to do something, she makes sure I commit to finishing it. She would ask me about it from time to time, and it keeps me in check. Adulting is hard, but I can deal with life better when she’s with me. She also taught me to smile more.

    Rate the relationship on a scale of 1 – 10. 

    Chelle: 8.5. We haven’t gotten to where I want us to be in our relationship. I’d like to move out of Lagos and she has plans to leave Nigeria. We’re trying to see how things will work out in the long run. 

    Layide: 9. Our relationship is going to get better, and I don’t think I’d ever rate it a 10 because I want to leave room for more. 

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill this form.

  • Love Life: We Help Each Other Grow

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.


    Audio: We Help Each Other Grow

    Femi*, 26, and Yemisi*, 25, have been dating for two years. Today on Love Life, they talk about helping each other grow and be better people and how the lockdown helped them transition into a long distance relationship.

    What’s your earliest memory of each other? 

    Yemisi: In November 2018, I asked people on my Twitter timeline what they wanted before the end of the year, and this person who thinks he’s a smooth operator said lunch with me. I said, “Cool, I can make that happen.” He slid into my DM and asked if he should go straight to the point or do small talk before asking me out to lunch. He was very formal — using big grammar. LOL. I said he could go straight to the point and we settled on a date, but he didn’t get back to me. 

    A few weeks later, he apologised. He said he was busy with work and we should reschedule. But I was away for a conference on the island. I wasn’t planning to leave the conference venue, so I told him we could plan something when I returned to the mainland. While I was still at the conference, I tweeted that I wanted cake.  Femi messaged me to ask for my address and sent a cake. I actually got two cakes. One from Femi, one from someone else. 

    Femi: Whose was bigger and better?

    Yemisi: Lmao. I’m not going to answer that.  

    What happened next? 

    Femi: We started chatting via Twitter DMs but we still didn’t go on that date. Her office organised a monthly event that I used to go for. At these events, she was always with other men, so it felt like she wasn’t interested. 

    A few months after we started talking, a mutual friend organised a dinner that we both went for, and after that, we became close. She slept in my house that night. 

    Yemisi: The dinner happened four months after he sent me the cake in November 2018. We actually met once in early 2019 before the dinner. It was a mani-pedi date, and I brought a friend along. 

    Femi: A male friend who is taller than me by far. 

    Yemisi: LOL. I didn’t think of the mani-pedi date as a real date.  

    After the dinner, things naturally fell into place. We had a movie marathon the day after the dinner because I tweeted I wanted to see a movie with someone and he slid into my DMs to indicate interest.  

    Femi: She claims she planned the whole thing. I can’t disagree. 

    Yemisi: LMAO. Then we started hanging out after work regularly. He would come to my office or I would go to his house. One of the things we bonded over was Game of Thrones and getting pedicures. We found out that we had a lot in common: Our parents are pastors in the same church, we come from the same place, and have similar beliefs. In May, he invited me to his church and I went. We spent more time together before he officially asked me out. 

    How has the relationship been so far? 

    Femi: Although we have fights and sometimes over the littlest of things, it’s been good. We spent a lot of time together during the lockdown. This meant we spent a lot of time in the kitchen together and that came with some bickering. We got to know each other deeply. For instance, I found out that she doesn’t know how to open mouthwash. 

    During that period, we skipped the regular boyfriend-girlfriend stage and entered the comfortable married couple stage. 

    What was your biggest fight about? 

    Yemisi: We were arguing about something on Twitter. I was coming from a moral perspective, and Femi was looking at it from a legal perspective. We were in the same house, in the same bedroom, but I didn’t talk to him for like two hours, I don’t remember how it ended. At the end of the day, we kind of agreed on the same point, but it took a while to get there. 

    Femi: My idea of our biggest fight is different. We used to take evening walks, and one time, we were supposed to go get food. At some point on the way, she stopped to tie her shoelace. I asked her to move away from the road so she could be safe.  For the rest of the walk, she kept frowning. Even when we got home, she continued frowning and wanted to be by herself. I don’t know if she remembers this. 

    Yemisi: I do remember it — I didn’t like his tone. I think I’m responsible for like 70% of our fights. He calls me “Fighter” because I fight about everything. 

    So how do you resolve fights?

    Yemisi: Whenever we fight, it’s always Femi that reaches out to me. He’ll make me come out of my shell by offering food or joking. After that, we’ll have a conversation about it.  I’d feel bad because he is such a kind, thoughtful person, which is annoying. Then I would now apologise properly and admit where I went wrong and he’ll do the same. 

    One thing he’s taught me is that more than anything, love is a choice, and even in these fights, we keep loving and caring for each other.

    Femi: My strategy is mumu button. At least that’s how I de-escalate the immediate tension so that we can have conversations about the problem. We can be fighting and pause to ask each other what we want to eat or joke about something else.

    What’s the best part about the relationship? 

    Femi: Yemisi is my sugar mummy. She spoils me. I can’t say I want anything and that’s how it ends. She always finds a way to get it for me. From clothes to gadgets. Especially now that we are apart. She is so intentional about taking care of me and she motivates me to be better. 

    Yemisi: We help each other grow and become the best possible versions of ourselves. Since we started the relationship, we’ve both grown simultaneously. When we started talking, I got a new job, which was a big deal for me. Shortly after, he got a new job. We helped each other prepare for the interviews and gingered each other. There’s such a stong sense of “I believe in you” in this relationship. After I got a raise, he got a raise as well. I got a promotion, and he got promoted too. That’s how we do things over here. No one gets left behind.

    Although Femi isn’t expressive, he’s very kind and thoughtful. Sometimes we fight about it because I’m like, why is he doing something for this person, but he’s taught me to be a better person to the people around me. 

    Also, he is my sugar daddy. When my computer was bad, he vexed and got me a new one. After I moved, he got tired of the shitty video conferencing app we were using and got me an IPhone so we could FaceTime.

    So you help each other grow professionally, financially and emotionally? 

    Yemisi: Yup. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that my salary has grown 10x since we started dating. When you’re with someone who is succeeding, you’re forced to put in your best and succeed too. Similarly, when you’re with a kind person, it rubs off on you. We’ve been deliberate about learning from each other.

    Femi: What she said about growing professionally and financially. 

    And then emotionally too. I’m usually quiet, reserved and sometimes clueless. But she’s been intentional about helping me grow and she’s been patient about it too.

    Do you have any future plans together

    Femi: She’s trying to get me out of Nigeria. 

    Yemisi: Yup. I recently moved out of Nigeria. We both knew from the start of our relationship that this would happen. At some point in the relationship, we knew that we wanted to end up together. Our siblings know each other. This year, I met his mum, and he’s met my parents online — my dad already calls him his son. We are on the road to getting married, but one of our biggest priorities is getting him to join me abroad. 

    What’s long-distance like for both of you?

    Femi: It’s hard tbh. But definitely not the worst thing in the world. No physical touch is the hardest thing. And sometimes, unnecessary squabbles because the nuance is missing.

    Yemisi: It’s not the worst thing or the best thing. I think we’re lucky because, during the lockdown, we lived together for about eight months. We got to know each other. I think that was a defining point in our relationship. I recently told him  that if I had left Nigeria before the lockdown, we might not be together. Living together helped us know each other.. 

    We both like physical touch, and sometimes I want it, but not having it is not the worst thing. 

    Overall, we’ve been able to hack how we spend time together. We talk everyday and send gifts to each other a lot. We have movie night often. Long distance is good for us, but it’s not the best situation. 

    Rate your relationship on a scale of 1 to 10. 

    Femi: 8.632. 

    Yemisi: LOL. What?

    Femi: It’s because of the long distance. Sometimes I want to knock your head or do things I can’t say here, but it’s not possible, so yeah. 

    Yemisi: 9. We have been dating for two years, and we have both grown in different ways. There’s no way you’d date him, and you wouldn’t grow or date me and you wouldn’t grow. Our growth is the best part for me. 

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill this form.

    Relationships can be hard, and sometimes you just need someone to give you a bit of advice. Ask Ozzy is our new advice column where you send Zikoko the relationship questions that have been bugging you, and Ozzy Etomi gives you the best relationship advice. The column is part of our brand new category, Ships, that tackles all kinds of relationships, not just the romantic ones. If you’d like to send in your questions, click here.

  • Love Life: We Are So Aligned, It’s Unbelievable

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.



    Audio: We’re So Aligned, It’s Unbelievable

    Ore, 28, and Lekan, 30, got engaged last year after dating for about a year. Today on Love Life, they talk about meeting in church as teenagers, reconnecting as adults and how they got God’s confirmation that they are meant to be.  

    What is your earliest memory of each other?

    Ore: In 2006, my family and I moved to Ikorodu. We joined a church there and that’s when I met Lekan. I was 14 at the time. He was 16. We were in the same drama group. I remember texting him all the time on my flip phone. 

    Lekan: I was already crushing on her. She was in secondary school, and I just finished. I remember I always wanted her to be at our drama meetings. There was a time her mum was taking her to school, and she wore her boarding house wear. I texted her something about her being beautiful. Later when she came back from school, she told me her mum saw the text. I thought I was in trouble, but nothing came out of that. 

    Ore: LOL! I don’t even remember that. 

    Lekan: I even asked her out then but she gave a clever response — that she wasn’t ready for a relationship — and I respected it. Shortly after, she and her family moved. 

    So how did you two become a thing?

    Ore: After my family moved out of Ikorodu in 2010, Lekan and I lost contact. We found each other again in 2016 when I was doing my masters in the UK. I was in church one day and his face flashed in my head. I have this habit of checking in on people or praying for them when I think of them. That day, I was wondering why I thought of him, so I went to find him on Facebook. I did, then I messaged him and we chatted. We exchanged numbers afterwards. 

    He would always text to check up on me and make sure I was doing okay. I wanted to see him when I moved back to Nigeria, but I didn’t want to be the one to initiate it.

    Why?

    Ore: Back then, I felt like our conversations were too casual to try to push for anything more. I thought he wanted us to just be text buds, and I was okay with that. 

    Lekan: For me, I was wondering what she was thinking. I didn’t know if she was in a relationship or married. We kept in touch from when we reconnected in 2016 till 2019 when I finally decided to let her know my feelings. I told one of my female friends about her, and she advised me to tell her. Her birthday is in June, so I got her office address and sent her gifts. I wrote her a long message asking her out but my friend advised against sending it with the gifts. So I sent her the message two weeks later.  

    Ore: Before he sent that message, I had felt the need to pay more attention to him in my spirit. When he asked me out. It made sense, but I was sceptical about whether I wanted to date him or not. I liked him as a friend — I liked that he often checked up on me and I loved our conversations. I told him I was going to pray about it. 

    In the past, I have been in relationships where I would get a red flag from God after praying but would go ahead with the relationships. I didn’t want that to happen with Lekan. I was already in a place of prayer when he asked me out, so I just added it to the things I wanted to talk to God about. On the second day of my prayers, I got a sign but I didn’t trust it because it felt like the sign came because I was already thinking about dating Lekan. I prayed some more and this time, I asked God to give me a sign that this was the right thing to do. I asked for a confirmation from someone I looked up to spiritually. 

    Sometimes God can be funny because he sent my confirmation through my mum. At the time, I was working at Yaba, so my mum and I used to drive to work together. One day, on our way to work, I asked her if she remembered Lekan. She did and said she knew his mum from the church in Ikorodu. I told her what he said. My mum was surprised because she was praying about the man I would bring home as my husband, and she got an idea of what the man would look like. The description she gave me was exactly like Lekan. It was scarier when she said she had gotten the message a long time ago but didn’t want to share it with me so as to not pressure me. 

    I still didn’t tell him yes because I have felt more for the guys that I have dated in the past than I did for Lekan at that time. I was asking myself if I could hold the relationship without a little bit of obsession. As I deliberated this, I got another message to write down the things I wanted in a man. I was surprised when I listed 25 things because it wasn’t something I had thought about. I decided that I would date Lekan for a few weeks to see how he is. After a while, I just knew he was meant to be my husband. 

    Lekan: That lockdown period was great because we got to spend time together. It made it easy to love her. We got engaged last year. We are looking forward to getting married later this year. You know our relationship is long-distance…

    Wait, when did that happen? 

    Ore: It has always been a long-distance relationship. I came back and he left the country. Imagine that? 

    Lekan: Honestly, it doesn’t even feel like long-distance because we talk a lot — a lot of video calls and texting. 

    Nice! Now I am curious about how the engagement happened. 

    Lekan: I was in Nigeria for the holidays.

    Ore: I am still beefing him sef. He didn’t kneel down. I told him that he will do it again. 

    Lekan: LOL! It was a lot of pressure. I even watched YouTube videos to learn the best way to propose. On Christmas Day, I told Ore I wanted to go on a date. At the restaurant, I arranged with the waiters at the buffet to bring the ring at a specific time while one of my relatives would come with a camera to take pictures. When we got there, the restaurant was full, and I became shy. I asked for the ring back and told my relative not to bother. We were sitting when I told Ore I wanted to do something but I couldn’t kneel down.

    Ore: I said, “Sure, no problem.” What made it better for me was the fact that he asked. I thought it was sweet.  

    What is the best part of the relationship? 

    Ore: We are so aligned, it’s unbelievable. I always tell him he is a better person than I am. I ask him a lot of questions and he always answers. He is a safe space for me.  

    Lekan: For me, it’s the fact that we are quite similar. I always feel like we were meant to be. 

    What was your biggest fight about? 

    Ore: We have disagreements. One time we had an issue, and he noticed I was upset about it. He kept apologising until I snapped and asked why he was still saying sorry. We resolved that issue, but later on, we learned about apology languages and I understood why I was upset that day. Repeat apologies don’t work for me — I want to know that the person is going to change their behaviour. Understanding that has helped us navigate difficult situations. 

    What’s your favourite thing about each other?

    Lekan: I love how ambitious she is. 

    Ore: I love how selfless he is. I remember when I told him that Uber was eating all of my money, and he said he would send me transportation money monthly. He is always willing to help without expectations. 

    Rate your relationship on a scale of 1 – 10.

    Ore: 10. He is someone my soul loves and I think what we have is beautiful. 

    Lekan: 9, because I don’t want everything to seem too perfect. I love being in a relationship where you can talk about anything and know that someone is listening to you. When we have disagreements, it’s easy to navigate because we can both see the actions that have been taken. We are both willing to change for the other person. 

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    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill this form.

  • 5 Nigerians Share The Ups and Downs Of Being In A Long-Distance Relationship

    Long-distance relationships can be tough and tricky to navigate. There’s a lot that goes into making a long-distance relationship work such as trust, consistent communication, spontaneity and the willingness to make sacrifices.

    We spoke with a few Nigerians in long-distance relationships about the ups and downs of having their partners live far away from them. Here’s what they had to say:

    1. Angela, 27

    Woman on cal

    I don’t have a problem with long-distance relationships; I actually prefer it. My boyfriend and I have been together for almost a year and we’ve only met twice. Long-distance works for me because I’m not much of a physical person. Physical touch isn’t one of my major love languages, and being apart helps us avoid fornication. This doesn’t mean there aren’t times when I wish we were together physically.

    There are days when I crave physical touch and wish we’d just cuddle and binge-watch ‘The Office’. It’s our favourite show and I don’t like watching it without him. Sometimes I wish I wasn’t looking at his face through a screen and sometimes I wish he could play with my hair till I fall asleep.

    But the most important thing is, we’re deliberate about the things we do and we find ways to make it work. He also comes to over to Nigeria to visit, but because of the nature of his job, not having him around is something I’d have to get used to.

    2. Bayo, 24

    My major problem with my long-distance relationship is that there’s always a problem with communication. Even with video calls, words and emotions get lost in translation. I also almost never know how my partner is truly feeling. She can say “Oh, I’m okay”, and really not be okay and that can cause a lot of miscommunication and tension. For me, it’s better to be together with the one you love, to hug and to kiss them every day. I can’t wait for this to end.

    3. Emily, 26

    Phone call

    I’d never been a fan of long-distance relationships before I got into this one because I’d never found someone who I was willing to try it with. In my current relationship, being apart has brought us closer than I could imagine because we’re being very intentional about communicating very often.

    There are times when I think, “What manner of punishment is this?” because everyone has physical needs, but in the end, being in a long-distance relationship pays if you’re doing it with someone who fully understands you and your needs and my boyfriend does.

    4. Debbie, 28

    I like the fact that being in a long-distance relationship makes us put in the work to make our relationship work. We’re constantly exchanging pictures, videos and voice notes, and talking about how our days went. It’s cute. There’s also the thing where not seeing each other makes you value each other better and enjoy each other’s company better. But those are the only good parts about being in a long distance relationship.

    I’m a young woman with physical needs, you know. Who will satisfy them? And me, I cannot cheat, so I have to wait to see my man before I get any action. It could be months. It gets really lonely and it gets really boring. And when we stay apart for too long our communication starts getting strained and sore. I absolutely hate being away from my man.

    5. Victor, 31

    video call

    I hear many people say their biggest fear in long-distance relationships is not knowing what the other person is doing at the other end but that’s not it for me. My biggest fear is that we’ll grow apart. Don’t get me wrong, there’s always a possibility that they’ll cheat, but if you’re in a relationship with someone you fully trust and you’re holding being faithful on your own end and doing your part, then there’s nothing you can do to stop them from cheating. And even they do, you break it up, move on, and don’t let it affect your future relationships. You can’t let something like that hold you down forever.

    Then there’s the constant worry about your partner because you’re always having to think “Are they doing alright?”, “Are they lonely”, etc.

    Two things make long-distance relationships work; a clear timeline, like “When will this end”, and constant and clear communication. I’m in a totally different timezone from my partner so we have to schedule calls and sort of book timeslots to talk to one another. It makes things more organised.

    But it’s super important to realize when it’s over. Distance kills a lot of relationships and you should know when yours is done as well so you can move on and heal quickly.

    Note: Names of respondents have been changed for anonymity.

    Also read: 6 Nigerians On Losing Friendships After Marriage


  • Love Life: We Fell In Love Without Ever Meeting

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.


    Audio: We Fell In Love Without Ever Meeting

    *Klaus, 28, and Lilian, 24, have been in a romantic relationship for about a year without ever meeting each other. For today’s Love Life, they talk about their love and how they cope with a long-distance relationship. 

    long distance relationship

    What’s the relationship here?

    Lilian: Klaus and I are dating. 

    Klaus: Lilian is the love of my life. 

    How did you meet?

    Lilian: In December 2018, we met in a school fellowship group chat.

    Klaus:  There was a send-off party organised for her academic class and after the party, they posted some pictures in the group and that was how I saw her picture. My first reaction was, “Wow! This girl has an incredible smile.” So, I sent her a private message. 

    Lilian: Really? I didn’t even know this.

    Adorable. At what point did you fall for each other? 

    Klaus: After talking for a while, we built a rapport. Although she was a little sceptical, the conversations we had were pretty decent. 

    Lilian: For me, it wasn’t immediate. It was January or February 2019 when we would talk for 30 – 45 minutes on the phone. We had similar interests. He knew how to sew and I was just learning.

    At some point, I realised that I was always looking forward to telling him about my day. That was when it hit me like, “Come oh, you like this guy.”

    How soon after did you start dating?

    Lilian:  This is a bit complex because I remember he told me he was going back to our school to get something, and then he casually mentioned he was going to see his girlfriend.

    Omo, I felt like I was just there catching feelings no one was throwing at me. I started withdrawing because I didn’t want intense conversations anymore. I decided to bury my feelings.

    Klaus: What? Really?

    Lilian: Yes na. At some point, he told me he had broken up with his girlfriend, but I wasn’t convinced. Then when I went to NYSC camp in November 2019, we resumed talking for hours on the phone. My friends even started teasing me. The emotions I thought I had pushed aside came flooding back. 

    Ahhh. I thought we buried those.

    Lilian: Same oh. But when he travelled and I couldn’t reach him for several weeks, I started acting weird, snapping at people. Thoughts of him filled my head and it was so invasive.

    I tried to deny those feelings because I knew we had not defined things. It was annoying because our story wasn’t a typical boy-meets-girl-and-goes-on-dates-with-her. I was mad at myself because I felt all these emotions without ever meeting him.

    Deep down, I knew I was in love with him, but I didn’t want to be the first person to say it. Then on Christmas Day last year, I was about to sleep when he texted me, “I love you.” I called him back immediately and that’s how it started. 

    Klaus: I think timing is everything. By the time I asked her out, she was in a better place to accept my request. That night was something else for me. I couldn’t sleep. I didn’t call because I was lost for words.

    How do you manage the distance? Do you fight often? 

    Klaus: What? Makers of peace like us?

    Lilian: Haha. I wouldn’t call what we have ‘fights’; they are more of disagreements. On my end, I am very reserved and like to keep to myself a lot. Sometimes, I tend to unplug from things and it affects the relationship.

    We had an argument and that was when I realised that this relationship is different. Most times, I ghost completely after an argument and that’s the end, but in this case, I love how he makes me feel, so we end up sorting things out.

    Klaus: I understand that you are very introverted and all but sometimes, I require more. You come through but only with a lot of cajoling on my end. 

    Lilian: It’s not all the time na. It’s rare. 

    Klaus: Mami, I never really register those things as serious issues. It was just the time when you had serious issues with expressing yourself and it put most of the communication on me. It wasn’t easy. I just think you need to put in a little more effort.

    Have you guys ever tried to meet in person? 

    Lilian:  We made plans but then Corona hit, so now, we are making new arrangements. 

    Klaus: I have it all planned out. Problem is, I have a few work commitments so I just can’t go to see my baby girl yet. 

    What’s the hardest part about long-distance dating?

    Lilian: Not being able to have the simplest conversations with him physically present. I can’t wait till we see because if just talking to him makes me feel this way, then being with him physically should be explosive. 

    Klaus: There is a special feeling that comes with being physically present with a lover. The heightened senses, prolonged moments of intimacy and longer periods of communication without uttering a single word. I just want to spend physical time with my love. 

    This is just beautiful. How do you guys deal with the urge to…yunno?

    Lillian: Yunno what?

    Yunno…

    Klaus: We recite by heart the book of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob until the urge to…yunno…dies a premature death. 

    LMAO. Killing the spirit of horniness with the good book. Love it. 

    Klaus: I like to fantasize for a bit without dwelling too much on it, seeing as nothing can be done about that. Sometimes, I call her and we talk for a while. That’s as good as it gets.

    Lilian: Haha. I’m actually speechless by the way but yes. The urge comes and goes. I know I won’t look great as a pregnant corper so that quickly kills the urge anyway. I’m just paranoid, that’s it. 

    Wait, is this a celibate relationship? 

    Lilian: Yes. 

    Klaus: I don’t think so. We are too far apart to define that aspect of our relationship right now. 

    Are you worried the chemistry won’t be there in person? 

    Klaus: Well, we do a lot of video calls, so I don’t think that’ll be the case.

    Lilian: Oh, I’m sure I’m going to like him in person. 

    Klaus: You’re making me shy. Haha. My fear is that the time we might get to spend with each other might not be enough for me. 

    What do you want the first meeting to look like? 

    Klaus: I would prefer the initial moments of our first encounter to be private, so that if there are any bits of excitement, it would be for our sole consumption. Then by the time we’ve exhausted all that excitement, we can look for a public space. I think we might spend a lot of time indoors. 

    Lilian: I don’t want it too planned out because there’s already anxiety and nerves. I just want something fun. 

    Is this your first time in a long-distance relationship?

    Klaus: Yes, it is. Compared to my previous relationships, this feels better too. We have such a strong emotional and intellectual connection. She is the smartest woman, so it feels better.

     Lilian: This is also my first time in this kind of relationship. It still surprises me how I’m able to adapt so much. I usually call him my uncharted territory.

    You know how you don’t realise how thirsty you are until you take cool water. That’s how this relationship feels to me. I didn’t know what I was missing until I had it. Bliss. 

    What would you consider your biggest fear in this relationship?

    Klaus: Not making the best out of the relationship. Caving in to the pressure and expectations people have of us.

    Lilian: I fear that in the long run, we will start to yearn for more physical proximity, and the fact that we aren’t in the same city will affect that. 

    Would you be willing to change cities to be with each other? 

    Klaus: Without hesitation.

    Lilian: You’re going to make me cry. Changing cities for me is a huge thing just because I have my family to consider. If work can move me there, then fine. That’s the concrete reason I want to raise with my mum when having that conversation. 

    What do you love the most about each other? 

    Lilian:  I love that we have things in common so that when we are talking, he doesn’t get lost. I love how much he pays attention to details. Most importantly, I love how he loves me. I love you, baby boy. 

    Klaus: I’m glad I got to meet someone like my chubbylove. It’s rare to find someone so special. My introverted sugar and spice mami. She is truly irreplaceable in my life. 

    Lilian: Awwn, babe!


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  • 5 Ways To Handle A Long Distance Relationship

    If you’ve ever been in one, you’ll know that long-distance relationships are the ghetto. From the constant I miss yous to the severe horniness that afflicts you, long-distance relationships are nothing to write home about. Luckily, there are a couple of things you can do to help make your long-distance relationship easier to bear.

    1. Break up.

    Break up with them. They can’t cheat on you if you break up with them.

    2. Cheat.

    Let’s face it. This is the only way the relationship will last. The ball is in your court.

    3. Move.

    Just follow your partner wherever they are going. Quit your job and follow them.

    4. Buy internet data in wholesale.

    You’ll be needing loads of it for all the video calls you’ll be doing.

    5. Open the relationship

    At this point, just open it. So you can be sleeping with other people with your chest.

    Read: 5 Ridiculous Things Nigerian Men Do To Get Over Heartbreak

    Man Like – A series about men, for men, by men. Every Sunday by 12PM.

  • 16 Struggles Nigerians In Long Distance Relationships Can Relate To

    1. You and bae start a long distance relationship but you’re happy because you’ll have your own space and time.

    You didn’t know it was going to really suck.

    2. When you need a hug after a really long day but bae lives 1000km away.

    It’s not cheating if I hug my gate man abi?

    3. When they annoy you but can’t see how angry you are.

    You’re lucky I can’t slap you through the phone.

    4. When you’re trolling bae via text and they take it personal.

    Na wa o, small play?

    5. When you miss them and have to wait 6 months before getting to see them again.

    I’m not crying.

    6. You, when other people talk about hanging out with their bae.

    Let’s hear word abeg.

    7. When you go out with your friends and they bring their significant other.

    Why evils?

    8. When you want to drive all the way to surprise bae and you see the price of fuel.

    My chest!

    9. When you spend 3000 Naira recharge card on the phone with them in one night and it’s not enough.

    Na wa o.

    10. When you had to wait till 12am to talk to them during the time of free night calls.

    Sleep is for the baeless.

    11. You, when bae is turning up without you.

    It’s not your fault.

    12. When bae starts getting close to the boy/girl they told you not to worry about.

    I’m coming to carry my thing abeg.

    13. How you try hard to fight sleep when skyping with them because you’re not going to see their real face in a while.

    I’m awake, my eyes are just closing on their own.

    14. When you check your data balance after skyping with them.

    Hay God!

    15. When you find out you’re going to see them soon.

    My heart!

    16. You, the next time you see bae.

    Yas!