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Love life | Zikoko! Love life | Zikoko!
  • Love Life: I Had a Crush on My Customer

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other? 

    Segun: A friend who had bought a cake parfait from Anu referred her to me in 2021. The first time I made an order, I went to pick up cake parfaits at her house.

    Anu: I could’ve sent them through a dispatch rider, but he said he didn’t want that. I was confused, but what’s my own? I told him he could come get his order. 

    Wait, why?

    Segun: She lives really close to me, so paying extra for delivery didn’t make any sense. I could just drive down to her place to pick it up, so I did.

    What was the first meeting like?

    Segun: She had so much energy. There was this cute way she did her thing. She gave me the parfait and told me to come again. 

    I continued going there to pick up my cake parfaits.

    Anu:  Can I say my own?

    Segun: Oya.

    Anu: I won’t lie. When I saw him, I was shocked. I’d seen his WhatsApp display picture and some pictures on his story and I wasn’t feeling him like that. Then he showed up at my house, and I was like, this man is sexy.

    LOL. Was that when you both started liking each other?

    Segun:  Not really. I loved her cake parfaits and her vibe, so I always patronised her. Then, we started talking outside my orders.

    Anu: I invited him to my church.

    Why?

    Anu: I had a crush on him, and I needed to shoot my shot. So when they told us to invite two or more people to church, I thought, why not?

    Segun: I asked her if I’d find a wife in her church, and she said yes.

    Anu: Did you not find me?

    Segun, did you know about the crush?

    Segun: I had a feeling. She used to look at me really intensely. Like, I would be doing something, turn to her and find her looking at me. She didn’t admit it at first, but she was always inviting me to do things with her. I just had a feeling.

    Anu:  It’s not like I had a choice. Look at him. He’s a very fine man. And when we started talking, we found out that we had the same dreams and goals. That sealed it. I fell flat on the ground.

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

    Segun, when did you fall for her?

    Segun: After our first date. That was when I realised I had started liking her.

    Anu: Oh yes, that’s when I realised it too. He was driving, and I couldn’t stop staring at him. He kept going on about how happy he was. 

    He’s very shy, and I’d never seen him express himself like that. That’s when I really thought this man might like me, and my crush might be more than a crush.

    Okay, you have to tell me about this date.

    Anu: He asked me out on a movie date, so we went to Maryland Mall. 

    Segun: It didn’t start well.

    Anu: Nigeria was happening that day, so the cinema didn’t have electricity for a while. We had to sit somewhere, eat small chops and wait for the light to be restored. When it finally came back on,  we went in to watch the movie. I was so shy. 

    Segun: You were?

    Anu: I had to go to the bathroom at some point because I forgot how to breathe. When I got back, I just kept staring at him.

    Segun: I would look at her to find her looking at me.

    Seems like it was a great first date.

    Anu: The best. I didn’t even want to go home.

    Segun: It was fun. I already liked her before the date, so I was just happy we had that much fun and I could just be myself around her. Later that night, I told her about my YouTube channel. I wanted her to make videos with me because she had a lot of energy.

    Anu: I agreed, shared the channel’s link and in five months we went from 84 to 1,000 subscribers.

    That’s insane.

    Segun: I was surprised when we got to 1,000 subscribers..

    Anu: He had mentioned earlier that he preferred actions to words, and I was down to show him I cared through my actions. It’s why I was so determined to grow the YouTube channel.

    Is this what Anu meant by similar dreams and goals?

    Segun: Yes. It’s mostly content creation. She’s a content creator, and I’d just started creating reaction videos on YouTube when we started talking. I also wanted to switch to doing content with my partner.

    Anu: And that’s where I came in.

    Segun: We’re also business people. Well, kind of.

    Anu: I’m the more business-inclined person, sha.

    Segun: She really is. I’d always wanted to start some type of business, but I wasn’t getting things right. Honestly, we wanted a lot of similar things.

    Are you going to share these business interests?

    Segun: No.

    Anu: Nope.

    [ad]

    Fair enough. What about how you both help each other’s businesses?

    Segun: She helps me create content for my shirt brand and manages my business’ social media accounts. 

    Anu: He’s sometimes busy with work, so I post on the page, reply to customers, collect money, and revert to him. In turn, he helps me make videos for my business. He’s a great cinematographer and video editor, so he takes the videos and edit them too. 

    Last Saturday, he followed me to a trade fair and shot videos I could use to create content and post on my page.

    Aww, that’s so sweet. What’s your favourite thing about your relationship?

    Anu: It’s the fact that it’s him. I’m in a peaceful relationship with a man who’s very proud of me, shows me off at every chance and has actually shown that he’s interested in me. There are no inconsistencies in the way he loves me, and he always makes time for me. He gets busy with work, but he’ll always take out time to check in and text me.

    Segun: For me, it’s the way we understand and care for each other. She compliments me and carries my matter on her head unprovoked. She’s just always doing the most for me. 

    It’s also the letters.

    Anu: Oh God. 

    What letters?

    Segun: We write letters to appreciate each other, but she does it more, so I’ll randomly get handwritten letters. Last year, I got a letter in my email from the first day of my birth month till my actual birthday. It was really sweet, and I’ll never forget it.

    Best in love and romance!

    Anu: What can I say? I’m a finished woman.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your love life?

    Segun: Let me not do too much, but this is a solid 8.5.

    Anu:  Ahh! I rate it a 10, minus nothing.

    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.

    Here’s another Love Life: We’ve Co-habited, Had a Kid but Still Can’t Commit

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

  • Here’s How AI Can Fix Your Love Life

    Text chatGPT instead of entering a talking stage

    You can text it all day, get fast replies and be sure it won’t ghost you. 

    Become more romantic

    Being a big ball of romance is finally only a few prompts away. Just ask Claude AI to tell you what sweet words to say at every point in time. Isn’t God good all the time?

    Shoot more shots without needing more rizz

    Connected to our previous point, your work rate will go up because dead pickup lines will no longer be part of your story. Think about it.

    Settle every fight before they happen

    Imagine your partner sends you a long pdf about something you did, and you just don’t have the time to read it. You can have AI write you a response in the sweetest tone possible. Just copy-paste, and your relationship problem is solved.

    In fact, your whole relationship can be on autopilot

    Just imagine using an AI chatbot to send replies to your partner all day? You can finally ghost in peace without them even noticing you’re gone.

    More time on your hands

    What if you just want to sleep, and your partner is why you can’t? What if you just want a break without the break-up? With the effective use of AI, you can now eat your cake and have it. 

    Gift ideas won’t require much thought

    You can finally outsource to AI, the answer to the question, “What do you give someone who has everything?” and focus on actually saving to buy that thing. You still score points for being thoughtful.

    You can safely vent at chatGPT

    If you’re the kind of person who has issues with being vulnerable to other humans, how about being vulnerable to a machine that can talk back? Just ask it to mimic your therapist, and you can be rest assured you’re in a safe space.


    NEXT READ: Only People With These 7 Jobs Are Safe From the AI Takeover


  • Love Life: We Get to Take Terrible Selfies Together

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

    The subjects of this week’s Love Life, Mofe (25) and Tunta (23), have been together for a year. They talk about how they almost didn’t get together because of her ex, and how even though they’re both polyamorous, they aren’t looking to date other people right now. 

    How did you meet?

    Mofe‬: We met on Twitter in November 2020. I want to lie that she moved to me, but it’s me. I’m the one who took my eyes to the “market”. I slid into her DM barely five minutes after discovering her Twitter profile for the first time. I found (still find) her incredibly interesting, and I was very excited to get to know her better. 

    Tunta: I’d tweeted about how I take terrible selfies, and he said he wanted to take terrible selfies with me. I was like, “Who is this one now?” but I clicked on his profile and saw a fine boy.  I also saw that we had a few mutuals so I responded. It was his avatar that made me even open his profile. I wanted to see the picture properly. 

    ‪Mofe‬: We had mutuals?

    Tunta: Yes. Just a few.

    What did you think when he DM’ed you? 

    Tunta: I thought he just wanted to sleep with me. He’s a designer and it was a field I was getting really interested in, so I thought he wanted to use that as scope. I even told my friends that. 

    Mofe‬: They even gave me a nickname because she thought I wanted to use design to sleep with her, meanwhile what I was feeling felt like romance. I was a little apprehensive about leaning in fully into my romantic intentions. It’s the internet; things aren’t always what they seem to be. But I wanted this romance I felt to be what it seemed to be, A LOT. She’s a lot more than that idea I had in my head. She’s my favourite person to explore and explore life with. 

    Tunta: Mo the Explorer. God, when?

    Mofe: See as I dey do romance for you. You no do any romance o. 

    Tunta: I’m shy, please.

    Please, don’t jump. We need the steps that led to the exploration

    Tunta: Well, I replied his DM, and with every conversation we had after, he seemed to care about me as a person, wanting to sleep with me aside. 

    Mofe‬: Add everything together.

    Tunta: So, while he didn’t straight up say, “I want a romantic relationship”, his DM didn’t seem completely platonic to me. 

    ‪Mofe‬: It wasn’t.

    Tunta: But I was in love with someone else at the time and wasn’t looking for another romantic connection. 

    Did you tell him? 

    Tunta: I didn’t mention it because I didn’t feel the need to. The other guy and I had stopped talking when Mofe messaged me. But we started talking again then started dating in May 2021, so I told Mofe about the guy. He knew Mofe because they have a mutual friend, and for some reason, this Mofe boy was telling everybody about me. 

    Why were you telling everyone about her?

    Mofe: It was love, but it wasn’t blind. It was certain. I’ve always been confident about the depth of the connection we shared. The love is absolute, and I’m not even being cheesy. 

    Tunta: I love you.

    ‪Mofe‬: I love you too.

    You people have jumped again

    Tunta: LMAO, sorry. I felt a connection too, but not romantic. I’ve cared about him since we met. There’s just this “Jenny say quan” to him. However, as time went on, we weren’t talking every day anymore because he was terrible at texting, I wasn’t interested in phone calls and he had a lot going on with school. I also think because we hadn’t met yet, he was less willing to talk. 

    You hadn’t met yet? 

    Tunta: I wasn’t keen on meeting him in person at first because I felt he went out too much and would give me COVID. There were like three different times we were supposed to meet in January/February, but something always came up on my end.

    I wanted to invite him to my sister’s wedding in April 2021, but I thought it would be weird. We didn’t talk much again till the beginning of 2022.

    Back to the relationship you got into in May

    Tunta: The relationship ended a month later.. After, I posted something about how I still wanted to try a non-monogamous relationship on my WhatsApp status, and Mofe said I should mention it to my partner. I was like “I don’t have”.

    Mofe‬: Scope to check if my suspicions were true.

    Tunta: Mofe said he hopes I know he’d try non-monogamy with me. I said I do. Unfortunately, two weeks later, me and the other guy got back together. We broke up again in October, and I almost didn’t date Mofe because my ex once implied I’d cheat on him with Mofe. I thought it’d look weird.

    So what changed your mind? 

    Tunta: The New Year of 2022 made us talk. I started ranting about the thing with my ex and how it doesn’t seem like we’re broken up even though we are. If I remember correctly, I actually told Mofe it’d be somehow if we get into a relationship because it’d be like I’d been talking to him to the whole time and “giving him hope”. He asked why I cared what it looked like or what the other guy thought, especially considering everything he’d said and done.

    Mofe‬: I thought if it was stressing her that much, it was definitely not healthy for them to keep talking, but I also knew it was easier said than done. Feelings mostly just don’t disappear; detachment is a process. 

    When did you finally meet? 

    Mofe‬: On my birthday.

    Tunta: He said he wanted to spend his birthday with me o. I didn’t want to go at first because I thought where he was staying at the time was far.

    ‪Mofe‬: It was far as fuck.

    Tunta: But I went. Despite all the nonsense that tried to stop me that day. Do you believe my car got seized?

    Mofe‬: That driver is an opp. I’m sure he somehow set you up.

    Tunta: Some law enforcement officers stopped the driver and I and said we entered BRT lane. We didn’t, but okay. They sha seized my car. I was discouraged and in a terrible mood.

    ‪Mofe‬: When she got to me, she was frowning because of the annoying journey, but I was smiling because “see fine girl”. 

    Tunta: I wanted to knock you. I was wondering why he was smiling like that when I was annoyed. 

    God, when? What did having that meeting do for both of you?

    Tunta: It made us start seeing each other at least twice every week. Then it became once because he stopped working remotely. 

    ‪Mofe‬: It gave all it was meant to give. At that point, I just knew this is who I want to be with for life. 

    Tunta: God, abeg.

    Mofe‬: I don’t think she realised it as quickly as I did, but she caught up. 

    Tunta: You’re right. I have no idea when I realised I’d fallen for him. It just clicked one day that I was in love, but it was on his birthday I realised there was something there and that I could be in a relationship with him. Mo on the other hand has been in love since.

    ‪Mofe‬: Yep, for a while. My love is very patient.

    Tunta: God, am I the fattest bone?

    ‪Mofe‬: I don’t remember a specific time, but I knew I was in love. I wasn’t gonna be in those crush-type situations where it’s consuming you and the person you’re in love with just dey vibe dey go sha. 

    I didn’t think telling someone who’s in a monogamous relationship you loved them was useful for any of us. If it was gonna happen, it would.

    And it happened! But how? 

    Mofe‬: We started dating in February 2022. At this point, she’d briefly met both my parents during my pharmacy induction, and I’d met her mum during the times I went to visit her in her house. We kinda knew where it was going, but I was stalling until I could take her out on a proper dress-up date to pop the question.

    Tunta: Earlier in the month, he had said “we’re already together in my books” and I asked him what kind of book that is. He was like we’re already together, but he wants to do the whole dress-up date.

    ‪Mofe‬: Her own love no dey patient.

    Tunta: Get out. We became official the day he met my dad. My dad was like “Are you going out?” That was his way of him asking if we were in a relationship. We said yes. Then later I was like “oya ask me out” because I knew he wanted to. He asked me to be his girlfriend, then I asked him to be my boyfriend. 2FA.

    ‪Mofe‬: I told her I’d think about it, but when I asked she said yes immediately. 

    Tunta: Liar. You said, “I already am”.

    Mofe‬: Even though.

    You’ve been together for a year. Can you tell us what you love most about each other?

    Tunta: There’s a lot o, but let me try to make it short. He’s already pretty great but is always trying to be better. Plus, he’s a good friend, and he just gets me. 

    Mofe: The first thing that drew me to her as an individual is how kind she is. She’s very funny and thoughtful. When I was looking for a new job, she kept sending me vacancy announcements. She just puts you in her mind. I feel very loved by her. I’m her biggest fan and I love her very much. 

    I just wish she didn’t doubt herself. She’s a very confident person but sometimes she starts to question herself and when she gets into that funk, it’s sometimes hard for her to get out of, but she’s taking risks now and trying to get better.

    Tunta: Being with him has made me a better communicator. The fact that he’s easy to talk to and doesn’t make me feel irrational even when I might be definitely helps. There were times before we became official that I thought I was giving him too much information, especially when I was talking about my ex, but I wanted everything out. Let everybody know what they’re entering. 

    I’m mentally ill, and I had a breakdown recently. I was saying absolute rubbish, but this guy didn’t make me feel like I was. 

    I’m happy I replied his DM because he’s a great person to have in your corner, and I’m extra happy I eventually caught up with him on the romance end. I love how we make each other better. 

    Did you still do the non-monogamous relationship?

    Tunta: Yes.

    Mofe‬: I’m polyamorous, and so is she. It was a mutual decision. We set up certain “rules” to guide us in navigating it. I think the effort we made to create a relationship where we could tell each other literally anything has made the open relationship seamless for us.

    Do you have plans to date other people? 

    Tunta: Not at the moment but dynamics can change. We just have to talk about it. 

    Mofe: Exactly. 

    On a scale of 1-10, what’ll you rate your love life? 

    Tunta: 100. 

    Okay, I’m joking. A 9. He’s very beautiful and supportive. He has a positive outlook on life. The one I removed is because we’re not where I want us to be yet, and it’s because of both internal and external factors like finances.

    Mofe: I’ll say 9. There’s always room for improvement. This is the best my love life has been since I’ve known myself. I’m having the time of my life with my favourite person.

    RELATED: Love Life: I Cheated With Him but I Won’t Cheat on Him

  • Love Life: I Cheated With Him, but I Won’t Cheat on Him

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

    Tell me about first impressions 

    Jane: We met in law school in February 2020. We stayed in one of co-ed hostels in Lagos. Jay’s room was across from mine, and I’d befriended his roommate before I actually started talking to him. 

    Jay: In law school, we were put into different groups. A mutual friend of ours was in my group; the babe introduced me to Jane as a “Brostitute” — combination of bro and prostitute. 

    Jane: He might look like a player, but when you take your time to get to know him, you’d see he’s the sweetest person ever. 

    Jay: When I met her, I couldn’t care less about her. 

    Jane: Wow.

    Jay: I came to law school to read, not to be following women up and down. Unfortunately, the pandemic hit and we were all asked to go home for seven months. When we came back, I started talking to two women, but Jane wouldn’t stop calling me Brostitute outside. It wasn’t really good for my reputation. 

    Jane: I’d forgotten his actual name. I saw him at the shopping mall and wanted to say hi. So I had to call him that, and he answered me.

    Jay: What reasonable person calls someone Brostitute in broad daylight? 

    Jane: It was night…

    Jay: Doesn’t change anything. 

    Was that how you started talking? 

    Jay: Not really. As she mentioned earlier, she started talking to my roommate first, and he brought her to the room a couple of times. I didn’t understand what was going on between them, but I’m very interested in other people getting into relationships. I decided to push them together, and I did a good job. Sometimes, I’d lock them in a room in hopes that something happens. Something did happen, but they kept behaving like children, so I was the mediator. It evolved into Jane and I being study partners.

    Why study partners?

    Jay: Well, we technically never studied together, but she had all the past questions for the courses we were taking, and I’d come to law school to pass. I’d go to her room occasionally to share past questions and compare notes. The strange part was when she started locking me in her room with her. 

    Jane: Wait, don’t say it like that. I heard one of his voice notes. He’s a public speaker with a good voice; his voice was very deep and nice. I asked this man talk to me like that in real-time. He did it once, but I wanted more, so I locked him in until he did it again. There was nothing romantic about it. 

    Jay: Mind you, she was already dating a new guy while she was locking me inside rooms and demanding for me to speak. Because I’m a very God-fearing and respectful guy, I didn’t pursue anything with her and started talking to another girl. But Jane was ruining another woman’s chances of being with me. Whenever the girl came over, Jane would suddenly make herself available to scare her away. 

    Jane: I wasn’t scaring anybody away o. After our final exams, while everyone else was packing and getting ready to leave, we waited till the last day to pack. Since we were already friends, we spent a lot of time together. One day, the girl he was talking to came to the room while I was on his bed and we were watching TikToks together. When she saw us, she turned and left. Honestly, I tried to feel bad for her, but I couldn’t. 

    Jay: Jane and I got a lot closer after the exams ended in March 2021. We had nothing else to do, but instead of this babe to go and meet the man she was dating, she was following me everywhere. I really pity the guy. 

    Jane: As if you were not flirting with me. When your other friend came to hang out with us, he asked us at three different points if he should leave the room for us because the tension was a lot. 

    When did you both act on this tension? 

    Jay: I think the first time was when she asked me to teach her how to choke people in the bedroom.

    Jane: No, no. It was self-defence. I was in his room, we were talking when I mentioned I was a good fighter. To prove it, I tried to choke him. He told me I wasn’t doing it right and got on top of me to show me how. It was close contact, but there was nothing sexual there for me.

    Jay: I was trying to understand her motives because while we were in this room, instead of staying on different beds, she kept staying on the same bed with me. The choking for me was to figure out how far she was willing to let me go in terms of touching her. 

    Jane: When I’m comfortable with someone, I express it through physical touch. There was nothing romantic or sexual about it for me. I was just letting him touch me. 

    However, on the last day of law school, there was a bit of sexual tension between us. Jay and I were cuddled up, then he said, “Should we make out or play a game?”

    Jay: I’d gotten frustrated with all the mixed signals. 

    Apparently, she wanted to make out with me, but she chose playing a game instead. After playing the game, she asked me if we should address the sexual tension. 

    Jane: I was trying to downplay how I was feeling but I was curious and wanted to shut him up. While he was talking and talking, I grabbed his face and kissed him. 

    But did you guys take it further? 

    Jay: Yes, but everything came to a grinding halt when I went to her place. Jane didn’t live in Lagos, but after law school, she got an apartment to stay for a while and invited me to stay with her. The first day I came around, her boyfriend called and asked to come over. She told him no, that she had a guest. 

    Jane: But were you not a guest?

    Jay: While I was there, she was trying everything within her power to get me to break and make a pass towards her.

    Jane: It’s not that deep.

    Jay: First day I came to see her she wanted us to watch American Pie 1 and 2. Who does that? 

    Jane: You hadn’t seen it before. I was doing you a service. 

    Jay: And you barely wore any clothes.

    Jane: It was my room; I was being comfortable. 

    Jay: And you asked that we play a game you made up, where you can do anything to me but I can’t touch you in return. 

    Jane: Jailer. It’s a game I like. I made him promise he won’t try to do anything with me.

    Jay: Because she didn’t trust herself. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Found Our Way Back to Each Other After 35 Years

    Did you keep the promise?

    Jay: Yes, but things changed when we had to go to Abuja to get called to bar. Since I didn’t do my hoe phase in law school, I decided to do it in Abuja. With clearance and the actual Call to Bar ceremony, we had to be in Abuja for about a week. 

    So, I went around asking my female friends if they wanted to stay with me through that period. I’d asked Jane as a joke, and she turned me down, but a week to the thing, she called to change her mind and I agreed. 

    Jane: He planned on keeping his own end of the promise, but I’d already forgotten about it. 

    Jay: The bed in our hotel room was small, and this woman had already changed into boxers and a tank top, so my strength was being tested heavily. On the first night, nothing happened because I kept to my own. The second night, I kept to myself again. She even wrestled me to the ground. I had to remind her of the promise. 

    Then on the third day, she told me to forget the promise and just see how things went. 

    And how did things go?

    Jay: Well, after the Call to Bar ceremony, she asked if I wanted to make it serious. I agreed, but I was half-and-half because she was still dating this other guy. Two weeks after we started dating, she told me she broke up with the other guy. 

    Why did you break up with the other guy? 

    Jane: He’d gone to Canada and I didn’t see the point in pursuing an already failed relationship with someone that’s not even in the same country with me. 

    I never told him that we were breaking up because I cheated. When he found out I was dating Jay, he thought it was one of those rebound situations.

    Are you scared history might repeat itself? 

    Jane: Yes, and so is everyone we tell the story of how we met to. All his friends think there’s a large possibility I’d do the same thing to him. But I knew deep down that the relationship with my ex wouldn’t last because we started dating during the pandemic when he’d already processed all his papers to travel. I’m not big on relationships so it’s not like I was with Jay because I was lonely in law school or anything. I have genuine feelings for him. 

    For a long time, I thought the same way our friends did, that I might cheat on him too. But I’d never do anything to hurt his feelings. 

    Even with the less-than-ideal foundation, I look back at what we have and I smile. I love him. 

    Jay: I’ve told her she has my permission to cheat on me. When she comes back, she should tell me about it, then we’d stop dating and start being best friends. 

    Jane: He’s a toxic guy, don’t mind him. 

    Tell me things you love about each other

    Jay: She’s always doing the most. It’s rare for a lady to spend so much of her money on you. She still spends my own money, but she’s always ready to give me something too. 

    When I was trying to work my NYSC to Lagos state, she wanted to financially contribute even though we didn’t know if what we were paying for would work. My birthday is in a couple of days, and I’ve been begging her not to spend anything on me, but she’s probably already spent more than my entire salary on gifts. 

    Jane: I have.

    Jay: Wonderful. She’s amazing. My favourite gifts from her are my Samsung Galaxy buds and glasses (because I’m constantly staring at my screen). She also got me a painting of myself. My parents love it so much, it’s hanging in their house. 

    Jane: I love buying him gifts. His ex never really did that for him, and I like that I have an opportunity to take care of him like that. I’m very attracted to his mind. He’s so intelligent, and he takes care of me. I have particular ways I like to eat food, so he orders me food I can eat. 

    What’s the end game for both of you?

    Jane: That’s a very stressful question for me, and I don’t know how to answer it. 

    He’s from Kogi, and his parents love me, but I’m Igbo. His parents are not fans of Igbo people. They don’t say it to my face, but they tell him and he tells me. My dad could be convinced, but my mum was scared when I told her he’s from Kogi state. She didn’t like the idea of me dating from that part of Nigeria. Now, she asks about him just to show she cares. 

    We’re just basking in our love and taking one step at a time. We don’t see ourselves breaking up any time soon. 

    Jay: I don’t like thinking too far into the future because there are so many uncertainties. In this japa economy, it’s very unlikely Jane will be in Nigeria for long because she’s too brilliant for the trajectory this country is moving towards. My parents, on the other hand, aren’t too keen on sending another child out of the country because the last one they sent, they never heard from him again. 

    But rather than endangering the entire relationship based on these variables, we’re choosing to just enjoy each other’s company. 

    On a scale of 1-10, what’ll you rate your love life? 

    Jane: 8. There are uncertainties, but we’re in a good place. 


    Jay: Before we did this interview, we planned an answer to this question. We planned to say 5. 

    Jane: I’m sorry, I forgot.

    Jay: Our relationship didn’t start on the best note, and there are certain sides of us that aren’t compatible. So it was supposed to be my five and her five to make it whole, but she didn’t stick to that. 

    Now, I’ll give it a 7. We need God’s grace and time. I don’t think the relationship can be considered a 10 because it hasn’t lasted long enough. It needs to weather the storms and be used as a model for other people’s relationships. Till we get there, we’re at a 7. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I Reported Her to Our Manager, Now We’re Married

  • Love Life Guide: How to Secure a Forever Valentine

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

    Valentine after Valentine, you find yourself struggling to get the person in your life to stick around. Do those who get back-to-back money towers have two heads? They don’t (We’ve checked). So your story can change.

    Here are some ways to get someone to spend several Valentine’s Days with you, tried and trusted by our Love Life couples. 

    Love Life: I Went to Her House Every Day for a Year 

    As long as whoever you want to see is comfortable with it, then you should definitely go to their house every day for one year. It’s just that, the people who did this didn’t have phones, but now, we do. Still, a gesture is a gesture.

    Love Life: I Moved to Be Closer to Her 

    Drop whatever you’re doing and move to your lover’s street. That way, you get to spend every waking hour together and can be doing Valentine left and right. Be warned that this couple had already been dating for two years before they pulled this stunt. 

    Love Life: We Finally Met Up Because of Christmas Chicken 

    Step 1: Buy Christmas chicken. Step 2: Post that you want to sell it, on your WhatsApp status. Step 3: Meet up with the person who offers to buy the chicken. Step 4: Fall in love and live happily ever after. It’s almost too easy.  

    Love Life: We Became Lovers by Accident

    Easiest way to get a forever Valentine is by accident. Send a bunch of messages to the person who’s entering your eye, but make sure one of those messages is a dating proposal.  Pray they mistakenly say yes. 

    Love Life: He Cooks, I Eat. We’re a Complete Package 

    If you can’t cook, find someone who can. If you can cook, find someone who loves to eat. You too deserve a missing rib. 

    Love Life: “We Are Married but He Needs to Propose” 

    In most marriage stories, there’s a proposal. But not for Ada and Kingsley. They had sex one day and Kingsley decided he would meet her parents. At the meeting, the parents started dropping dates for introductions. A couple of months later and they’re married. Straight to the point with no time to waste. That’s how you get a forever Valentine. 

    Love Life: “We Found Love in a Hopeless Place” 

    What we learnt from this Love Life story is more people should sit inside empty, dry gutters. The love of your life might just be tempted to join you inside. 

    Love Life: We Started Our Relationship With a Lot of Lies 

    When starting your relationship, lie to everyone, especially your parents. Never lie to the person you’re with though. Or that’s where the problem will start. 

    Love Life: We Were Best Friends in Secondary School But Now We’re Both Married 

    If you had a best friend when you were in secondary school, we advise you start looking for them now. If you didn’t have a best friend, you may have to go back in time to get one. That way, you’ll have someone you can do friends-to-lovers with. 

    Love Life: We’re Roommates Who Fell in Love

    Your decision to live alone could be what’s standing between you and getting a forever Valentine. Your destiny might be to fall in love with your roommate, but you wouldn’t know for sure because you’ve decided to live alone. Move in with someone today.

    Brought to you by LOVE LIFE

  • 10 of the Sappiest Love Life Stories You’ll Ever Read

    What’s better than one cute love life story? Ten sappy ones. We’ve compiled a list we know will satisfy the cravings of your inner romantic. 

    Love Life: We Found Our Way Back to Each Other After 35 Years

    They found each other when they were teenagers but parted ways only to reunite decades later. Not only do they show you can find love in old age, but they also managed to reignite a love from many years ago. I guess if it’s meant to be, it’ll find its way back to you no matter how long it takes, because it’s yours.

    Love Life: 26 Years and We Have no Regrets

    People hardly ever mention a farm when listing the cutest places to meet the person they’ll spend the rest of their life with. Maybe it’s why they’re single? Because this farm meeting led to a 26-year (and counting) marriage. The biggest problem they faced? Navigating a long-distance relationship at a time when phones weren’t a thing. 

    Love Life: I Moved to Be Closer to Her

    Not everyone is lucky enough to find their soulmate at a young age. That’s why when 22-year-old Lade needed a new place to stay, moving close to her girlfriend was the only sensible option. Now, they get to spend as much time as they want together while her girlfriend is with her family. A win for all. 

    Love Life: We Found Out We Have Chemistry in a Chemistry Lab

    The doctors of tomorrow are finding love during chemistry class. But we’ll let it slide because of how cute they are. From keeping seats for each other in class to reserving space in each other’s hearts, this story highlights the beauty of a young love that happens while studying a demanding course. 

    Love Life: We Bonded Over Our Love for Music

    What do a songwriter and musician have in common? If you said “music”, you’re right. Taiwo and Abisola started a relationship on the foundation of shared love for music. They go to concerts together and introduce each other to new sounds and artistes, finding new ways to combine their love for each other with their love for music. 

    Love Life: We’d Been Committed to Each Other Long Before We Started Dating

    Sometimes, all it takes is one person to make you realise you don’t want anybody else. As soon as Uyai and Ayo met, they knew they didn’t want to add more people to the equation. Months before they even started dating, they’d made a promise to themselves and the moon (which, for some reason, got involved in this). 

    Love Life: He Wouldn’t Go to London Without Me

    One thing about loving intentionally is including them in your life plans. Michael* took it one step further by only taking jobs that’d allow for his girlfriend to leave the country with him. Funny what a “friends with benefits” situation can lead to. 

    Love Life: It Took Us 9 Years to Fall in Love 

    There’s slow-burn friends-to-lovers romance, and then, there’s whatever happened to Esther and Chika. After meeting each other in church at the age of 18, Esther didn’t realise she’d fallen in love with Chika until nine years after the friendship began. Unfortunately, he didn’t immediately feel the same way. A classic tale of she fell first, but he fell harder. Hits you in the feels every time. 

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

    Picture this: A good church-loving girl meets a bad cultist boy. They fall in love and he gives up his bad ways for her. Now, they want to build a family together, but she can’t conceive. At that point, all they had was each other. So even when people tried to mock them for not having a child, they got through it together. Pretty cute. 

    Love Life: I Reported Her to Our Manager, Now We’re Married

    We all love a good office romance, but what about one where they only got closer because he reported her to their boss? They also had to navigate a father who didn’t like him and threatened to get him arrested. Not just that, there were two failed wedding proposals, but their love conquered all.

    Brought to you by LOVE LIFE

  • QUIZ: Which Tems Lyric Sums Up Your Love Life?

    What does your love life look like right now? Let Tems tell you

    Brought to you by LOVE LIFE
  • Love Life: I Reported Her to Our Manager, Now We’re Married

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

    The subjects of this Love Life are Blessing* and Tunde* who are both 30. They tell us about meeting through work, two failed proposal attempts and how Tunde pulled what he considers the “greatest scam of all time” by making sure they got married on their shared birthday.

    Did you know you had the same birthday before you met?  

    Blessing: Well, I did. 

    Tunde: Because she was stalking me.

    Blessing: I was doing my job. On December 31st, 2018, my line manager told me to review the CV of a guy who came highly recommended. His birthday was on his CV, and it was the same as mine. So I checked his name on social media to see what he looked like. In his profile picture, he was wearing a waistcoat, looking like a good boy. 

    Tunde: I don’t even own a waistcoat. What are you saying?

    Blessing: I even forgot about it until February 2019 when he started working in the office. I remember the first day I saw him. He was wearing a blue shirt with grey pants, and I said to myself, “Who is this brother?” He looked like such a church boy. I smiled at him, and we had a chat. 

    Tunde: Abi, you fell in love at first sight? 

    Blessing: Lai lai. I did not at all. 

    Tunde: You won’t sweeten this story to make your life great? Anyways, now that you’ve said your own, let me say my own version. 

    Blessing: My version is the truth, and all you need to know. 

    Tunde: When you were talking, I didn’t interrupt you. So let me say my own o. 

    Oya, Tunde, speak your truth

    Tunde: They gave her my CV, and she was blown away so she decided to check me out online. When she saw I was a fine boy, she knew she had to work with me. That’s when she started recommending me to the manager. 

    Blessing: That’s a very big lie. 

    Tunde: But our coworker said you fought for me to join the team.

    Blessing: Your CV was impressive, and I did look for you on social media, but only because of the birthday thing. I didn’t give a shit if they hired you or not. I just needed to get the work done. 

    Tunde: We ended up working in the same team and reported to the same manager. Our manager told me you fought for me. 

    Blessing: You won’t talk about how you saw my big bumbum and became confused?

    Tunde: Who told you that one?
    Blessing: Your friends did. 

    Tunde: I remember seeing her for the first time in the office, dark-skinned with her big bum and tiny waist. I was like wow. When I got back home, I had to tell my friends the women in my new office had yansh. 

    What was working together like? 

    Blessing: We sat together at work, and I like to believe we were friendly towards each other. 

    Tunde: In the office, she’d act as if she cares, but when I travel to the North for work, she’d never text to check in on me. I even had a word with our manager about working in a team of people who don’t care about each other. Blessing never called to ask how my trip went even though she knew I had to travel to all these dangerous places. 

    It’s giving JSS 2. Why did you report her to the manager?

    Blessing: LMAO. He wanted me to talk to him, but instead of meeting me as a man, he went to report me to “Big Uncle” manager. 

    Tunde: It’s not like I reported her. I had a review of culture meeting with the manager in April. Because I typically travelled alone — the company couldn’t afford to send more people — I felt like the team didn’t really have my back. Hers was even more hurtful because we sat together in the office, and she was always tickling me. Then when I travelled, she wouldn’t even bother to find out if I was dead or alive. 

    Blessing: Sorry nau.

    Tunde: Can you imagine. Four years later is when you’re apologising. 

    Blessing: We weren’t that close then. He was a great seatmate, I won’t lie, but I just didn’t care so much. 

    How did you progress to being friends? 

    Blessing: After the manager told me what Tunde said, I started checking up on him. We worked more closely together, and he was fun.

    Tunde: And funny. I’m a funny guy. 

    Blessing: Somewhat funny. He thinks he’s very funny.

    Tunde: Not somewhat. No “I think”.

    Blessing: He’s a gbef, and it’s his gbefness that makes me laugh.

    Tunde: That’s being funny. Do you laugh? Exactly. The thing is that because I’m a funny and fun guy, she couldn’t get enough. She’d call me around 6 a.m. to find out if I was going to the office. 

    Blessing: That was later when I started liking your big head. Nonsense.

    Tunde: Same thing. 

    Blessing: Please, let’s stick to the questions. 

    And you both realised it was more than friendship when? 

    Blessing: After we’d built a solid foundation of friendship in June. We searched for places together while he was getting an apartment. We even used to visit each other on some weekends. It was easy for us to bond beyond the office environment. We also used to come to the office together with one of our colleagues. The three of us would meet at a designated point, so we were in each other’s faces a lot. I started to get these mosquito feeling in my stomach whenever I got a text from him or saw his face.

    Tunde: It’s me that’s mosquito feeling? 

    Blessing: Not you; the feelings. 

    Tunde: What happened to butterflies? Why mosquito? 

    Blessing: It started as mosquitos then moved to butterflies. Now, it’s elephants in my tummy. 

    Tunde: It’s not even cute animals you’re mentioning. 

    The feeling solidified in August 2019 when she started having issues with a lecturer we can’t really talk about. I didn’t want to see her hurt, so it really hit me that I wanted to take care of her. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Our Friendship Means More to Us Than Our Love

    When did you decide to do something about the mosquitoes in your tummy? 

    Blessing: I had a boyfriend at the time. We started dating a couple of days before Tunde joined the company, but along the line, we started having issues. The guy and I broke up in October 2019, then Tunde and I started having relationship-type conversations. 

    Tunde: After she broke up with her boyfriend, she started seeking for me. 

    Blessing: Oh God. 

    Tunde: One Saturday in November, I went to see her, and as I was about to leave, I just started gazing at her. 

    Blessing: I feel like if anyone had carried scissors to cut that tension, the scissors would’ve broken. 

    Tunde: I wanted to kiss her, but I didn’t want to do it first because I’m a bad guy. 

    Blessing: So I did it. 

    Tunde: She told me to come back and kissed me. I knew I would die there. We became kissing coworkers, or co-kissers, if you will. 

    Blessing: He’d come to the office and there’d be tension. We both knew if it weren’t an office, we’d tear each other apart. But we’re great work partners, so we put all our emotions aside to make sure we got work done. 

    Tunde: I want to believe the tension helped us with work. We’d want to finish as quickly as possible so we could focus on other matters. I asked her out twice, but she turned me down because she needed time to think after just coming out of a relationship. But when our office closed for the year on December 19, she came over to my place and we spent Detty December together. On the 29th, I asked her for the third time to go out with me. We were in bed together; she said yes. 

    Blessing: Changed my mind because Detty December made me realise I enjoyed spending so much time with him.

    Didn’t your office have a no-dating policy? 

    Tunde: If anything, our office encouraged it. Everybody dated everybody there. 

    Blessing: It even produced three married couples.

    Tunde: Twice, someone introduced a coworker to their friend or family member, and they got married. 

    Company or dating site? God, abeg 

    Blessing: Dating and working together was great because we got to spend a lot of time together. 

    Tunde: In January 2020, she returned to her place, but honestly, she spent more time at mine than hers. 

    In February, COVID-19 happened, and we spent the lockdown together at my house. I stayed in an estate in GRA at the time and we had 24/7 electricity. Her place in Somolu didn’t, so it made sense for her to work from my house. The first couple of weeks were really good. We didn’t have any problems, and it stayed that way until we found out her dad didn’t like me. Her parents were really attached to her ex-boyfriend. They thought he was a responsible guy who’d eventually marry their daughter. 

    Blessing: Then we broke up for no actual reason. And they thought Tunde was this bad boy who was turning my head. 

    Tunde: Her dad reached out to her in late March to find out how she was doing. She said she was spending the lockdown at home, but he found out his unmarried daughter was living with the same guy he already thought  was turning his daughter’s brain. That’s when all hell broke loose. He’s an influential man, so he started threatening to reach out to some top police officers. That’s how our life went from peace and quiet to chaos and confusion. 

    I was so scared, I had to call my dad and tell him about the girlfriend he didn’t know about. He told me I had to return Blessing to her place so I can get her father’s blessing for the relationship. But it was in the thick of the lockdown, so we had to walk all the way from Ogudu to Bariga before we could see a car to take us to Somolu. 

    Even Fitfam people don’t do like that 

    Blessing: When he dropped me off at my place, I had to let my parents know I was back so they could stop all the police talk. But I didn’t want to let him go, so he stayed with me for about a week. 

    Tunde: I loved he,r and she was really unhappy. I didn’t want to just leave her like that. 

    Blessing: When he left, he stayed alone for like a week before I went back to his place. 

    Does that mean you resolved the problem with Blessing’s dad? 

    Blessing: Not really. There was no light or water in my place, and I needed both to work. My parents live in Edo state, so it’s not like I could go there. They just weren’t seeing that the most sensible decision was to stay in his place and work from there. 

    Since they didn’t agree to see it that way, I just went back to his place and lied to them that I was still at mine. There was no way I’d endure the lockdown period without light, water and my man. We lived together for a couple of months till he had to move from the mainland to the island for his MBA. 

    Tunde: I resigned from the company to do my MBA in January 2021. It was a residency program, so I had to leave her at home and move. It was the first time we had to go long periods without seeing each other. So it was catastrophic initially. She was home alone while I was in school doing this high-intensity programme that sometimes had me studying until 3 a.m. I’ll be too tired to speak to her on the phone, and she couldn’t come visit, so we barely spoke. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Make it Work Despite the Distance

    How did you get through it? 

    Tunde: This is the part that made me believe our love was meant to be. A couple of weeks after I started the program, she got a job in an office really close to my postgraduate school. Sometimes, when they gave us lunch in school, I’d take some to her. But that wasn’t enough; we had to get creative. 

    Blessing: I started sneaking into his room sometimes.

    Ah? How? 

    Tunde: There were loopholes in the school’s rules, and we exploited that. I won’t go into specifics because I don’t want to give the current students expo. 

    Blessing: I’d sneak from his room to work and then slip back into his room. It was adorable. 

    Towards the end of 2020, he stylishly asked what I thought of getting married. I freaked out about it because I thought it was too soon. He wanted to meet my parents, and luckily for us, my younger sister was getting married to one of his best friends. They did their introduction in the village and he was part of the wedding party, so he used it as an opportunity to meet my dad. 

    Tunde: I always knew her dad would like me. The problem was just that he didn’t know me. So before I went to their place in Edo state to see him face-to-face, I wanted to have a conversation with him over the phone to tell him my mind. I told him I was a responsible man, doing my MBA, and was interested in marrying his daughter. After that conversation, we didn’t speak again until her sister’s introduction in May.

    How did the meeting go?

    Tunde: Do you want to tell them how scared you were? 

    Blessing: I was shaking. My parents can be quite strict, so I didn’t know what to expect. But he came with his friends, and it went well. He became their sweetheart, although it took my mum a bit longer to warm up to him. She was extremely careful because she didn’t want me to go into the wrong hands. It took Tunde, my dad, sisters and even me talking to my mum for her to warm up to him. Now, they’re besties. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I’m Scared to Tell My Parents About Him

    Let’s talk about the marriage proposal

    Tunde: I proposed a few weeks before the official introduction between our two families in August. The proposal was funny because I had to change the venue a couple of times. 

    The first proposal was to happen at the beach in July. I’d planned with my colleagues to use them as a decoy. I’d tell her my office was having a “bring your partner” beach event. That way, she’d have to dress up and gbam! Proposal. Blessing and I stayed in a small studio apartment, and we never hide things from each other. We take all our calls on speaker, and we know each other’s passwords. With my colleagues in on it, they’d know to slip the plan in so it would seem legit. 

    Unfortunately, the Saturday I’d planned to propose, I couldn’t get the logistics right, so I moved it to the next Saturday. However, I didn’t tell my colleagues. When they called during the week, they started asking how the proposal went. She was right there so the proposal couldn’t happen again. 

    Oya, proposal number two 

    Tunde: I was planning to propose to her during our annual office retreat. You were allowed to bring your partner and even kids for the week-long retreat. It was at a really nice hotel, and the aesthetics would’ve been perfect for a proposal. Unfortunately, our Chief of Staff changed the rules and said she couldn’t come because I hadn’t proposed yet. I couldn’t tell her I planned on proposing there because I’d just joined the company and didn’t want it to be weird. 

    The date for our introduction was getting closer, and I wanted to propose before then. But I knew it would be difficult to get her to dress up without looking for a ridiculous excuse, so I had to do the ridiculous. I reached out to a not-so-close friend of mine and got him to invite us to a fake event. Then, I told my neighbours I wanted to propose to her in their apartment. They were in love with the idea. They left their apartment for us so I could get it all set up. I called my friend’s sister to help me out with balloons and everything. 

    While all of this planning was going on, Blessing and I were arguing. Why? Because I kept having to take my calls outside so she couldn’t hear what was going on. While she was accusing me of talking to other women, I was planning her proposal. 

    LMAO

    Tunde: I got a lot of our friends and family involved. On the day of the “dinner” my friend invited us to, I told my neighbours to call me and ask me to come over. They’re a married couple with a two-year-old and were like a big brother and sister to us. So them calling one or both of us over wasn’t new. 

    When I got to the apartment, I called to tell her it was both of us they wanted to see, and she should get ready so we could go from there straight to the “event”. When she got there, I was on my knees with all our friends around and music playing. 

    Blessing: And I laughed so much. When my younger sister got proposed to, she laughed as well, and I was wondering what was wrong with her. It got to my turn, and there I was. Seeing him in his turtleneck, down on one knee with all the balloons, it just looked really funny. I’m not sure I heard anything he said. I just said yes, and he put the ring on my finger. 

    Did anything change once you got engaged? 

    Blessing: Not really. We still remained the cool and adventurous couple.

    Tunde: Maybe our mentality changed. We had to start saving for a house and planning a wedding, so we had all those things at the back of our mind. 

    What was the wedding planning like? 

    Blessing: It was actually cool, not as hectic as I thought it would be. Since my sister got married in August, we had a template to work with. 

    Tunde: We did elevate the template though because our wedding was the bomb. 

    Birthday wedding? 

    Tunde: Look, let me tell you. I’ve pulled the greatest scam in history. Now, instead of celebrating our birthday and anniversary separately, I can lump it together and give one gift. People will read about me. Children will write stories about me. I’m making history.

    Blessing: It’s not like I objected to the idea of getting married on our birthday. Plus, he’s making all this mouth about not buying gifts, but this man is a liar. Since we entered February 2023, he’s been buying me gifts every day. 

    We got married on our birthday because he just thought it was adorable. Now, it’s a story he tells everyone once they mistakenly ask. It doesn’t help that we have the same loc hairstyle. When people see us, they mistake us for siblings then he launches into the “born on the same day and married on the same day” speech. 

    What’s married life like? 

    Blessing: We’re a lot more conscious about building long-term wealth, not just for both of us, but our families are involved now. 

    Tunde: When you get married, you think you’re getting married to one person, but it’s actually a village. You now have to consider family members when doing certain things. We kept trying to figure things out individually, so we argued a lot at first. Like three months in, we realised how important talking to each other about things is. We’d sit up in the middle of the night and cry about stuff. 

    Something else that’s helped our relationship over time is the foundation of friendship. I may be upset with Blessing my babe, but Blessing my friend and I will sit down and talk. 

    On a scale of 1-10, what’ll you rate your love life? 

    Blessing: I’ll rate it a 9. The 1 is because of the possibility of us being more than this. There’s a lot of room for improvement. 

    Tunde: I disagree for the same reasons. Since she said there’s a lot of room for improvement, I’ll rate it a 1. Shebi it’s you that’s looking for room? The 1 means there’s plenty of room for you. 

    Blessing: That room you’re talking about, it’s like you’ll go and collect it outside o, because I don’t understand. 

    Tunde: But for real, I’ll say a 9 as well. We don’t fight, and it’s not because we don’t have growing tension about things, it’s just that we quickly communicate it. It’s been butterflies since we started dating. I feel pretty good about us. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I Found the Love of My Life on Tinder

  • Love Life: I Found the Love of My Life on Tinder

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

    The subjects of this week’s Love Life are Fegor (21) and Michael (26). They talk about meeting on Tinder, not having a real first date and moving in together one month after they started dating. 

    So, Tinder? 

    Michael: Yeah, in December 2021. I swiped right because of her radiant beauty honestly. She has one of those contagious smiles that light up a room. She has incredible skin and beautiful almond eyes. I couldn’t wait to see if she would swipe back.

    Fegor: On dating apps, I usually swipe right because I think the person is attractive. He has a pretty face and had a blunt in one of his pictures, so that was it for me. 

    Michael: When I saw we’d matched, I was excited af. I sent her a message letting her know how much I couldn’t wait to see her smile again. Mind you, this was all at like 4.a.m. Chicago time, and Ii had work at 6.a.m. the next morning, but I couldn’t wait to talk to her. Thankfully, I work remotely, so I just had to find the strength to roll out of bed two hours later.

    Fegor: I wasn’t surprised about the match because men on Tinder are easy, but the text about seeing me smile was really cute. That’s why about two days later, we moved to Instagram. 

    Right off the bat, with the text he sent and how into the conversation I was, I knew I wanted to meet up with him in person. However, it was Christmas break and I was in a different state from him. We talked every day until I returned to Chicago. When I started falling asleep to him on FaceTime, I knew I was in trouble.

    FaceTime is how they get you

    Fegor: Really. It’s what helped me realise I have feelings for him. Whenever I match with people on Tinder, I tell them I live in Chicago when I really don’t. I don’t stay too far away, but I just lie to them. With him though, I wanted to make concrete plans to hang out with him, so I had to come clean. 

    Interesting. So what was it like when you eventually hung out? 

    Fegor: I’m still lowkey vexing for him because of that day. I was bamboozled. He didn’t take me on a real first date. He just picked me up from my friend’s apartment, took me to a smoke store to get some stuff, then to his apartment. The moment we got there, he literally carried me into his room. We watched some shows, smoked, talked and had sex the whole night. I came on Thursday and was meant to leave the next morning, but I ended up staying with him till Sunday when I had to go to school. 

    Michael: I swear there was no bamboozling going on. A week or two prior to meeting her, I’d arranged a date with another woman who was interested in grabbing a drink. The night of the date came and she stood me up. It was my first time trying to plan an actual date since I broke up with my ex of 3+ years, and that really impacted how I felt about it at the moment. I guess it just put a really bad taste in my mouth about planning first dates.

    I look back at it and think about how dumb that was. I’m spending the rest of the relationship trying to make it up to her. 

    So you both knew you had feelings for each other? 

    Michael: Yes, but she confessed it first when we were on molly together later in January. 

    I was so happy when she said it because I’d been feeling the same way. So I was like, “Wait, what you say?” She got shy and tried to deny saying it, but I asked her to say it again, and she did. My smile and eyes grew wider and then I told her I loved her too.

    Fegor: That’s cap. It wasn’t when I was on molly. That time, I was just telling him how no one had ever made me feel safe and how I think this is what love feels like. I told him I loved him on the Sunday morning when I was about to leave Chicago the first time we hung out. We used to say, “I’m falling for you” instead of “I love you” because we didn’t want to use that word. But it slipped out then he told me to say it again and I did. He said it back to me after he made me repeat myself. Since then, we’ve been saying it to each other like 1000 times a day. 

    RELATED: Love Life: It Felt Natural to Call Each Other Boyfriend/Girlfriend

    When did y’all start dating?

    Michael: I asked her about a month after we first met. I straight up told her I really liked and enjoyed being with her, and I wanted to make it official. She actually put me on ice and told me to ask again later because she wasn’t sure she was ready to get into another relationship yet.

    A couple of months go with us going on dates and seeing each other, then around April, I could tell she was comfortable with how we stood and how we clicked. I set up a cute picnic by an arboretum and pond, gave her a promise ring and asked her if she was ready.

    Fegor: I feel like when he first asked me out I was really scared. I’d just gotten out of a toxic relationship like a month or two before we met, so I thought it’d be stupid to have another boyfriend so soon. Plus, I was meant to be on a healing journey. But the second time, I was like I really love this guy. It’s not his fault my last bf was an “ain’t shit” guy. Plus, the way he did it was really cute with the flowers and picnic and promise ring. 

    I wanted and was ready to be his girl officially. I knew he loved me by the way he talked, listened and played with me; the way he made time for me, paid for me to get things done and even helped me scam my plug. He used to leave his high rise to come to my ratchet ass rural town and sleep in my dorm room as just so he could spend time with me. He took time off work so he could stay and watch Euphoria together one Sunday night. Everything was just so perfect. I couldn’t say no. 

    My chest. What’s the relationship like now? 

    Fegor: A month after we started dating, we moved in together. It happened in May 2022, after I graduated from college. He offered and I didn’t have better options. I was scared though because people are always like, “Oh. Don’t move in with your partner.” When I stayed with my ex for a month one summer, he treated me so badly and used to kick me out. Luckily, I love living with Michael.

    The original plan was to move out of his place after I got a job, but neither of us want that anymore. I tell him all the time that his/our apartment is the safest place I’ve lived in my whole life. I love that I get to come home to him everyday, and we cuddle, fuck, smoke and binge-watch shows together. We eat, shower, take baths and host friends together. I prefer this to living alone or having roommates. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I Moved to Be Closer to Her

    So you have no issues at all? 

    Michael: For me, I honestly don’t have any issues with the living situation. 

    Fegor: Sometimes, we have roommate issues. He’s really hairy, so his hair is always allover the bathroom and that annoys me, but he cleans it up more now. I also don’t like when he says he’ll do something, like vacuum the carpet or hang up something, then he doesn’t do it. 

    And there are some codependency things that creep up. Like we always eat dinner together, so sometimes, even if I’m really hungry and he isn’t home yet, I actually starve and wait for him.

    How do y’all handle these issues? 

    Fegor: I think one of my favorite things about us is how we communicate. Before him, I didn’t know you could communicate issues without shouting, fighting or crying.

    For his hair, I just told him about it. Sometimes, I still see hair in the tub, sink or on the floor. I either clean it because it’s not that deep and he cleans after me too, or when I’m not in the mood, I tell him to do it. I actually don’t like repeating myself, so I don’t pester him except we’re having visitors and I need to make the apartment look nice. He’s honestly so nice to me and always wants to make me happy so he’d apologise and do it. 

    As for eating, I actually don’t mind waiting. I like eating and watching a show or movie with him, so I wait. But if I’m really hungry, and he’s not back when he said he’d be, I’d eat.

    What does the future look like for both of you? 

    Fegor: I hope we’re both grown in our careers so we can invest in small side hustles together. I also want to travel the world with him. 

    I always have so much fun when we’re together. One of my favourite memories with him is going to the beach together in June 2022. He didn’t want to get in the water so I basically carried him and spun him around in it and he did the same to me too. It was just really really nice. 

    We don’t know how we feel about kids, but he’s husband material so I’d like to marry him eventually. We do have a puppy, and if we get bored we’d probably get another one.

    Michael: I’ll say this is spot on. 

    Rate your love life on a scale of 1-10 

    Fegor: 10. I’m really happy and at peace. Everything is blissful, and I’m very satisfied. 

    Michael: I’ll give it a 20/10. I haven’t felt this happy and secure in a relationship ever. The feeling is unmatched. We share common goals about what we want our relationship to be and look like. I also feel like we communicate in such a respectful way and we make serious efforts to understand and meet each other’s needs. We know each other’s love languages so well and our sex life is amazing.

     RELATED: Love Life: I Asked Her to Marry Me Before We Started Dating

  • Love Life: I Asked Her to Marry Me Before We Started Dating 

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

    The subjects of this week’s Love Life, Musa* (61) and Abike* (52), are pastors who’ve been married for 24 years. They discuss being drawn to each other because of their service to the church and how he proposed before they even started dating. 

    How did you two meet?

    Abike: We met in church. I joined in 1993, and he joined two years later. 

    Musa: She was a choir mistress at the time. I joined as a Sunday school teacher and interpreter for the church founder. We were both evangelists and were often paired for evangelical missions. 

    She was still a student when I joined, but I was done with school. Her school was in a different state, so we only saw each other when she came back for long holidays. 

    What made you decide to start dating? 

    Musa:  When I realised I was drawn to her, I decided to ask our pastor and his wife to join us in prayer. We didn’t start dating until I got the go-ahead from our pastor.

    We’ve been taught that when you pray for a life partner, God gives you a reading or shows you the person. You don’t meet the person directly. There’s a Yoruba adage that says, “What an elder sees while seated, the young ones cannot see even if they climbed a two-storey building”.

    After the prayer, the pastor and his wife told me I could propose to her. When I did, she asked for some time to pray about it. 

    Abike: Although I was done with school, I was worried about our financial situation because the money we were earning wasn’t a lot. But when I prayed about it, God led me to Psalm 37:19, and I got my confirmation. 

    Musa: A couple of weeks later, I asked her if she’s made a decision, she told me yes. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I Went to Her House Every Day for a Whole Year

    So you proposed marriage from the jump? 

    Musa: Yes. After I proposed, we dated for over a year before we got married in 1999. We were both very advanced in age. She was 29, and I was 37, so there was no need to waste time. Plus, we’re both committed to the work of God. I knew I couldn’t pursue anything with someone who isn’t as dedicated to God’s work as I am. 

    Our spiritual life was the major factor that really drew us together. The combined love for things of the kingdom was too strong to ignore. 

    Abike: He handled the things of God with a certain passion that really made me interested in him. 

    Musa: Our spiritual parents had a hand in our relationship from the very beginning. Even our brothers and sisters in the church didn’t object to the union. Our biological parents were also in support of us coming together as husband and wife. I honestly believe we are divine partners. That she is the will of the Lord in my life. 

    Abike: I think so too because there’s a certain peace that comes with him.  Not to say we never had issues, but when we did, we prayed on any and every mountain. 

    What kind of issues? 

    Musa: First, the money we were earning at our respective jobs wasn’t a lot, but we thank God for small provisions like bonuses and salary increases. 

    Abike: Another of such issues is that I’m not a very easy person to control. You can’t just tell me to sit there and obey without trying to convince me. Sometimes, he’d make a decision without discussing it with me and expect me to just go ahead with it. That’s not how I work. Now, he knows better than to just impose decisions on me. He’s also more gentle than me. When he’s annoyed, he may not say anything, but me? You’ll see it all over my face. 

    As time went on, we began to understand each other better. Now, if there are any issues, we settle them before we go to bed. If we can’t, we talk about it during our morning devotion.  

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

    And you’ve been doing this for 24 years? 

    Musa: Yes, we have, and it’s all been by the grace of God. God is the answer to every loving and peaceful home. Except the Lord builds the house, the labourers work in vain. The secret to being able to last this long in marital bliss is God. 

    Abike: There’s also the love we have for one another. It allows us to be patient and persevere. 

    On a scale of 1-10, how will you rate your love life? 

    Musa: An 8 because I believe we’ve just started. As long as we live it, it’ll continue to grow more and increase on a daily basis till eternity. 
    Abike: I agree. Every day, it keeps getting better by His grace.

    RELATED: Love Life: We Found Out We Have Chemistry in a Chemistry Lab

  • Love Life: I Moved to Be Closer to Her

    The subjects of this week’s Zikoko’s Love Life Lade(22) and Leah(23) tell us about leaving their partners to be with each other. They also share with us what led to their one-hour breakup and moving to be closer to each other. 

    Tell me about how you met

    Lade: We met at an event in January 2020. We’d been mutuals on Twitter before then, but hadn’t interacted much. I saw a tweet of hers one day and realised she lived in Ibadan. I was part of a queer group at the time and was looking for more women to join so I dm’ed her and invited her to come to the event we were attending. 

    At the time, I didn’t have any real plans to make a move because I’d seen a tweet she made where she said she was 16. When we met, I thought she was gorgeous so I decided to confirm her age again which is when she explained that she was 21 and the tweet was a joke. That’s when I dropped some of my smoothest lines and we had a lot of fun at the event, but then she left me to talk to another woman

    Leah: I thought it was clear that I was kidding about my age. The only reason I tweeted I was 16 years old was because I was sick of cishet men following and dm’ing me. 

    Also, it was one smooth-ish line and you forgot to follow up on it. About the other woman, the babe and had been talking for a bit. It would’ve been rude if I didn’t say hi. 

    What was the line? 

    Leah: I told her she was beautiful then she said she wasn’t going to compliment me because she didn’t want me to think that it was a back-at-ya kinda thing. She said she was going to tell me when I least expected it or had forgotten about it. I assumed she meant before the day/event ended but noooooo. She never did. Who does that? 

    Lade: I was much smoother than that, please. I said at some point during the event, you’d find me staring at you and that’s when I’d tell you how beautiful I thought you were. 

    Leah: Okay, but did you? 

    Lade: To be fair, there was that moment where you were walking barefoot and your gown was doing this thing and I did tell you that you looked like an angel then. 

    Leah: Doesn’t count. 

    Was that when you knew you both caught feelings? 

    Lade: It wasn’t until a couple of days later when she invited me over to sleep at her place. I made some weed milk to take along and we got trippy when we drank some of it. I remember everything feeling like a movie and me promising to make a film based on us. Then we were staring at each other and I suddenly realised “Shit, I’m in trouble”. I think I said that to her even. She asked what I meant and I just told her I really liked her. I didn’t tell her I was in love with her because I was in a relationship and I didn’t want to face what that meant at the time. 

    Leah: That night was perfect. It felt like we were the only ones on the planet. I knew I had caught feelings that night as well. The combination of painting her nails blue, the lighting, her smile and our conversations about nothing and everything felt so right. I didn’t want her to leave the next day. 

    Cute. So tell me about this relationship you were in. 

    Lade: I was in an open relationship but we’d been having some issues. My long-distance girlfriend at the time came to Ibadan for Valentine’s and we’d hoped to sort out those issues then. Unfortunately, things felt stilted throughout the stay and a couple of hours after she left Ibadan, I called and broke up with her.

    Leah: I had ended my relationship before she did. Things were kinda rocky for her because she was still trying to figure out how to go forward with her relationship. She didn’t want to hurt her partner and I didn’t want to ruin anything. I tried to balance staying away and also being there for her but the staying away part was difficult.

    After she broke up with her partner, I knew the right thing to do would be to take things slow and give everyone time to heal but I was hooked on this woman. The next thing I knew, two weeks later, I found myself in her house asking her how long I was going to have to wait for her to ask me to be her girlfriend. She said she was working on a special proposal but I didn’t want to wait any longer. 

    Lade: Women are so impatient. I didn’t want to ask her to be my girlfriend immediately because I didn’t want her to think she was a rebound. I was also trying to plan some special gesture to ask her out, but she came over one day and looked at me and said “So when do you plan on asking me to be your girlfriend?”

    Did the special proposal still happen? 

    Lade: No. The moment she asked me that, I asked her to be my girlfriend and that was it. We’ve been together for almost 3 years now. 

    Leah: I can’t believe it’s been that long and I also can’t believe it’s been that short. 

    Lade: There’s so much about her to love. I love how smart she is — I love bouncing ideas off her or having her edit my work. She’s also so king and caring and not just to me. I remember a pride picnic we had in 2022 and everyone was drinking, smoking, or playing games and my wife was just randomly making a charcuterie board and organising food and drinks to make sure everyone got some of each item. I admire how she’s able to keep friendships and be there for people, especially because it’s something I struggle with.

    Leah: It’s funny she thinks I’m a good people-person because I think she’s better at it than me. She has a way of lighting up any room and she’s so sweet and thoughtful. 

    So it’s been all roses and butterflies? 

    Lade: Not completely. There’s having to navigate family. We’re both out to our parents, but only her parents know what we are to each other. She has spent two New Year’s with me at my mum’s place in Lagos and I introduced her as my friend each time. 

    So there was all that navigation and being worried that the smallest looks, words, or touches, would make my mum suspicious. 

    I spent Christmas in 2022 at her parents’ place though and they were very welcoming and kind even though they knew about us. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Telling Our Parents Made Our Relationship Easy

    Were Leah’s parents always so welcoming?

    Leah: In late 2020, when I finally told them that Lade was my girlfriend, things were difficult. My mum had said that I shouldn’t invite her over because my dad wouldn’t be comfortable with that so for about a year and a half, I could only visit her at her place and go on dates. 

    Lade didn’t like that she couldn’t come over to be with me whenever I was feeling down or sick. She was worried that it was one-sided, me being the one who had to show up. I understood where she was coming from but I was just glad that I got to see her and that I wasn’t “banned” from hanging out with her. It’s even one of the reasons we “broke up”. 

    Tell me about this breakup

    Lade: Well, it lasted for about an hour and it was because I was being very self-centered. 

    At some point in our relationship, we created a group chat that we called “Let it out” where you could rant in vns about things the other person did that upset us. The other person wasn’t supposed to listen to the vn unless they were permitted to. Part of the reason we created the group chat was because we didn’t have people we could vent to about each other and sometimes all you needed to do was vent.

    One midnight, I sent this 20-minute-long vn to the group and then gave her permission to listen. The main issue I was venting about at the time was that I didn’t feel like I was a priority to her. 

    Leah is really close to her family and she was still trying to navigate her new relationship with them now that she was out to them. I was a student with no care at the time so I could drop everything and show up whenever she needed me, but she stayed with her family, etc so I didn’t feel like she felt the same with me. It felt like we’d never get to a point where she would, for example, move out of her parents’ and move in with me because she was constantly worried about who’d take care of them if she left. 

    Anyway, she dropped everything and came over that morning to talk it out, but as I said, I was being very inconsiderate and selfish. We didn’t quarrel or anything, I think there was just this soft implication that since it didn’t seem like she could leave her parents for me, maybe we should break up.

    I had never cried that hard in my life. We just sat in the room crying. After like 15-30 minutes, she packed her stuff and left. I was still standing by the door crying when she came back and said something like “were you really going to let me leave?” 

    And then there was more crying and talking and then we made up. She called her parents and told them she’d be staying over at mine that day.

    Leah: You weren’t being inconsiderate, babe. I understood where you were coming from. I could’ve communicated better and actually tried to see you more. Yes, I was worried about my parents and stuff but I was also just scared to bring you/us up a lot of times. If I’m being honest, avoiding that conversation with my parents seemed easier. I’m glad that talk/mini break-up happened because it was the kick I needed to just adult up and focus more on you, me, and us.

    Okay, so back to the conversation with your mum. Why aren’t you having it yet Lade? 

    Leah: To be honest, I don’t want her to rush it. Things in my house were awkward when I came clean about my relationship. I don’t regret it but it definitely was tough. I think she should still enjoy how things are with her mum right now. 

    Lade: I keep coming up with reasons why it’s just not the right time yet. I’ve also been trying to figure out the best medium for it.

    The bulk of the conversations we’ve had about my sexuality have been face-to-face but I don’t know if that’s the best medium. One of the times someone outed me to her, she waited for like a week to digest it and calm down and then sent me a long message. In the message, she mentioned that she intentionally waited to digest it so she wouldn’t say something she didn’t mean or something she’d regret. And in one of the face-to-face conversations we had, she did end up saying something that hurt me a bit.

    So I’ve been trying to decide if I should tell her over the phone or via text so she has time to digest it first or if I should tell her face-to-face because it’s a serious conversation. 

    I think subconsciously, it’s also because of what Leah said. I don’t stay with my mum so things wouldn’t be awkward in the house, but my mum and I have a good relationship at the moment so I’m dreading upsetting it again. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I’m Scared to Tell My Parents About Him

    I wish you luck with that. And as for your relationship with each other now, what’s it like? 

    Leah: In May 2022, she moved close to my area and now lives about 8-10 minutes away from me. The night she moved here, my dad scolded me for not inviting her over. He said she shouldn’t be alone, especially with no light and water, in a new house. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I texted her immediately and asked if she’d like to come over.

    Since then, she’s been coming over at least once a week. My dad said I didn’t have to be informing him every time she’s coming over but I still get nervous telling my mum. 

    Lade: Honestly, I moved because the place I was staying in before was in horrible condition, but the location was specifically chosen so I could be close to her. I intentionally only looked for places around her side. 

    When my agent told me about my current place and I saw how close it was to hers, I dropped work and jumped bike to meet him before it would get snapped up and I made a down payment the same day.

    That’s cute. On a scale of 1-10, how’ll you rate your love life? 

    Lade: A 10. It’s interesting because our relationship progresses as we go. We had a few minor fights in the first year, but we’ve worked through so much and have a good understanding of each other now. Somehow it feels like I’m more in love with her now than I ever was. 

    Leah: A 10. We’ve grown so much together. Our communication skills have improved a LOT and we know how to read each other. I’m grateful for the minor fights we’ve had because we always became stronger and more connected after settling. Like my wife said, I fall more and more in love with her each day. It’s crazy. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Found Out We Have Chemistry in a Chemistry Lab

  • Love Life: We Found Out We Have Chemistry in a Chemistry Lab

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

    The subjects of this Love Life Elizabeth* (20) and Oyin* (20) walk us through a relationship that almost didn’t happen, discovering their chemistry during a chemistry practical and finding a way to keep their two-year relationship alive in medical school.  

    Tell me how you met 

    Elizabeth: We met in 2019 in our first year, during a chemistry practical in the laboratory.

    Oyin: We were put in the same group. I had to take notes from the experiments we carried out, and she made fun of my handwriting. Then we started talking. 

    Elizabeth: I actually wanted to talk to him because he’s pretty smart, and I needed some help with schoolwork. Making fun of his handwriting was me shooting my academic shot. 

    LMAO. How did that work out? 

    Elizabeth: We exchanged numbers and kept in touch.

    Oyin: Only for the first week. After that, we didn’t speak again. She had a boyfriend, and I didn’t want to push for anything. Ever since that conversation we had at the lab, I knew I was into her, but with the boyfriend involved, I was respecting boundaries. Whenever we saw each other in school, we’d have a friendly conversation but nothing more than that. It was never awkward or anything. 

    When did you start talking again?

    Oyin: It was in 2020. I had come late to a class and the only empty seat was beside her.

    Elizabeth: We talked to each other all through the class.

    Is this what our future doctors are doing? 

    Oyin: LMAO. It happens sometimes. She spoke about how she always came to class early. But me? I was a serial latecomer. 

    Elizabeth: That’s why after the class, I texted and offered to keep a seat for him in every class we attended. I offered, not just because I was being nice, but because I’m attracted to him. 

    What about your boyfriend? 

    Elizabeth: Boyfriend was still in the picture, but we faced issues. He’d cheated and the relationship was hanging by a thread. I knew it was going to end, so I didn’t see anything wrong with at least talking to Oyin. 

    Oyin: We talked in every class and even after.

    Were you people even learning anything? Plus, what were you even talking about?

    Oyin: I want to believe we were learning, and we talked about anything. One conversation led to another that led to another. Whatever we didn’t finish saying in class, we’d continue over text. 

    Elizabeth: We could have the fluffiest conversation and immediately transition into traumatic moments that altered our lives. It was nice to have someone you could just talk to. That’s why in May 2020, three months after we started talking again, I told him I liked him. At this point, I’d broken up with my boyfriend and wanted to see if Oyin and I could develop anything more than a friendship. Unfortunately, he didn’t reciprocate my feelings. 

    Oyin: I didn’t want to lead her on when I didn’t feel it as intensely as she did. I told her I only liked her as a friend and wanted to remain friends. 

    Elizabeth: And it’s partly because there was another girl he liked.

    Oh? Tell us about this girl 

    Oyin: She’s also a medical student. I started talking to her towards the end of 2019, but our conversations mainly happened when we were both in school. 

    Elizabeth: Before I met Oyin, the babe and I were friends, but after a falling out, we stopped speaking to each other. Seeing her be all besties with him annoyed me, but I didn’t say anything about it. 

    Oyin: It’s funny because the thing I had with this other babe was undefined. It’s not like we’d spoken about having feelings or anything. We were just going with the flow but we’d end every conversation with “I love you”. 

    However, I got to find out that all the I love you’s she told me were friendly, and she actually had a boyfriend. It was a very serious reality check. 

    Elizabeth: LMAO. Toh. I thought they were an item, but maybe not with labels.

    Oyin: Not at all o. We were just talking one day in April 2020, and she mentioned her boyfriend. I was like, “Ah. From where?” I sha got the memo and knew my place in her life. 

    So what happened to you and Elizabeth in the midst of all this? 

    Oyin: We still spoke. She was still my friend. 

    Elizabeth: He paid her more attention than me so I moved aside for a minute. I was trying my best to play it cool, but then, something happened. 

    I had a small house party on my birthday in July. I’d invited him because he’s my friend, but he said he doesn’t go to people’s houses. No wahala o. Fast forward to August and I see a video of him in his friend’s house, celebrating her birthday. He was even singing. I was livid. I couldn’t speak to him for a couple of days.

    Wait. Was the friend that babe?

    Elizabeth: Gbam! I was so pissed. 

    Oyin: To be fair, the babe posted the video she saw. 

    Why was she even with your phone? You’re not helping yourself at all 

    Oyin: Everything happened in a blur. I opened social media and saw her subbing me all over her timeline. I deleted the video and tried to explain what happened, but she didn’t answer. 

    Why did you go to this babe’s house but not Elizabeth’s? 

    Oyin: I was just nervous because I knew Elizabeth’s parents would be there, and I didn’t want to meet them. This other babe lived alone so there was no such pressure. 

    Elizabeth: That’s what he told me o, but I wasn’t buying what he was selling at the time.

    Oyin: I waited a couple of days for her head to cool down before I texted her again.

    Elizabeth: I was supposed to be angry at him, but I really liked him and not talking to him made me sad.

    Oyin: After the apology, we started talking a lot more, and I liked her a lot more than I did initially. I started planning to ask her out, but I didn’t want to do it over the phone. 

    Elizabeth: We were trying to planning for his birthday in September. That’s how one day, I mentioned I wanted to give the birthday boy a kiss on his birthday. He agreed. I don’t even know why I offered. I was feeling adventurous maybe, but I’m glad I did. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Telling Our Parents Made Our Relationship Easy

    How did the kiss happen?

    Elizabeth: So we were arguing because I’d given another boy a lap dance, and for some reason, he was pissed. 

    Oyin: In my head, I was planning to ask her out, and she had said she wanted to give me a kiss, but here she was, giving someone else a lap dance. Plus, she knew I already had feelings for her. Why’d she do that? 

    The same way you knew she had feelings for you and didn’t attend her birthday but attended that babe’s? 

    Elizabeth: Gbam! 

    Oyin: Fair point. 

    Elizabeth: Anyways, he called me into a room, and as we were arguing, I asked if I could give him the kiss then. As a gone guy, he agreed. 

    Oyin: Then we had a conversation, and I asked her to be my girlfriend. 

    Elizabeth: I loved him and knew I wanted to be with him, so I agreed. 

    Cute. What was it like moving from friends to partner?

    Elizabeth: Hmm.

    Oyin: It had its good moments, but it wasn’t so smooth in the beginning. There were unresolved issues that got dragged into the relationship.

    Elizabeth: By unresolved issues, he means that babe he liked. They were still friends, and it made me feel a kind of way.

    Oyin: Okay, that’s more specific. The babe and I were still friends for the first three months of Elizabeth and I’s relationship. 

    Elizabeth: It was weird how big of a place she had in our relationship. It was extra weird because she had her own relationship to worry about. Apparently, she was his “best friend” and would always give him weird opinions about me based on the falling out we had a year or two before Oyin and I even met. 

    Oyin: I tried to keep my distance from her for a bit. Then she confronted me about it and called me a horrible friend that didn’t care about her. I didn’t reach out to her to even try to fix things, so that’s how the relationship ended. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Being Polyamorous Didn’t Stop My Jealousy

    After cutting her off, what did the relationship look like? 

    Elizabeth: It was much easier. We were actually able to grow as a couple. 

    Oyin: Yeah, it was so much better. Less arguing and external forces. 

    But navigating all this while studying medicine? 

    Elizabeth: Yeah, it was hard. It’s a difficult course to study. You barely have time for yourself, but we try to keep it going. 

    Oyin: We’re both there so we understand how the schedules are. We attend classes together, do homework and even study together. It’s our way of ensuring we spend time in each other’s presence. 

    Elizabeth: It’ll definitely be a lot harder if only one of us is studying medicine, but I guess that’s where we’re lucky.

    Oyin: We always find a way. 

    Lord, our future doctors are using lab to do love. Anyways, on a scale of 1-10, rate your love life

    Elizabeth: I feel like nobody in life will ever understand me the way Oyin does. I don’t know how to put my emotions into words, LMAO, but I know I want to do forever with him. I’d have given it a 10, but nothing is perfect, and 9 is the closest we can get to perfection. 

    Oyin: Me, I’ll rate it a 10. I want to spend the rest of my life with her and hopefully have a family someday. It feels right. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Bonded Over Our Love for Music

  • Love Life: Top 10 Must-Read Stories of 2022

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

    Before we go into 2023, here are some love life stories you should read. If you’ve read them before, read them again.

    1) Love Life: We Didn’t Need Phones, We Had Love

    A lot of things have become easier with technology. Now, with phones, dating apps and social media platforms you can meet and pursue relationships with people continents away. However, what was dating like before that happened? When all people had were letters and the love in their hearts? This couple gives us an insight into what that relationship was like and how it is now. 

    2) Love Life: We Bonded Over Our Love for Music 

    What happens when a musician and a music writer find each other? In this case, it’s love, a mutual bond and understanding of music and a lot of “X doesn’t have the musical range that Y has.” It’s the stuff of movies and also the story of this couple. 

    3) Love Life: We Finally Met Up Because of Christmas Chicken 

    Two things you learn from this love life; the first is that the love of your life might be in a relationship with someone that isn’t you. The second is that Christmas chicken might be the reason you find love.

    4) Love Life: We’re Roommates Who Fell in Love

    Some people go to school and get roommates they hate, others get roommates they like, but these two? They fall in love. I think they’re the only people doing this roommate thing correctly.

    5) Love Life: I Went to Her House Every Day for a Whole Year

    I’ve heard of dedication, but nothing like this. I wonder if it would have been easier with mobile phones, because I can’t imagine having to go all the way to someone’s house just because I wanted to see them. Then doing it every single day for a whole year? Love is a strong thing. 

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

    Marriage is hard enough as it is. Input financial difficulties and the lack of children, it becomes a lot worse. This is how this couple even in their old age, managed to keep the love alive.

    7) Love Life: Telling Our Parents Made Our Relationship Easy

    When teenagers and young adults don’t have to sneak around to see the people they’re dating, it makes the relationship a million times easier. At least, that’s what this couple told us.

    8) Love Life: We Found Our Way Back to Each Other After 35 Years

    If “If it’s meant to be it’ll be” was a love life, it’ll be this one. Thirty five years after their last encounter, Geraldine* and Felix* found their way back into each other’s lives.

    9) Love Life: I’m Scared to Tell My Parents About Him

    Growing up with strict parents is hard, but having strict parents and hiding a relationship you know they won’t approve of is even harder. The other option will be to just tell them about the relationship, but that’s where fear comes in.

    10) Love Life: Being Polyamorous Didn’t Stop My Jealousy

    There are a lot of popular misconceptions about polyamory, one of which being that they don’t get jealous. However, according to this couple, polyamory isn’t some blocker for jealousy. We learn somet

  • Love Life: 10 of the Most-Read Stories of 2022

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

    I started writing Love Life in August of this year and I’ve suffered a lot of “God, when?”, “God, what?” and “God, how?” 

    Listening to people describe their romantic relationships has been fun and each story holds a special place in my heart, but out of the hundreds, here are the top 10 most-read stories of this year. 

    1) Love Life: She Used Food and Netflix to Get Into My Heart 

    “Cynthia*, 30, and Ezinne*, 29, have been dating for six months. On Love Life, they talk about getting in touch after reading each other’s stories on Zikoko and falling for each other despite being married.”

    This is one of those love stories you read and a part of you goes “hmm”. On one hand you’re happy for the love and the other, you just keep thinking about the people getting hurt along the way. 

    2) Love Life: Therapy Helped Us Be Better For Each Other 

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

    Most times when you hear about couple’s therapy, it’s from the pov of a married couple. It’s interesting to see there are people who aren’t married but are willing to try couple’s therapy just so they can work out. 

    3) Love Life: We Don’t Have to Fight to Understand Each Other 

    Uju, 45, and Sirry, 40, have been dating for five months. On Love Life, they talk about meeting on Twitter, navigating dating as older women with kids and being in an intercultural relationship.

    Dating is hard enough, but dating with children? I can’t even begin to imagine. However, that’s Uju and Sirry’s reality. It’s interesting to see just how much the dynamics of dating changes with age and children in the mix. 

    4) Love Life: We’d Been Committed to Each Other Long Before We Started Dating

    “Uyai, 33, and Ayo, 28, have been dating for a year. On Love Life, they talk about meeting on Instagram, dating each other while they were in primary relationships, and eventually, breaking up with those partners to be together.”

    Have you ever met someone and just known they were the one? If you have, you’d probably understand exactly how Uyai and Ayo felt. If you haven’t, well you should read so you’ll know what it’s like. 

    5) Love Life: The Day We Started Dating Is the Day I Stopped Smoking

    “Naomi, 27, and Chiby, 28, have been dating for two years. On Love Life, they talk about meeting in secondary school, remaining friends and finding love in each other at South.”

    It’s interesting to see the lengths people will go for love. I wonder if there’s anything I’ll be able to give up because I fell in love with someone. 

    6) Love Life: We’re Deliberate About Our Faith

    “Seun, 23, and Àdìó, 26, have been dating for four months. On Love Life, they talk about meeting at Salt and Light Christian camp, how they flirted their way into a relationship after a seven-year old friendship and reuniting physically on Valentine’s day this year.”

    7) Love Life: I Didn’t Want to Date Him Because I Didn’t Want to Bleed on Him

    “Olanrewaju*, 27, and Temi*, 27, have been dating for a year. On Love Life, they talk about meeting on Twitter, starting a relationship after reading a Zikoko article and  their plans for the future.”

    Note: Second couple on this list to find love through a Zikoko article. We’re not saying there’s a pattern, but…

    8) Love Life: She Played Ludo With My Heart for One Month

    “Opeyemi, 30, and Sandra, 27, dated for a year and seven months before getting married. On Love Life, they talk about starting a relationship in the DMs, a horrible first date at Opeyemi’s house and why their families and close friends found out they were getting married on Twitter.”

    I think this is one of the most turbulent relationships we’ve had the pleasure to publish. 

    9) Love Life: She Fits Me Like a Glove

    “Jola, 25, and Oyin, 26, have been dating for a year. 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.”

    10) Love Life: We Became Lovers by Accident

    “Murphy, 25 and Susan, 22 have been together for almost five years. This week on Zikoko’s Love Life, they talk about dating by accident, breaking up at least three times, and getting engaged.”

    How many breakups is too many breakups? According to this couple, three breakups is definitely not too much. 


    Find all the past Love Life stories here.

  • Love Life: I Went to Her House Every Day for a Whole Year

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

    Peter (54) and Joy (47) have been married for 22 years. In this episode of Zikoko’s Love Life, they tell us what it’s like to fall in love at second sight, court a woman with a strict dad,  and how they dealt with their tribalistic fathers through prayer before getting married.

    Tell me about the first time you met

    Peter: In 1994, when sinking boreholes was not a popular thing back in Port Harcourt, I lived in a house where the tap always rushed. So I got an influx of people searching for water for their homes. 

    Joy: My sister and I, in our search for water, landed in his house. When we got in, we heard their dogs and ran out. He heard our shouting and came outside, so I asked him to please do something about the dogs. He did and I was able to fetch water. 

    Peter: After they finished fetching water, I allowed myself to look at them and when I laid my eyes on her, I was like, wow, this is a really beautiful woman. I asked her for her name and she told me her name was “Gold”. I later found out that wasn’t her real name. 

    Joy: I gave him a fake name because I had a very strict father who didn’t allow my sisters and me to talk to men like that. 

    How did you find out the name was fake? 

    Peter: I was determined to see her again. The following Sunday, I dressed and went to different streets looking for her. The people I asked on the way told me nobody called Gold lived close by, but based on my description, they thought I was referring to Joy and pointed me in the direction of her house. 

    She wasn’t around, but I knew I needed to see her, so I went to her house every day hoping I’d get a chance to. 

    Did you? 

    Peter: Yes. month after. It wasn’t easy and it took the help of her sisters, but I saw her. 

    What do you mean by the help of her sisters? 

    Peter: For the month I came to her house, she kept hiding from me. She’d send her sisters to tell me she wasn’t around. So, I got a chance to talk to her sisters. They thought I was funny and decided to help plan an avenue for us to meet. 

    The next time I came to her house, she was there. In fact, now that you’ve asked me about this, I feel like a young man again. Seeing her was so precious to me. We talked a lot about religion, life, and dreams. That’s how I ended up visiting her house every single day for a year. 

    How did you manage that? 

    Peter: Her house was about three streets away from mine, so I’d pass that route to work. On my way back from work, I’d go to her house before I went to mine. Seeing her became the highlight of my day. I was in love. 

    Joy: I knew I liked him, but whenever I wanted to engage in anything, I always asked God to direct me. He asked me out whenever he had the chance, but I knew I wouldn’t go out with him until I got confirmation from God. Unluckily for him, I didn’t get that answer from God until a year later. 

    Peter: I knew I would marry her from the time I spent with her because something drew me to her, but I decided I’d wait for whatever confirmation she needed. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Found Our Way Back to Each Other After 35 Years

    What was dating like? 

    Peter: Amazing. There were no mobile phones so the only time we saw each other was when I visited her. She never came to mine because I was always at work. 

    Whenever she did choose to come and see me, we’d talk and talk for hours. We discussed our future, our lives, our plans, everything. When it was time for her to go home, I’d escort her to her house, and when we got to her house, she’d escort me to mine. After escorting like three times and it starts getting dark, we give up. At a point, the whole community knew us. 

    Peter: This was how it was for us throughout the six years of our relationship.

    Six years? Why so long? 

    Peter: While we were dating, I already knew I was going to marry her. . I remember randomly telling her “Girl, I’m going to marry you. Prepare.” I was serious about her.

    Joy: The main problem was our parents. My dad is not only strict, he was prejudiced against Delta or Benin men. He said they were fetish and didn’t want us to have anything to do with them. 

    Ah. How did that play out?? 

    Peter: In 2000, my elder brother got married. When I returned from the wedding, I told her that since my elder brother has gotten married, it was my turn next and she should talk to her dad.  

    Joy: I loved Peter, but I really didn’t know how I was going to approach my dad on the issue. 

    Peter: That’s when I told her to approach her stepmother first, so she’d help Joy talk to her dad. 

    Joy: I mentioned it to her, and she told me to pray, and she’d handle bringing it up with my father. 

    Two days after, she told me she had spoken to him, but he wasn’t sounding very convinced. I should keep praying. 

    One Wednesday evening during church service, while I was praying, a man walked up to me and told me there was something about my relationship that was bothering me. He said the man I was praying to God about was my husband, and if I didn’t marry him, I’ll look for a husband and have issues. 

    I went back to my stepmother to tell her of the revelation. Then I told my dad, and he gave his permission. 

    Peter: Unfortunately, we couldn’t still proceed with the marriage because my own parents had to agree as well. My father had warned all his children that he didn’t want to hear we were moving around with Igbo people. I knew it would be difficult to convince him. He even sent a word to me from the village in Delta state that he heard I was following a Port Harcourt girl around, and I should forget about it if I thought I would marry her. 

    My dad was a disciplinarian and nobody had ever dared to challenge him whenever he said something, but I knew I was going to marry her. I also knew it was not going to work out if God was not involved, so we fasted and prayed for this marriage to become a possibility. 

    When I finally convinced them, I told Joy about it and we got married. 

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

    Did you propose? 

    Peter: Well, if you mean did I do it the way the children do these days, where they go down on one knee and bring out a ring, I didn’t. I knew I wanted to marry her since the first month we started dating. We just needed to get past the fathers. When that was done, we got married in 2000. 

    I don’t think there was a need to propose because we’d had the conversations. We’d talked about the life we had and what we were going to live. It seemed unnecessary. 

    What’s being married like? 

    Peter: Amazing. Marriage has taught me about trust, love and forgiveness. I’ve been blessed with five beautiful children, and I love them very dearly. 

    Joy: Great. I think it’s so great because God is a very important factor in this marriage because we wouldn’t be here without him. 

    On a scale of 1-10, rate your love life 

    Peter: If I was to take a pencil and mark this assignment you’ve given to me, I’ll score myself a 9 and a half or even a full ten. It has been from Glory to Glory.


    Joy: I’ll start by saying I give God all the glory, honour and adoration to God. I’ll give it a 9 and a half over 10. This entire relationship has been by the wisdom, the mercy, the strength and the Grace of God. Right now, it’s awesome and I’m grateful to God for this.

    RELATED: Love Life: Our Future Is Uncertain

  • QUIZ: If Your Love Life Was a 2022 Song, What Would It Be?

    For some, 2022 was the year they found love and for others, it was the year they were served breakfast. Get to the end of this quiz to get the perfect song.

  • Love Life: Our Future Is Uncertain

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

    Bear* (25) and Nala* (27) tell us about how they started dating one week after their first date. They also talk about having to define the structure of their relationship, the different ways they practice polyamory and the uncertainty of their future. 

    How did you meet?

    Bear: We ran into each other at an event called Green Camp. It was the first time we met physically, and there was sexual tension but we didn’t act on anything until this year when I saw her again on a Friday at South, Lagos in March 2022. 

    Prior to that, we’ve been following each other since 2016. I’ll always text her in a bid to try starting a connection but she wasn’t giving me the proper energy. I kept trying to take it beyond the banter we were having on the timeline, but she kept killing whatever fire I tried to light. 

    Nala: To be honest, it’s not his fault. He is attractive and based on the conversations we had on the timeline, I could see our views aligned. 

    I’m just a shitty person when it comes to maintaining contact with people via text. I used to think I liked texting, but what I really liked was the ability to respond to texts at my own time. The best I could maintain with him were topical conversations that didn’t really go anywhere. The problem was just that I was busy with work. I apologised for it. 

    That’s a long time

    Nala: He wasn’t pursuing me for that long, but we knew of each other. 

    So, let’s talk about the meeting at South

    Nala: My motivation for going to South was because I was hoping to go and see him. 

    Bear: Ehn? See who? 

    Nala: Let me tell my story. 

    Bear: You did not come to see me. Let’s not rewrite history. She didn’t come to see me. What happened was that I came and then stole the show. 

    Nala: Anyways, I saw him and was distracted from the person I actually came to see. I think at that moment, I started to wonder why I was actually running away from him. 

    Bear: Let me tell you what really happened because to be fair, I think I’m better at detailing events and memories. 

    I was having one of those high confidence days. I looked good and felt it. While I was trying to get a drink, I turned and we saw each other — she was right beside me. And her look was different. It said, “It’s time, I’m ready for you.”

    However, she was with someone else, and I didn’t know what the relationship was. We interacted and made plans to actually hang out on the island on Sunday. 

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

    How did the hangout go? 

    Bear: Sunday came and I didn’t hear from her untill 4 p.m. when I had already left the island. She felt bad about it and so we scheduled to meet during the week. She came to see me on Friday. 

    Nala: I’ll just like to add that I was working at the time. I had zero personal time and wasn’t as flexible as I wanted. I have time blindness and sometimes I get so wrapped up in one task, I forget the others I had set out to do. 

    Did you eventually have that rescheduled date?

    Nala: Yes, we did, and after it happened, I kept asking myself why it didn’t happen earlier. 

    Bear: I was very excited. I don’t know how, but everything just kind of aligned. Something that made me aware this was different was when we kissed. I think that’s how I describe our relationship till now. 

    The kiss was like a warm embrace. Like something I didn’t know I existed up until it happened. At that moment, I felt like I was walking through a desert and someone just pinned me down and force-fed me water. It was the best tasting water I’ve had in my life. I had never felt this way kissing someone before. It was a very emotionally charged and special day. As much as it was physical, there was a lot of emotional vulnerability that day.  

    After the date, her schedule suddenly blew wide open. She suddenly had my time. 

    Nala: You know why it blew open. I don’t know why you’re acting like this. 

    Bear: LMAO.

    Nala: My client actually left the country, and I had a lot of time on my hands. 

    Bear: Honestly, after that first date, everything just kind of aligned. We hung out every day for one week, and we were courageous enough to be emotionally vulnerable and talk about what we were feeling. 

    What kind of vulnerability and emotions are we talking about? 

    Bear: Around the time we started dating, my mum was having a medical emergency and it cost a lot of money so I was pretty low on funds. I started feeling ashamed about my general financial situation and I started to pull away. She called me out on it and then opened up a space where I could just talk about all the things I was feeling and going through. She helped me get to the root cause of my emotions and from there I was able to work towards getting better. 

    Nala: I had some insecurities about my body. Whenever I brought up how I felt, he was really patient and was able to empathise with what I was going through. 

    You started dating after one week. Why? 

    Nala:  I couldn’t get enough of his company, so we spent every moment together. 

    Bear: At some point, she mentioned in passing that if we were going to enter into a relationship, she needed me to ask her out. She may have mentioned it in passing, but I had it ingrained in my head. At that point, I had a different relationship structure I needed to find a way to dismantle before officially coming into a relationship with her. 

    While I was trying to do all of that, I decided to just go ahead and ask her out. I hadn’t felt that way about anyone before and I didn’t want to waste time. 

    I asked her out on a Saturday night in March, after we had finished having sex. After the very intense session, I kept looking at her and I could feel my chest flutter and tingle. So I went on a long talk that I don’t remember the details of, but I know ended with, “I want you to be my girlfriend.” She said yes.

    Nala: I’d spent a lot of time single and I used that time to reflect on what I didn’t want in a relationship. However, I didn’t know what exactly it was I wanted. He invoked a lot of strong feelings in me and I realised that’s something I wanted. A partner that made me happy and invoked strong feelings in me. I loved him. It was a no brainer I’d say yes. I don’t know why or how it happened, but I know I was in love with him. 

    One of the reasons I mentioned him asking me out is because we were already edging towards “falling” into a relationship. We did all the things couples did and were settling into a comfortable routine. I didn’t want to wake up one day and start having a “So what are we?” conversation. 

    Bear: All my years of pursuing older women finally paid off because I was able to bag this one. 

    Nala: It’s just a two-year difference. 

    What was dating like? 

    Bear: Well, for one, we had to define the dynamic of our relationship. I came into the relationship as a polyamorous person or how do they say it? 

    Nala: He likes women and women like him and everybody is on his tail. 

    Bear: Jesus. It’s everybody that likes you. Men, women, all of them. I knew I wasn’t monogamous, but I wasn’t sure what the details were. What I knew was that if I was going to figure out whatever this was with anybody, it was going to be her. 

    RELATED: Love Life: She’s Polyamorous But I’m Not

    I think you both described this thing differently. So let’s break it down

    Bear: So the other relationships I was involved in were the things I had to settle before I could be with her. I was coming off of what can maybe be described as a harem. 

    Nala: Ah ha! So was I wrong in my description of everyone being on your tail? 

    Bear: LMAO. When Nala and I eventually started dating, I told them there was someone I had to prioritise because she became my primary partner. 

    Before then, I had a system where I try to make sure my lovers are on the same level or that they feel like they have equal space in my heart, but they could tell there was something with Nala that was different. 

    When I broke the news to them, most survived but those that didn’t morphed into proper friendships. 

    Nala: I’m polyam as well, but for me, I handle my people with varying degrees of intimacy. I’m not as into people as he is. He’s more of a golden retriever type that’s friends with everyone. I am more detached. I don’t have that much mental energy. 

    Bear: So the way we practised was kind of different. 

    Nala: I knew what I had was working for me, and I liked it that way. When Bear and I started dating, I informed my other partners, but unlike his, mine was like bulk SMS. Just hey, I’ll see you around and also, I have someone now. 

    How then do you both navigate this structure you’ve created for yourselves? 

    Nala: I wanted to approach this relationship from a place of complete honesty with my feelings and emotions. I’ve tried traditional monogamy, and I’ve had some failings in it. 

    Knowing he was polyamorous as well was a step in the right direction. The conversation about wanting other people, even when you’re with someone you’re romantically invested in is always a tricky one to have, but I didn’t have to worry about that with him. 

    To an extent, there’s still a nagging feeling I have. Like does he like this person more than he likes me and stuff like that, but it’s usually just a casual thought. It’s hardly ever something I have strong evidence to back up. Plus, it helps that whenever I feel like this, I can just have a conversation with him. 

    Bear: For me, I think jealousy is something that can exist no matter the type of relationship. It could be a friendship, a business relationship or anything. Having a conversation and reassurance really helps.

    We have just one rule in place, and it’s that she’s my primary partner and I’m hers, and the only thing that can be considered cheating is when we put other people before each other. 

    Nala: We don’t really have firm rules. It’s just that we need to make sure our interests are protected before anything else. 

    Do you see yourself getting other primary partners or dating one person as a couple? 

    Bear: I know my partner, and I don’t think she has the emotional capacity or range to include another person into this relationship. The third person will suffer because they’d have to rely on only me for all their emotional needs. 

    Nala: LMAO. We’ve gotten offers from people wanting to come in.

    Bear: But they should just enjoy what they have now because inside? You’ll be starved. As for getting another girlfriend, I don’t think I want one, at least not now. I haven’t met anyone I like enough to want that from. 

    Nala: I don’t think I have someone on my radar that triggers as much emotion as Bear does. I won’t say I love anyone to the level that I love him and I consider that a requirement for getting into a relationship with someone. I have other relationships beyond this, but none of them just have the same level of intimacy. 

    On a scale of 1-10 how would you rate your love life? 

    Nala: I’ll give it an 8 because of some of the uncertainties that come with our future and because there’s always need for improvement. We don’t know what next year holds for either of us in terms of if we’re even still going to be in the country. Let’s survive Nigeria first. It’s almost painful to think about so we haven’t had a final discussion on what our future looks like.

    I’m so happy in the relationship and I wouldn’t trade this for anything else. I enjoy the fact that he’s a really calming influence. He also doesn’t mind going under the sun to do things for me. I sweat easily and the sun makes me uncomfortable so he sometimes runs errands for me. It just works for me. 

    Bear: 9 for me. Nala is more raging fire and I’m more chill and calm. There are days you can see the fire raging, and she’s burning up everything in her path, but when she gets to me, she becomes a calm little blue flame. I admire the fact that she usually softens up when she meets me. I’m baby, and I don’t like stress. 

    I love how we can banter over anything and can discuss a wide range of topics because of how much our politics align. I love her simply because she exists. The only reason I’m not giving it a 10 is because of the uncertainties surrounding our future

    RELATED: Love Life: We Found Our Way Back to Each Other After 35 Years

  • Love Life: I’m Scared to Tell My Parents About Him

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

    The subjects of this week’s love life, Isoken* (19) and Dami* (21), met at a tutorial centre in 2020. They talk about why she turned him down the first three times he asked her out, lying to her parents about their relationship and dealing with their religious differences. 

    Tell me about your first impressions of each other 

    Isoken: I thought he talked too much.

    Dami: I considered her a snub. She had friends who acted like they were better than everyone. Once, my friend went up to her to try to get her number, but she ignored him. 

    Isoken: The guy looked rough. I wasn’t interested. 

    Dami: You could say I was curious. That’s why during a chemistry class in the tutorial centre we attended, I decided to sit beside her. She was all alone, and I felt we could have a decent conversation if her friends weren’t with her. 

    Isoken: I wasn’t shocked when he sat down beside me. I’d caught him staring at me on different occasions during our classes. 

    Dami: How did you know I was looking at you if you weren’t always looking at me too? 

    Isoken: You had some female friends I knew. I looked at them, and you just happened to be in their presence. I’m neither rude nor a snub. I’m just not good at making new friends. That’s why I didn’t chase him away when he sat beside me. 

    What did you talk about? 

    Isoken: Phones o. 

    Dami: I’m not good at making conversation, so I don’t even know how we started talking about phones. 

    Isoken: See what I mean by he talked too much? The few conversations we had were always off-point. 

    He’s lucky I’m a cool and calm person. If not, once his rubbish talk started, I’d have pushed him away. 

    Dami: I collected her number because I wanted to talk to her more on WhatsApp.

    Isoken: I felt compelled to give him. He’d been there, talking to me for a long time. I didn’t want his effort to be in vain.

    How did the WhatsApp conversations go?

    Dami: Initially, it was awkward. There were occasional hi’s and hello’s, but nothing serious until I started observing how she spoke to her friends during and after the tutorials. She seemed pretty cool based on the snippets of the conversation I heard. I also knew she was smart because of the way she participated in class. With all that information, I started putting more effort into our texts, and actually trying to start serious conversations. 

    Isoken: We talked frequently about our fears and aspirations. I realised he was someone whose company I enjoyed, and by April, we’d become good friends. After that, the friendship was off and on. Dami, explain why. 

    Dami: Between April and December [2019], I asked her out three times. I liked her a lot; the way she talked and behaved captivated me. 

    However, she kept saying she wasn’t ready to get into a relationship. I’d stop talking to her for a while, only to come back and continue our friendship from where we stopped. 

    Isoken, why were you always turning him down? 

    Isoken: I liked light-skinned men; Dami is darker. He didn’t look like the kind of guy I’d date. Plus, I wasn’t ready for what he looked for in a relationship. 

    Like what? 

    Isoken: The second time he asked me out, I remember asking him what he expected from the relationship and how he expected it to play out. I never saw sex as something one did at the beginning of getting to know someone, but he made it sound necessary. 

    Dami: At that time, I was really immature and all my beliefs about relationships were wrong. 

    Isoken: He didn’t realise this on time. Then in February 2020, almost a year after we’d met, he started dating someone else. My phone got spoilt, and I couldn’t talk to him for a while.

    Dami: The relationship lasted for about three months. She broke up with me a couple of weeks before my birthday in May. I was sad because I thought 2020 was the year I celebrated my birthday while in a relationship. Add the fact that it was in the middle of lockdown, and I had nothing to do. 

    While I was spending my birthday sulking, I got a text from Isoken, wishing me a happy birthday.

    Isoken: I slipped my sim into my mum’s phone to send the message. I missed him and wanted to use his birthday as a chance to talk to him. 

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

    Dami: She eventually got a new phone in June, and we continued talking. That same month, I came to stay with my dad, who lived close to her house. I asked her to see me and she did. That was the first time we saw each other physically since the tutorial ended in May 2019. 

    In July 2020, I asked her out for the fourth time, and she said yes. 

    Isoken: I noticed when I knew he was dating someone else, it made me sad. I felt entitled to him. I wasn’t ready to date, but I didn’t want to lose him again. Plus, I think that relationship made him a better person. We talked about dating for two days because I kept asking him questions. I wanted to be aware of what I was getting into. 

    It’s been two years since then. What’s the relationship been like? 

    Isoken: For me, it’s been a blessing. I found a friend and a lover all in one. We’ve had our ups and downs, and no one is perfect, but we always find our way around whatever it is that’s troubling us. 

    Dami: This relationship is the best thing. I call her my teacher because I’ve learnt a lot from her, and she’s helped to bring out a better version of me. There are times I find it difficult to make decisions on my own, but she’s always there to give me advice and help ease the burden. 

    Isoken, you mentioned finding ways around things that trouble you both. Things like what? 

    Isoken: For one, distance. I’m currently in Benin, and he’s in Lagos, so we can’t see each other as often as we’d like. We make up for it with phone calls and texts. Unfortunately, when we’re both in the same state, we hardly get a chance to see each other. 

    Why? 

    Isoken: My parents are very strict. They believe I shouldn’t get into a relationship with someone until I want to marry. How’s that possible if I don’t date first? 

    To be with Dami, there’s a lot of sneaking around involved. I’ll have to lie to my parents about my whereabouts so I can spend the day with him. I don’t like lying to my parents, but it’s the only way. 

    Sometimes, I think it’s unfair I’m the one who has to do all the lying and sneaking around. It’s very stressful. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Telling Our Parents Made Our Relationship Easy

    Dami: My mum knows her to be my girlfriend, but we haven’t had a chance to have any conversation about her yet. Maybe she wants to see how far it goes first. One thing I know for sure is whatever I want, my mother will want the same for me.

    Isoken: I tried to introduce him to my parents, but once they asked him about his religion, and I said he’s a Muslim? They locked up immediately and started preaching about how I shouldn’t get into relationships. In their eyes, he’s a guy I’m just friends with. They have a problem with people of different faiths getting into a relationship. Although we’ve been together for two years, I still think about our different faiths. My religion is very important to me, so it’s all very confusing.

    Dami: I don’t consider the religion thing a big issue. I just know I want to marry her and build a family with her eventually.

    Isoken: The end goal of the relationship is marriage, but maybe along the line, we’ll figure out how to navigate the religion thing. 

    I wish you both luck. On a scale of 1-10, how’ll you rate your love life? 

    Isoken: 7. The distance and the sneaking around takes it down several points. 

    Dami: 8. We can’t see each other often enough. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We’re Roommates Who Fell in Love

  • Love Life: We’re Roommates Who Fell in Love

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

    Adaeze* (21) and Angel* (23) were roommates who fell in love along the line. In this episode of Love Life, they talk about developing feelings during the ASUU strike, hiding their romance from their other roommates and navigating religious guilt and internalised homophobia. 

    Tell me your first impression of each other 

    Adaeze: It was September 2021, the beginning of a new school session. She was one of the last people to move into our room, but immediately she came in, she started smiling and talking to everyone as if she’d known us before. 

    Angel: The first time I saw her, I didn’t even think we’d have a good relationship. We didn’t talk as much as I did with my other roommates. She didn’t seem like a social person. 

    The first night we had a conversation, she was saying some homophobic things, so I thought we’d be cordial at best. 

    Adaeze: Yet here I was thinking we’d be friends. I liked the energy she brought into the room. She may have wanted to just be cordial, but I was determined to get to know her better. 

    How did the shift from roommates to friends happen? 

    Angel: The next day, we got a chance to actually have more one-on-one conversations over time. We had this “midnight friendship” where we’d be up together when everyone else was asleep, talking about how our day went. She’s such a good listener. 

    Before I knew what was happening, I was looking forward to having conversations with her. She was so sweet, constantly getting things I wanted and going out of her way to make sure I was comfortable. She’d lay my bed for me or get me food when I’m hungry. 

    Adaeze: I think it dawned on me how close we’d gotten when her birthday rolled around. She’d resumed school a week to her birthday, so of course, we barely knew each other by then, but I wanted to buy her a gift. 

    I kept fighting the urge, so I eventually ended up not doing it. I regretted it so badly because I didn’t think she got as much care as she deserved. Whatever I’d have given her would’ve made a significant difference. I didn’t do it because I didn’t want her to think I was crazy or for her to interpret my actions wrongly. 

    In the past, I’d cared so much about the female friends in my life that people made jokes that I liked girls. It always scared me and hurt my feelings. 

    Angel: It’s not like it stopped you because you bought me food every night from a place I mentioned I liked. 

    Adaeze, why did the jokes bother you? 

    Adaeze: I was scared they were right and I actually liked girls. It was an internal battle because I knew I liked boys, and I thought it could only be one or the other. That’s when I learnt about being bisexual and that was scary too. 

    I’m a Christian. All my life, I’d been taught liking the same sex was wrong. That’s why when Angel helped me point out I had feelings for my best friend, I was so sad. It felt like I had this huge secret I had to spend the rest of my life keeping. 

    Angel: I remember when she came to meet me about her problems. It was February 2022, just before we went on strike. Her best friend had gone on a date with a man, and Adaeze had been sulking the entire day. She’d cooked food at around 5 p.m. and was about to eat when her best friend came back. Someone who’d not eaten all day, she left the room to meet the babe and even slept there. When she came back around 12 p.m. the next day, she kept complaining to me about how hurt she was by her friend going on a date. 

    I couldn’t believe she was so oblivious to her feelings. Everyone in the room could tell she had feelings for her best friend, but not Adaeze. She thought it was just “friendship”. 

    We talked about it and she realised her feelings were not the type you’d have for a friend. Seeing her so hurt about it hurt me too. I wished I could make all her pain disappear. It also made me aware of how jealous I was of their relationship. I had a crush on Adaeze, and I wanted her to feel as strongly for me as she did for this babe. 

    Adaeze: My midnight friend was my only confidant during that period. No matter how busy she was with school and work, whenever I told her I needed to talk, she’d drop everything and attend to me. Then the strike happened and our conversations didn’t immediately translate well over text. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Finally Met Up Because of Christmas Chicken

    What was it like? 

    Angel: Too much time at home, so I was depressed and unable to text. We didn’t talk as much as we did when we were in school. 

    Adaeze: We’d reply each other’s statuses and check in once in a while. 

    Angel: But then, we started calling each other and the conversations were much better. We could be on the phone from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m. I don’t think a day went by without us speaking to each other. Even if it was just to see how the other person was doing.  

    Adaeze: Initially, we mostly discussed the issues I had with my best friend, but over time, it became “I just want to hear Angel’s voice.”

    Angel: Sometime in May, I jokingly said that I liked her but was going to suppress it because of her feelings for the other babe. From then, she started to question her feelings towards me and admitted it was beyond platonic. 

    Did it go beyond declaring feelings for each other? 

    Angel: In August, she asked me to be her girlfriend, but we broke up about a month later. Small love wey everyone dey love, e reach my turn, I chop breakfast. 

    Adaeze: I got back from church one day, feeling really bad about being bisexual.  I knew I wasn’t myself, and I didn’t want to carry that energy into our relationship. So I broke up with her. 

    Angel: While I was hurt, I understood how hard it was for her. If there’s anything I’m sure of in my life, it’s that I love her and she loves me just as much. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Became Lovers by Accident

    How was it like when school resumed? 

    Angel: I was so excited to get to see her again. The strike was eight long months, and I missed her. We’ve been unable to stay apart. We’re always cuddling or just staying together, marvelling at each other. 

    I remember when she got dressed to go to church one day, but when she realised it meant leaving me, she sat back down and said she couldn’t go. 

    Adaeze: We talked over the phone throughout my journey to school, and she was the first person I wanted to see as soon as I arrived. I was worried how the other roommates would handle it, but she reminded me that we already spent so much time together and liked each other’s company. That it was nothing new for our roommates to see us being together. 

    Angel: We try to behave so our roommates don’t suspect too much, but behaving is hard. The attraction we share is really strong. Sometimes, she just finds herself on my bed, her hands on my thighs. Other times, it’s me on her bed, unwilling to let go of her.

    Adaeze: Her presence soothes me, and I try to hold on to it for as long as possible. 

    How’ll you describe your relationship?  

    Angel: We’re great friends, and I never want that to change, so we’ll stick to being friends who love each other.

    Adaeze: It’s like honey the world will let us taste and enjoy but won’t let us keep. 

    Angel: In an ideal world, I’d be in a committed relationship with her. I just want to live and do everything with her without having to jeopardise our safety or relationship with family.

    Adaeze: The ideal world is where I get to watch her sleep, be beside her when she wakes up, do all the work and make so much money she won’t need to work. I want to buy her anything she’ll ever want and ensure she’s treated like the princess she is. 

    I want to raise kids with her. Kids who’ll be such a plus to the world and consider themselves lucky to be raised in a home full of love. Whenever Angel walks into a place, it becomes paradise, so our kids will be raised in paradise.

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

    Angel: 9 and a half for me. Even though we can’t be together right now, there’s love here and it keeps me at ease. I struggle with depression and anxiety, and on most days, I don’t want to be alive. But when I’m around her, I feel alive and unbothered about everything. The remaining half is for the homophobia that pops up to give us a reality check that there’s a price to pay to be together as we want.

    Adaeze: 9. I feel safe, loved and looked out for. Loving her is so easy because she gives me reasons to day after day. She doesn’t stress me over anything. She’s so smart and thinks ahead about how I’ll take things when she says/does anything. 

    The remaining 1 is because of homophobia too. Knowing that just the existence of our love puts our lives at risk hurts me. If I could, I’d create a world just for us, where we could be anything we want without the fear of discrimination. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Our Friendship Means More to Us Than Our Love

  • QUIZ: What Romance Trope Best Fits Your Love Life?

    Enemies to lovers or second chance lovers? This quiz knows what romance trope your love life is always falling under.


    QUIZ: When Next Will You Fall In Love?

  • Love Life: We Finally Met Up Because of Christmas Chicken 

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

    The subjects of this week’s Love Life are Mary* (33) and Linda* (29), who’ve been together for two years and ten months. They talk about a failed party that led to exchanging numbers, meeting because of Christmas chicken, a complicated former relationship and dealing with various insecurities.

    How did you meet? 

    Mary: We met at an LGBTQ+ WhatsApp group. 

    Linda: The group was supposed to host a hangout party and she was appointed to head the Port Harcourt branch. The hangout ended up not happening, but I’d saved her number the moment she texted me. 

    Mary: We became status viewers and occasional texters. I was in a complicated relationship at the time, and I needed some new friends so we kept making plans to meet up. 

    Linda: In my mind, I wanted something more than friendship. When she posted her pictures, I saw how very hot she was, so I wanted to have sex with her, maybe even a relationship, anything more than just being her friend. But whenever she spoke, she always mentioned her girlfriend. I knew she was in a relationship, but I didn’t like that she constantly brought it up. It was such a turn off for me. 

    Oh, the complicated relationship

    Mary: The woman I was dating at the time had cheated on me in 2018. She said she’d let the woman go, but she ended up coming back to tell me she was polyamorous.

     I wanted to break up with her, but we lived together, and it was hard to. Mentally, I’d checked out of the relationship, but she didn’t want me to move out, so it was difficult to fall for someone else. 

    After a while, she  told me she wasn’t polyamorous anymore and wanted to be with only me.

    RELATED: Love Life: Being Polyamorous Didn’t Stop My Jealousy

    Yeah, that’s complicated. You mentioned something about both of you meeting up. When did that happen? 

    Linda: On December 23, 2019, a couple of months after we started talking, I posted on my status that I wanted to sell a chicken. She was interested in buying, but we kept going back and forth on who would come to see who. 

    Mary: I couldn’t transfer the payment because, every Christmas time, I withdraw a certain amount of money I’d need for the season ahead. There are always banking and card issues during Christmas season, so I just prefer to use cash. She wanted to send a rider to pick up the chicken, but I didn’t want to give the person cash in case he runs away with my money. I asked her to come deliver it herself because I would be busy at work the next day. She refused and somehow persuaded me to come over. 

    Linda: After all her shakara, she came o. She was standing by one big tree across the road. I saw her, but still called to make sure she was really the gorgeous stem in black jeans and t-shirt with red and white sneakers. 

    She picked up, and my heart melted. I just wanted to walk up to her and give her the kiss of her life. I approached her and couldn’t stop staring. It was love at first sight. 

    Mary: She even forgot to collect her money because she was staring so hard. I had to call her back to reality. 

    Meanwhile, I was thinking of how much this woman stressed me. I closed late from work, and there was traffic everywhere, but I still had to come over to her place to pick up chicken. 

    Did you both get a chance to talk?

    Mary: I had to rush back home, but she called the moment I got to my street, to ask if I got home safely. That was cute.

    Linda: She couldn’t even talk on the phone because she was busy, but then, she promised to call back that night. She never did. 

    Mary: I texted her the next day to explain that I’d dozed off. I asked her out on a date to make up for it. I was still technically dating my ex girlfriend at the time, but I was no longer feeling the relationship. I’d checked out since the cheating incident; I just didn’t leave. 

    Linda: We agreed to watch a movie on the 26th. I can never forget that date.

    Mary: The cinema was overpopulated, so we went to the karaoke lounge instead. 

    Linda: We talked, and she told me everything about her relationship with her ex. I told her about mine, and then, she sang for me. She was so hot, I had to run to the restroom to cool down. 

    Mary: I followed her to the restroom and tried to kiss her there, but she hesitated. As I was about to leave, she grabbed my head and kissed me. 

    Linda: It’s not like I didn’t want to initially. I just wasn’t comfortable with the environment, but clearly, she was too hot for me to care. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Left Our Partners For Each Other

    That’s cute. When did you start dating? 

    Mary: January 4, 2020. 

    Linda: She asked me to be her girlfriend. 

    Mary: On December 28, 2019, I travelled to my village for Christmas. I planned to return to Port Harcourt on the 6th of January, but on the 3rd, she told me to come see her in Umuahia, so I did. 

    Linda: I didn’t believe she would come, but she did. I planned for us to stay together and just relax, but I had a call to come back to Port Harcourt for work, so we left together that night. 

    Mary: We went our separate ways, but when I got home, I saw my girlfriend and another woman half naked on our bed. 

    For the first time in my life, I wasn’t bothered. I just apologised for barging in on them and went to wait in the living room till they were done so I could pack some of my things in the room. She tried to explain what was going on, but I wasn’t interested. I didn’t want to hear anything she had to say. 

    Linda: I remember her texting me about what happened. After I was done with the job, she came to meet me and stayed with me till we went home together. 

    Mary: At home, I made us food and told her I wanted her to be my girlfriend officially. She said yes. 

    What about your own girlfriend, Mary? 

    Mary: After Linda and I started dating, I’d told the girlfriend I’d fallen for someone else and was already in a relationship with her. She was angry, but I didn’t care. I moved my property little by little to the apartment I got. 

    Linda: When she told me everything, I started coming around to her house to stress the ex. 

    Mary: I eventually moved out in May, 2020. 

    Linda: At first, I wasn’t comfortable she was still living with her ex, but the more time I spent with Mary, the more I realised she’s not the kind of person to go back to someone once she’s done.

    What’s dating since you both stopped living with your exes? 

    Mary: Well, we don’t live together, but we spend a lot of time together. It’s just that she nags sometimes and assumes things that never happened.

    Linda: Sometimes, she acts like she wants to cheat. She hides her phone a lot when she starts getting admirers, and she gives them her attention.

    Mary: She has my password, but then, I don’t like the idea of her reading my chats each time we get together. I don’t do that to her because I trust her %100, and I wish for that to be reciprocated.

    Linda: It’s not like I don’t trust you. It’s just that I feel insecure once in a while. My ex started a whole relationship right under my nose while we were together. When I see signs that seem like it might be happening again, I start doubting. 

    Mary: It makes me mad, but I understand her. I try my best to assure her I’d never do anything like that to her. 

    Other than that, being with her is amazing. She gives great advice and is great company. 

    On a scale of 1-10, how’ll you rate your love life? 

    Mary: 8. We’re saving up to get married and leave the country. Until then, 8 will do.
    Linda: 9. My insecurities sometimes get in the way, but it’s a great relationship, and I love her.

    RELATED: Love Life: We Bonded Over Our Love For Music

  • Love Life: We Bonded Over Our Love for Music

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

    Taiwo (24) and Abisola (22) didn’t physically meet until three months after they started dating. In this episode of Love Life, they talk about how their music careers created a strong foundation for their relationship and the initial fear of not being physically attracted to each other.

    How did you meet? 

    Abisola: On Twitter.

    Taiwo: When she was fangirling me.

    Abisola: You’re a fool. Who was fangirling? If anything, you were stalking me.

    Taiwo: I wasn’t stalking; I was observing. We had many mutual friends, so I saw her tweets when they interacted with her. Then I’d check her account out whenever it popped up on my timeline. I tried to support her music by tagging artists to check out her covers. That’s what she’s calling stalking. 

    How can she even say I was stalking her when she was the one who followed me first and was constantly interacting with my account? I followed back, and we’d sometimes have music-related discussions and arguments.

    Abisola: So that’s how I was a fangirl? He was the one all over my Twitter account. The mutuals he said we have are people I went to school with. I followed him for two reasons. The first was because I was curious about him. I knew he didn’t go to my school, but he was friends with all these people. 

    The second reason was he had a lot of opinions about music. I love music, and I sometimes refer to myself as a musician. It’s a core part of my identity. He reviewed and wrote about music. We’d sometimes talk about it on the timeline, but we never messaged each other until the day he tweeted about someone sending him a question mark as a message. He was so annoyed about it. I told him I was tempted to send him a message with nothing but a question mark. That’s when he told me I was an exception to the rule and could do that if I wanted, so I did. 

    Taiwo: I was already attracted to her at that point. I had seen her pictures and had concluded she was free to send me whatever she wanted. 

    Abisola: I sent him the three question marks, and we’ve talked ever since. 

    Taiwo: It was so funny because I thought she was joking when she said she would. It turned out she wasn’t, and I found it hilarious. I think it’s important to note that we started all of this in June 2020, so it was during the lockdown, and we both had more time on our hands than we usually would. She was interesting to talk to. We’d talk a lot about music, and then, our day, sharing things about ourselves. A week after we started talking, I texted her that it’s our “one-week talkiversary” and that we should celebrate it. 

    Abisola: I’m not someone who talks to people a lot, so I felt after a while, the conversations would end, and we’d return to normal. I told him that was my reason for not wanting to celebrate talking for one week, but to reach some sort of middle ground, if we were still talking by the end of the month, we can celebrate then. 

    How did you celebrate your one month of talking? 

    Taiwo: We started dating. I texted her that day and told her I wanted us to start dating. 

    Abisola: Looking back, I blame the lockdown because I thought it all happened very fast. We all thought we would die and might never see outside again. So, I honestly thought I had nothing to lose. I liked him, and he was easy to talk to, so I was curious to know what a relationship with him would be like. He loves music as much as I do. It was nice to talk to someone about a passion we shared. I resolved in my mind that if we met, and I hated him, or we couldn’t stand each other, we’d break up. 

    Were you scared of that happening though?

    Abisola: I really was. I had a couple of thoughts running through my mind during the first few months of the relationship. What if he was a catfish? What if I was being deceived? What if we met, and I wasn’t attracted to him? What if I couldn’t stand him? He went to the same school as my sister, so I’d asked some questions about him from her and her friends and they all confirmed that he was a great guy, but about the attraction, I wouldn’t know until we met. I’d resolved that if I still had all these questions in my mind after that, I’d end the relationship. 

    Taiwo: There was the fear that the spark might not be there. But I knew I liked her enough. I’d seen pictures and all, I knew what she sounded like, I just hadn’t seen her in person. So while there was a bit of worry, I knew I was in love with her already.

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

    So when did you eventually meet, and how did it go?

    Abisola: Well, during the first three months of the relationship, he was in Osun state, and I was in Ogun state. Legally, travelling from one state to another wasn’t possible at the time. Plus, I was living with my parents. How was I going to explain travelling to another state to see a man I’d never met before? 

    By October, the COVID-19 restrictions on travel had been lifted, and I had my passing out parade to attend, so I had to be in Lagos, where he also was because of work. 

    Taiwo: We had our first date, and it was great. I was late because it took me a while to locate the restaurant, but when I saw her looking so pretty, it calmed me. Thankfully, she was sweet and understanding. I apologised a lot, but eventually, I was able to relax a little. Luckily for me, she didn’t leave the conversation for me to carry.

    Abisola: It was a little nerve-wracking, obviously, because it was our first meeting ever, and I had to wait for him for some time. But like I said earlier, it was great. I knew I wanted to keep seeing him after that. 

    Taiwo: The second date happened not too long after. It was a pizza and ice cream date. This time, I got there before her. I was more relaxed so, in my opinion, it was the better date. We had conversations about everything from life to family, and our fears. 

    Abisola: We just sat and talked for hours. Till date, it’s still one of our favourite dates. 

    You mentioned music is a big part of your lives. In what ways? 

    Taiwo: I review music, so it’s not just something that matters to me, but my income also depends on it. I’m more of an afrobeats lover while she’s a musician who loves to listen to neo-soul and alternative RnB. I mean, that’s one of the things that put her on my radar. 

    We share music with each other and are constantly battling over who has the superior taste. Currently, I think I’m winning because she’s stolen all my favourite musicians down to my friend, Aisosa. 

    Abisola: I’ve put you on to great stuff too.

    Taiwo: Yeah, she helped me explore a lot more genres and sounds. 

    Abisola: He’s part of the reason I appreciate Nigerian music a lot more now. 

    RELATED: Love Life: It Felt Natural to Call Each Other Boyfriend and Girlfriend

    Do you both have an “our song”

    Taiwo: No, we don’t, but we do have artistes we both adore. Show Dem Camp, Lady Donli, the Cavemen — in fact, our first kiss happened at a Cavemen concert. It was our third date, so we were getting quite comfortable around each other. The music was awesome, and we could really unwind. 

    Abisola: It was also the first concert he’d ever attended. He was so cute and shy.The music was amazing, but being there with him made the experience even more enjoyable.

    Taiwo: I won’t be dishonest to say sparks were flying cos it was a short kiss. But it was nice nonetheless. We have shared better kisses since then. 

    Abisola: Almost every important stage of our relationship has been formed by music. It was what attracted me to him, and now, we bond over music. He sends me songs and playlists, and I do the same. It’s always so sweet because it’s like, “Hey, I heard this, and it reminded me of you.” or  “I put together a compilation of songs I think you’ll like”. It’s really the sweetest thing. We talk about everything from industry stuff to things like production and music theory.

    Taiwo: There are times when she’s not in a good place, and I randomly send a song she might like. Or she sends me something she wrote, and it gets me all excited. I think I’m the biggest fan of her music.

    Abisola: I don’t call myself a musician often because I don’t put out a lot of music, so I don’t know what he’s talking about. 

    Taiwo: Don’t mind her. She was the star of a music show in Ibadan a couple of months ago. She’s great at it. 

    Abisola: I haven’t been able to focus on music as much as I’d like because I had to go back to Ibadan for my master’s in 2021. I can’t focus on multiple things at once. 

    I thought you both stayed in Lagos? 

    Taiwo: No o. I stay in Lagos, but she stays in Ibadan. 

    Abisola: Long-distance is currently kicking our ass. When we started the relationship, the distance was manageable because we didn’t know each other well enough, but in 2021, after he redeployed from Sokoto to Ibadan, I knew what it was like to constantly have him around. We were in the same city and could see as much as we wanted. Now, I’m alone here. 

    Taiwo: My schedule is more flexible than hers, so every month, I travel to Ibadan to spend a couple of days. We try to make plans beforehand, so it’s always exciting when we see. Food, movies, outings, gist and everything else. It feels like a monthly vacation because I can escape from the bustle of Lagos with my favourite person. She’s always worried about me travelling too often, but we make it work.

    Abisola: The ideal life will be staying together, but we’re not there yet. 

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

    Taiwo: 7 because of the distance, but everything else is perfect. She carries my matter for her head. Every time I have an issue, it’s always, “How’re we going to solve it?” As such, I never feel alone. She’s pretty, sweet and can be funny at times. 

    Abisola: 8. He makes me really happy. I’d be happier if the distance didn’t exist. He gives the best hugs; I literally look forward to them. He’s the sweetest person I’ve ever met. The most caring too. He’s quite literally my biggest fan. It’s like God said here’s your person, made perfectly for you.  

    RELATED: Love Life: We Started Our Relationship With a Lot of Lies

  • Love Life: We Started Our Relationship With a Lot of Lies

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

    The subjects of this week’s Love Life, Michael (29) and Ada (24), are planning their wedding. They talk us through breaking the bro code, all the lies they told to be together and how their epic Valentine’s Day proposal almost didn’t happen. 

    How did you both meet? 

    Michael: In October of 2018, we met at a birthday party her brother dragged the both of us to. Even though I’d been friends with her brother for a while, the party was the first place I saw her physically. She didn’t school in Nigeria and had just returned a couple of weeks before to start NYSC

    Ada: I came to serve my country, and I found love. What a life. I’m a shy person, so that day was extra hard for me because I wasn’t just outside with my brother but with two of his friends. I tried not to do too much so it wouldn’t seem like I was looking for attention, but not do too little so they wouldn’t think I was proud. I was stressed. 

    Michael: I thought she was beautiful, so I approached her. We vibed really well and had a lovely conversation. We even exchanged numbers. After the party, I started texting her. It was going well, save for the times when she was forming for me.

    What do you mean by “form”? 

    Michael: Twice, I asked her to hang out, but she said she was busy. What was she busy doing? 

    Ada: Technically, it was one time I didn’t get to hang out with you because I had an event to attend with my parents. The second time which was about a month after we met, we eventually saw a movie together. 

    How did that happen? 

    Michael: I’d asked her if she was free, but she said she had plans to see a movie with her friend. Later, my friend called to ask for a lift to the cinema. When I dropped him off, I was about to leave when I saw Ada walking out with her friend. 

    Ada: I was shocked to see him but went to say hi. 

    Michael: We just sat there and talked about many things. 

    Ada: Unlike the last time that meant planning something, we were both already outside. Nobody had to make any effort, so it was easier to just sit down and talk. I enjoyed spending time with him so much that I skipped going to church so we could watch a movie together. 

    LMAO. Wow 

    Ada: It wasn’t the first time something like that happened. A couple of weeks after the cinema thing, in early December, I texted him that I was done with my PPA and was about to go get pizza with my parents. He asked if I could come see him at work, and I agreed because it was still early in the afternoon. I really can’t believe I gave up pizza for this man. 

    Michael: But I bought you food. Doesn’t that make up for it? 

    Ada: It does.

    Michael: After we hung out in my office for a bit, I drove her to a bus stop. At this point, I already knew I liked her. We’d been texting every day since we exchanged numbers, and the two times I’d spent with just her were great. That’s why after gathering courage, I kissed her. 

    Ada: I was excited, but I also tried not to do too much because, even though we were in a car, it was still in broad daylight. 

    Michael: After the kiss, we didn’t become official. I was trying not to rush into anything. 

    Ada: I liked him too, but I was trying not to put all my eggs in one basket, so I still went on dates and hung around with other people.

    Michael: Meanwhile, I was there, with all my eggs in one basket. 

    Ada: LMAO.

    Ada, when did you realise you didn’t want to talk to anyone else? 

    Ada: Valentine’s Day of 2019. In the days leading up to it, I didn’t bring up anything to do with the holiday because I didn’t want it to look like I was expecting anything. When he asked to hang out with me that day, he didn’t make it seem different from any other day. 

    Michael: Meanwhile, I told my boss I was sick so I could take the day off. Missed my daily 2k. 

    Ada: When I got to his place, he’d made that signature bachelor stir fry spaghetti with carrots and bell peppers and bought me red wine and chocolate. He laid his blanket on the floor, and we watched The Notebook together. Because we weren’t even together, but he was intentional about doing things that’d make me feel special, my feelings for him deepened. 

    I love love. How was seeing only him like?

    Ada: We tried to see each other as often as possible, but it was easier during work hours because he worked in Lekki Phase 1, and I worked in VI. We’d dash between offices during our lunch breaks. I’d occasionally lie that I needed to run an errand. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We’d Been Committed to Each Other Long Before We Started Dating

    So how did both of you become official? 

    Michael: I don’t like to rush into things, so I wanted to think it through and ensure everything was perfect first. In June 2019, I told myself if I extended it past this period, I would be playing it too safe. 

    Ada: I was in his house, and he started pacing. I was worried about him, but he told me it was because he was nervous and had something important to talk about. That’s when he asked me to be his girlfriend. 

    Michael: I told her she didn’t need to give an answer immediately, but I just wanted to ask. 

    Ada: I told him yes because I’d grown fond of him, and my friends loved him. He asked me out a couple of weeks before my birthday. I’d told myself that by 21, I’d be more intentional with my dating life, so it felt like a sign. Plus, he’s my brother’s friend, so I knew if he did anything to me, my brother would find him. 

    But I thought it was against the bro code to date your friend’s sister

    Ada: Bro code in the mud o because my brother didn’t even know we were dating for a bit.

    Michael: We were trying to figure out how best to bring it up. Three weeks after we started dating, we all went to see a movie. Ada and I had planned to tell him about it together in the afternoon, but she went ahead to tell him in the morning. When I eventually came over in the afternoon, he and I just talked. 

    What if he’d said you shouldn’t date? 

    Michael: That would’ve been his business. We told him out of courtesy. Plus, he’s not that kind of person. If he didn’t want me dating his sister, we wouldn’t have been friends anyway. 

    Ada: My brother wouldn’t let me around people he didn’t trust. The actual obstacle we had to face was my father. I’m the only girl, so my dad is extra protective of me and didn’t like the fact that I was staying out so late. Whenever he came back from work and didn’t find me at home, he’d be upset. My mum, on the other hand, was a bit more laid back. When I told her about Michael, she just warned me to be careful. She even started covering for me with my dad sometimes. 

    If I wanted to sleep over at his place, I’d have to lie about staying with my friend, Dammy. I was 21 and still living with my parents, so I made sacrifices like staying back to spend time with him instead of following the rest of my family on a three-week trip. When they asked why I couldn’t go, I just told them I couldn’t take leave from work. 

    With physical touch as my love language, I really need to be in situations where I can just hold him. Three weeks without seeing him could have killed me. 

    You must have hated lockdown 

    Ada: I almost lost my mind. 

    Michael: There were no more sleepovers or quick dashes to each other’s offices  . We tried to make do with video and audio calls, but it wasn’t the same. 

    Ada: At 7 a.m. on the day they lifted the lockdown, I borrowed my mum’s car and went from my house in Ajah to his in Yaba. I couldn’t go another hour without seeing him. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Telling Our Parents Made Our Relationship Easy

    See love o. Did you ever confess about the Dammy thing? 

    Ada: No, but my parents can’t do anything to me now. I’m a married woman. 

    Tell me about the proposal 

    Michael: I started preparing to propose to her in January 2022. I enlisted her friends to help find out the kind of ring she wanted and her size. A friend of mine who owns a restaurant in Lekki offered it as the venue. I also had to speak to her parents and get an event planner. 

    I made sure before I bought the ring, I’d told my family and hers. When I got their approval, I went ahead with getting the ring and setting up a plan. 

    I told her our friend group decided to have a big “February 13” Valentine’s dinner in VI, but the truth was that the event was in Lekki. I didn’t want her to get too suspicious of what was happening. The plan was that she’d come “pick me up” at Lekki, I’d propose to her. 

    On that day, everything was set. Our friends were hiding in the dark, I was on my knees, and the ring was in my hand, but she refused to come down from her Uber. 

    Ada: In my defence, I was being reasonable. He’d told me to pick him up from the place in Lekki so we could go to VI together. I didn’t see the point in ending the trip then trying to order another ride. Plus, I had some bags with me. I didn’t want to wait with my load when he could just walk to the Uber, and we could go. 

    LMAO. What now happened?

    Michael: I don’t know how her friend did it, but she convinced Ada to come inside. They started playing her favourite song as she walked in. I asked her to marry me. After she said yes, our friends came out, and we had dinner to celebrate.

    Ada: I remember walking into the room and trying hard not to step on the roses on the floor because I thought it was for someone else’s Valentine’s Day surprise. 

    LMAO. Does that mean you weren’t suspicious he wanted to propose? 

    Michael: I think I played it well enough that she didn’t know. There were a few close calls like when she was searching the glove compartment of my car for something while the ring was in there. Immediately she went to do something else, I removed it and threw it under my chair. 

    Ada: LMAO. Can you imagine? When he wanted to talk to my parents, I was a bit curious, but I didn’t put my mind on it. 

    Congratulations. How was the wedding? 

    Michael: We’ve technically not done a white wedding yet, but we’ve done an introduction and court wedding. We wanted those things to happen a month before the white wedding. 

    Ada: We’re married by law but haven’t had a wedding ceremony. 

    Why bother with one? 

    Ada: For me, it’s for the things before and after the wedding; getting ready with my bridesmaids, walking down the aisle and the afterparty. I want to celebrate and have fun with my friends. The rest is just formality. 

    Michael: Exactly

    So, let’s talk wedding planning. What’s shocking you and what don’t you understand

    Michael: One thing I’m yet to wrap my head around is the price of a cake. 

    Ada: It seems like such a waste of money. How many people actually eat cakes at a wedding? 

    Michael: The people we’re trying to get a cake from told us we’d pay 150k for a three-tiered cake, but only two tiers are actual cake. The base layer is fake and the other two layers are edible. 

    LMAO. Interesting. 

    Michael: DJ’s also cost a lot. I thought we could get good coverage for like 70k. If you’re not holding 250k upwards, you won’t get anything decent. Also, when it comes to inviting people, you might not think you know people, but you do.

    The venue we’ve gotten can seat only 250 guests, but now that we’re counting, it’s getting to 400+. I keep trying to tell our parents that the hall will not fit all the people they keep inviting but keep insisting that it will. Where will they stay? I’m thinking of doing it strictly by invitation so everyone will have space to breathe. I really don’t want a crowded wedding, but if it ends up that way, that’s everyone’s business. I’m married to the love of my life. 

    Ada: Awww

    God, when o. How will you rate your love life on a scale of 1-10?

    Ada: 10. I’m huge on compatibility and Michael has always fit in with any area of my life. My family and friends love him, so it’s always been him. 

    Michael: I’d give it a 9. Everything about our relationship aligned and she’s everything I’ve ever wanted. We have a lot of plans for ourselves and I love that they align. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We’re Expecting Our First Child After a Year Together

  • Love Life: We’re Expecting Our First Child After a Year Together

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

    Olisa (29) and Sandra (27) started dating, got engaged and married within a year after meeting on Twitter. They tell us about how it happened, the stress of planning a wedding and their first pregnancy

    How do you meet someone on Twitter? 

    Sandra: Early 2021, I saw a tweet about how Taurus women are always lucky with men. I was very single at the time, and all the men who’d reached out to me were hellbent on hi-ing me to death. I replied to the tweet with “I beg to differ.” 

    Olisa: I saw that comment. It was funny and made me think she had a good sense of humour, so I replied. 

    Before I did, I went through her profile and saw her pictures. She was stunning, had such a gorgeous smile and looked approachable. I tried to get her attention by liking all her pictures. 

    Smooth

    Sandra: Seeing all the notifications made me curious about who was behind the account. I went through his media, and that’s when I tweeted, “You, liking all of my pictures, this is me telling you you’re cute AF”. He liked that tweet and sent me a DM. I was eventually going to text him, but he beat me to it. 

    Olisa: If I’d liked all her pictures and she hadn’t noticed me, I probably wouldn’t have had the courage to text her. 

    I think I’m using my Twitter wrong

    Olisa: I wanted to see her in person as soon as possible, but I couldn’t at first. 

    Sandra: We were both very busy with work. Extremely tight schedules and booked weekends. That’s why when we met a week after we started talking, it was during my lunch break. It was a 30-minute break, but it was lovely. 

    Olisa: I saw her smile, and I knew I was a goner. There was no hope for me. 

    Sandra: During the date, my mum called and he spoke to her. 

    Olisa: I told her mum I was going to marry her. The next day, I asked her to be my girlfriend. 

    In a week? 

    Olisa: There’s something about her. I was so sure from the first picture I saw of her. I didn’t want to waste any time before someone else who saw what I saw would carry her away. 

    Sandra: When he mentioned marriage to my mother and me, I thought he was just spinning my head. You know how all these Lagos boys do? 

    Olisa: I wasn’t lying sha.

    Sandra: It was just that initial fear that you would break my heart.

    Olisa: I’d never. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Became Lovers by Accident

    God when. What was dating like? 

    Olisa: It was great. The problem was we were both extremely busy people. Between traffic, meetings and stress, seeing each other could’ve been labelled impossible, but we made sure we had dates every weekend, no matter what. 

    Sandra: It could be watching a movie or going out, but we must spend the weekend together. Throughout the five months we dated, he only missed two weekends because we weren’t in the same country. 

    Olisa: I’d just proposed, then I needed to be in America for two weeks. 

    Sandra: Imagine proposing and leaving your fiancée for two whole weeks. I thought he wouldn’t return.

    Olisa: LOL

    Tell me about the proposal 

    Olisa: I knew I wanted to marry her very early on. She’s kind and I knew she would make a fantastic mum. If she loves the child just half as much as she loves me, it’s enough. 

    When I proposed to her, it was on a Sunday after we got back from church. While on the bed, I told her to close her eyes and kiss me. Instead of kissing her, I put the ring on her lips. When she realised it was a ring, she said yes. 

    Sandra: He’s kind, communicates efficiently, is a good listener and even though the world is challenging and tiring, he makes me happy. Saying yes was a no-brainer. 

    Tell me about planning the wedding. How did that go? 

    Sandra: The engagement lasted five months because we kept trying to ensure everything went according to plan. The wedding was in Port Harcourt, where I grew up. I was in charge of everything because he didn’t know the location. 

    Olisa: The stress of the wedding was getting to her, but I tried my best to organise people, make payments on time and schedule movement. Everything from booking flights to dealing with the event centre manager caused us a great deal of stress, and we never want to go through that again. 

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

    That must’ve cost a lot too.

    Olisa: Can’t give an actual figure, but yes, it did. 

    Sandra: I didn’t want people travelling up and down for the wedding. I felt it wouldn’t be safe. So we decided our white and traditional weddings would be on the same day. A white wedding in the morning and the traditional wedding as the reception. 

    Olisa: We had to pay for the accommodation and transportation of our bridal party and family members. 

    Couple with their bridal party

    Sandra: Food, drinks, clothes, photographs, omo. It was a lot. 

    But it looked like you had fun 

    Sandra: We did. Now that that’s over, we’re looking forward to starting our family. I want to start my family traditions like taking Christmas pictures by our tree, going on vacations, etc. 

    Olisa: I’m so excited because I’ve always wanted to start a family. Knowing it’s happening with her makes it so much better. 

    Sandra: I want to have my two children before I turned 30. I’m about to pop now. So, one down, one more to go. 

    How’s pregnancy treating you? 

    Sandra: Great, except for the weird cravings and evening sickness. During my second trimester, I was in a constant state of craving eba. It could be with any soup. I just had to eat eba. 

    Olisa: I try to do my best, but I’m not the one carrying the baby. We had to adjust our outing schedule because she’s not as energetic as she used to be, but I know it’ll pass. 

    Sandra: There’s no easy part, but knowing I’m creating a human is a fantastic feeling. I’m currently on maternity leave, and it’s so dull. I started watching Grey’s Anatomy to keep me busy. 

    Rate your love life on a scale of 1-10

    Sandra: 10. This relationship is everything I’ve always wanted.

    Olisa: 10

    RELATED: Love Life: It Felt Natural to Call Each Other Boyfriend and Girlfriend

  • Love Life: Being Polyamorous Didn’t Stop My Jealousy

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

    The subjects of this week’s Love Life are Jaymes*(23) and Seyi*(20), a polyamorous couple who got together five days after they started talking. Since then, they’ve had to deal with one of them being outed as queer, navigating multiple relationships and the jealousy it comes with. 

    Tell me how both of you started talking

    Jaymes: We met on Twitter. I’d seen Seyi fighting all over the timeline, but I never messaged them until at the beginning of 2021 when they tweeted something that made me worry about them. 

    Seyi: What do you mean “fighting”?

    Jaymes: If anyone talked anyhow about women or queer people, you were there to help them press reset on their brain. 

    Seyi: I was doing it out of the goodness of my heart. It was community service, thankless work. 

    Jaymes: Yes, baby. Well done. 

    After I messaged them on Twitter, it’s not like we spoke constantly. We only talked to each other when we remembered. And I only remembered when I saw them behaving like an agbero on my timeline. 

    Seyi: You’re very rude, you know? I’m a sweet and kind person. 

    Jaymes: Of course. 

    LMAO. If the talking wasn’t consistent, how did you start dating?

    Jaymes: Well, we started talking consistently in March of 2021. I don’t even remember why. I just know we spent five hours on the phone during our first proper interaction, talking. 

    Seyi: And this was what we did for the next five days. We spent 11-14 hours on the phone each day. When we weren’t on the phone, we were texting. 

    Were you people unemployed? 

    Seyi: Yes, but I also had classes. We texted while I was in class. 

    Jaymes: On the fifth day, asking them out just fell from my mouth. They agreed, but it cost me ₦20k. 

    How? 

    Seyi: He lost a bet with his friends on how long he could last before he asked me out.

    Jaymes: I have a track record of asking people out almost immediately after we start consistently talking. After the first day I spent hours on the phone with Seyi, I told my friends about them, and my friends told me I’d behave like I always do. I said this was different, so we all put money on it. I’d win if I could make it till the time they set without asking Seyi out. I didn’t. 

    How much time did they set? 

    Seyi: Seven days.

    Jaymes: Looking back at it, it was a very stupid decision not to wait for the seven days.

    Seyi: Yes, because we could’ve used that money for something. 

    Jaymes: I agree. It was worth it though. I lost the money, but I’ve got the most amazing human alive.

    Seyi: You’re so sweet. 

    But what were you people talking about for five days?

    Seyi: He’d sing to me, we’d talk about how our days went,  joke and laugh. Rant about stuff that was unfair, our lives, what we wanted in a partner, etc. We asked all the talking stage questions of what do you like, favourite colour, etc. 

    We video-called sometimes and danced. It was the kind of talk that’ll make you sit under your dining table smiling like a goat. That meme of the guy on the bed and holding a broom on the phone was me.

    So I knew he would lose the bet. I’d already told my friends and other boyfriend there was someone I liked and might start dating so they won’t be surprised when I did. 

    Ah yes, another boyfriend 

    Seyi: Yeah, I was in a relationship with someone for a year and some months by the time Jaymes and I started talking. 

    RELATED: I Realised I am Polyamorous in 2020

    How did that work? 

    Seyi: My other boyfriend, Kunle*, and I told each other about the people we liked before getting into a relationship with them. So when I started talking to Jaymes, I told Kunle about it. 

    I went from “Hey, I’ve been talking to this person I really like and think I might date” to “This person asked me out, and I said yes” a few days later. That caused a slight problem because Kunle just thought I’d been talking to Jaymes for a long time and kept it from him. When he confronted me about it, I told him the truth. That it happened fast. And I think he accepted that. 

    Jaymes, are you also polyamorous? 

    Jaymes: Yup. Unlike Seyi, I didn’t have another partner at the time, but there was someone else I was in love with. I’d always known I was capable of loving multiple people at the same time, and that’s why I stopped forcing myself to try and be in monogamous relationships. 

    We both understood how we worked, so we hardly had problems with it. But we had some slight issues.

    What were the issues? 

    Seyi: Well, we stayed in two different states, but there also was the fact that he got outed as queer to his parents. That period was very scary for me because I couldn’t be there him, so I had to rely on calls and texts whenever he had the chance to.

    Jaymes: Add the fact that I’d gotten diagnosed with schizophrenia towards the end of 2020 and the outing led to multiple psychotic breaks. I was dealing with that, changing schools and being cut off from my parents. 

    I’m so sorry. That’s a lot for one person 

    Jaymes: It’s mostly all right now, but then? Because my parents cut me off,  I didn’t have my medication, which made me very paranoid. I believed everyone was out to get me, Seyi included.

    I don’t know how they were able to cope, but I do know if not for my patient and magnificent friends and partner, I might’ve lost it.

    I’d call at odd hours because I had severe nightmares. At one point, I felt bad for Seyi. I figured it was too much to make one person deal with and that I was detrimental to their life and wellbeing, so I broke up with them. 

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    Seyi: When he broke up with me, I didn’t feel bad about it. I knew and understood why he thought what he did. All that mattered to me was that he knew he was safe. 

    Jaymes: After I told them I wanted us to break up via text, I wanted to take it back immediately, but I was in school and the network randomly disappeared

    When I eventually got to them, I told them I wanted us to get back together. The breakup lasted for a total of 12 hours, but it took us at least a week before we stopped walking on eggshells around each other.  

    How long were you both together when the outing happened? 

    Seyi: Six months, so it was fairly early into the relationship. 

    Jaymes: I’m grateful for them in my life because they supported me through everything. I started freelancing to make some money, and Seyi tried to make sure I got my medication and was taking them. I’d skip some days to try to drag the drugs out for longer though. 

    Seyi, and you did all this while navigating a second relationship? 

    Seyi: Yeah, navigating both relationships was okay for a while. Kunle and I had both been in and out of relationships while dating each other, so we knew how the dynamic worked. But things kind of got rocky when Jaymes came to Lagos. 

    RELATED: Love Life: She’s Polyamorous but I’m Not

    Why? 

    Seyi: I thought since I had a partner, Kunle, whom I regularly saw one partner when I was in Lagos, it was okay to spend more time with the one I hardly saw. But that didn’t work. They both felt I was giving the other person more attention, and it was extremely stressful. 

    Jaymes: I knew they were trying their best, but there were two incidents in which the three of us would be at the same event and I just felt jealous. 

    I didn’t have issues with Kunle personally, we were actually pretty cool. It’s just that I wasn’t going to be in the same physical location as my partner again till heaven knows when. I wanted to savour every moment and spend as much time with them as I could, but I still had to share that with someone else. 

    How did you navigate the jealousy?

    Jaymes: Well, I’d been jealous before. Whenever they hung out, I’d feel bad because all I had were calls and texts. I wanted to just hold their hand or go on a physical date with them. 

    As time passed, I was more comfortable speaking about how I felt. They reminded me that us not being in the same places didn’t mean they loved me less or didn’t want to hang out with me. They listened and didn’t judge me for being jealous. We’d talk about all of the things we’d do when we meet, have our long ass calls, and most times, sleep on the phone.

    So when I was in Lagos, we talked through it. They’d listen, reassure me and ask questions about how I felt and things that made me upset. They’re amazing. That’s why when they and Kunle broke up eight months after we started dating, I wanted to be as there for them as possible. 

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

    Seyi, why did you and Kunle break up? 

    Seyi: The reasons were a lot. He said the distance was hard for him. Meanwhile, he was in Ikeja and I was in Yaba. He also said he wanted to be monogamous and that I never sexted him. It was a lot of nonsense. 

    Jaymes: If I was in Lagos, I’d have put Kunle in a hospital. I even contemplated travelling just to come and fight. He was so stupid. 

    Seyi: I’m really glad Jaymes was there for me. He was so good to me. Letting me rant, ranting with me, listening, reassuring me and dealing with the insecurities the breakup caused. I didn’t stop being heartbroken, but I recovered enough to focus on the person I was still dating. 

    Glad you both have each other. Any new relationships? 

    Seyi: None from me. I don’t think I have the mental and physical energy to date anyone right now else. 

    Jaymes: I started dating someone new last week. 

    Rate your love life on a scale of 1-10

    Seyi: 8. Minus one for distance and the other because, sometimes, we have issues communicating how we feel to one another, but we’re working on it.

    Jaymes: 8.5

    Seyi: Na wa. Where did the .5 come from? 

    Jaymes: It’s jara now. Despite the difficulties we’ve had, I learnt what love without fear means. It’s safe to be all of who I am without hiding, shrinking or being scared to say how I feel.

    RELATED: Love Life: Telling Our Parents Made Our Relationship Easy

  • 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. 

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    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. 

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    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

  • QUIZ: This Quiz Will Tell You How to Break Up With Your Partner

    You need to step up your breakfast and wickedness game. Take this quiz and we’ll tell you how to break up with your partner.

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

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

    The subjects of this week’s Love Life are Frank*, 56, and Enobong*, 51. They talk about dating for six years, navigating long-distance in a time without phones and being married for 23 years. 

    What’s your earliest memory of each other

    Frank: I had an office in Ikeja beneath a computer school, and the day she came to register, she said hi to me. We went to the same university back in Calabar, so it was nice to see a familiar face. 

    Enobong: I was 22 and trying to be useful during holidays, so I enrolled at a computer class. The first day we had a conversation, I mentioned I was going to the market after computer classes. He told me to buy something for him from the market, and I did. I didn’t know what to buy, so I bought him a handkerchief. 

    Frank: I didn’t think she would buy it. I just said it to continue the conversation.

    How did you realise you liked each other? 

    Enobong: Well, at that time, there was some other person I was talking to. But when I went to visit him one day, he did something that made me realise I didn’t want a relationship with him. I thought, “Frank wouldn’t hurt me like that.” That’s how I realised I genuinely liked him. 

    Frank: So I was a rebound? 

    Enobong: Something like that, yes.

    Frank: Wow. Well, I realised I liked her when I tried to make her jealous. I had this female friend who came to write exams but was resting in my office. I told the friend to help me gauge Eno’s reaction when she sees me taking her to lunch. As I realised I cared about her reaction, I knew just how much I felt for her. 

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    Were you jealous?

    Enobong: Yes now. She was a very pretty girl, and I knew they were close friends. I thought he would go for her over me, but here we are. 

    Frank: I didn’t even know she was jealous because she never acted on it. She’s never been one for drama. 

    And how did that progress to dating?

    Enobong: Honestly, I don’t remember. I know I started talking to him every day. Before or after the computer classes start, I’d pop into his office to talk. 

    Frank: Well, we would talk like that for the duration of the computer training period. Then one day, I told her I wanted us to be friends. 

    Enobong: I remember wondering what he meant. Weren’t we friends? We’d been talking almost every day for a year.

    Frank: I liked her a lot and wanted us to be friends. I wanted to know where the feelings would take us.

    What was dating like?

    Enobong: Well, we saw each other as often as we could because, when the holiday ended, I went back to school in Calabar while he stayed in Lagos. There were no phones then, so we only wrote letters to one another. 

    Frank: Sometimes, she wouldn’t get my letters, so it was only the love I had for her that kept me going. I’m an architect, and sometimes, I’d get jobs in Calabar, so we’d hangout once or twice during the school year. But asides from that, nothing till the holidays. 

    How did you people cope?

    Enobong: I was busy with school and church, so I didn’t even have the energy to entertain anything else. 

    Frank: When you love someone, it occupies your mind. My thoughts were filled with her, and I couldn’t think of anyone else. I knew I wanted to marry her, but she was still in school. We decided to wait until she was done with her NYSC. 

    Funny enough, I’d sworn I would never date anyone who’s still in school because they wouldn’t be faithful to me. But if I’d already broken one rule, waiting for her to finish was something else I could do. 

    After she was done with NYSC, which was about six years after we started dating, I proposed to her during a get-together at my cousin’s house. I told everyone I had an announcement to make, and I asked her to marry me.

    Enobong: I was shocked because I didn’t know he’d planned it, but I’d made up my mind that if I looked for a job for a year and didn’t find one, I’d get married. I loved him enough to marry him immediately, but I wanted to find a job first. When I didn’t, I decided to go ahead with the wedding. 

    How was that like?

    Enobong: My family liked him, but they initially thought I was rushing into it because they didn’t know we’d dated that long. Once I cleared the air with them, they were no longer worried about it. They also thought I should’ve gotten a job first.

    Frank: The only problem we could’ve had was that she comes from a very rich family. Me, not so much. My dad had just died, and I was caring for my siblings. 

    I’m lucky she wasn’t one for extravagance, but I still took it as a challenge upon myself. I wanted to make her happy always. It might be with something small like coming back home with a gift for her, her favourite biscuits, but it’s important she’s happy. 

    God when? What was it like after the wedding?

    Enobong: The year we got married, we had our first child. I don’t think anything about us changed. We were just a couple with a child. 

    Frank: We prayed a lot and knew this was the path God was leading us to, so we never deterred. Anything that came across as a challenge, we took it to God. We promised ourselves early on that we wouldn’t bring other people into our relationship. It was just us and God. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Work Because We’re Deliberate About Our Faith

    And your children. How many?

    Enobong: We have three children we love very dearly. 

    Frank: Having children made us love each other more. These were the products of the love we shared.

    Enobong: Children bind you to a person, and ours bound me to someone I love. 

    What’s something about marriage that you realised the older you got?

    Frank: Marriage is about working on it. Nobody can say they have it 100%. You started out as strangers, and now, you’re making a life together. There’ll be bumps, but you’ve made the decision to stay together, so you must work on it. You navigate your differences and try to understand. 

    When we had our third child, there were some complications with the birth and we argued about it for a while. How much rest she was taking and how little she needed to work, but we worked it out. 

    Enobong: You may have a plan for yourself and the place you want to be at a certain point after being married, but you might not get there. That’s why love is important. 

    Also, living with someone is much different than dating them. I didn’t know this man was messy. He leaves nylons and food wrappers everywhere. 

    Frank: It’s not that bad. She’s exaggerating. 

    Any challenges?

    Enobong: He’s messy.

    Frank: She’s always saying, “I don’t know,” when I ask her questions. How can she not know? I want to make her happy all the time, but I don’t think I have the capacity for it. I try my best though. 

    Enobong: You do.

    On a scale of 1-10, rate your love life 

    Frank: An 8. If it were a 10/10, it’ll no longer be a human relationship. We still have our shortcomings, but we care about each other greatly. 

    Enobong: 8.5 because we understand each other. We try our best.

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  • QUIZ: We Know How You Shoot Your Shot

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    Take this quiz and see for yourself.

  • Love Life: We Became Lovers By Accident

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

    Murphy, 25 and Susan, 22 have been together for almost five years. This week on Zikoko’s Love Life, they talk about dating by accident, breaking up at least three times, and getting engaged. 

    What’s your earliest memory of each other

    Susan: We met in 2018 because of a friend. I was going through tough times emotionally and asked this friend if she knew anyone that’d be free to hang out during the school holidays. 

    She had a friend that was coming to Warri for an internship who needed a tour guide. I agreed and she gave him my number. When he texted me, I replied, “Hey stranger,” and he said, “I like you already”. 

    Murphy: A tour guide that doesn’t know work. When I asked for a tour guide, I just wanted someone to show me around. I heard there was a zoo in Warri ,and I wanted to see it. Would you believe I actually never saw the zoo? The only place she took me to was Shoprite. 

    Susan: My mummy didn’t let me go out. 

    Susan, you agreed to be a tour guide knowing your mother doesn’t let you go out? How were you going to do your work? 

    Susan: In my defence, I just wanted a friend to keep me company. At the time, my mum didn’t trust anyone with my safety, so I always had to be in the house by 6 p.m. There was no way I was going to take him to fun places and still be back home on time.  

    That’s why our first meeting happened at the mall. 

    Looking back at it, I could have been talking to a ghost or a serial killer becuase I didn’t even know what he looked like. I just trusted my friend to not put me in the hands of an evil person. 

    Murphy: She passed me, and when she came back, she asked if I was the person she was supposed to see. I just started laughing. I wasn’t sure it was her the first time. I thought if she was the one, she’d call my number.

    After that time, I started hanging out with her almost every day after work.

    Susan: It was every day o. Not almost.

    Who is lying? 

    Murphy: Work would close by 5 p.m. and we’d hang out till her mum started calling her to come home. I enjoyed her company and I didn’t have a lot of friends, so I spent all my time with her. 

    See romance. 

    Susan: At the time, it wasn’t romance. We were not together and had only been talking for a month, but I knew he was someone I could rely on. He didn’t try to get information or be nosy. He would just be there. 

    I remember when I wanted to get a new phone and didn’t have enough money to pay for what I wanted. He was with me while I was trying to strike a deal with the person buying the phone for me. 

    That’s how he just sent me his salary for the month, which was the balance for me to buy the phone. He told me that if I wanted to pay back, I could. If I didn’t, I shouldn’t. To date, he hasn’t asked me for the money. 

    RELATED: Love Life: He Wouldn’t Go to London Without Me

    AH! In Buhari’s Nigeria? A whole one-month salary!? 

    Susan: I like to believe he did it because he’s a good person.

    Murphy: Well, she needed the money, and I don’t think I thought too much about sending her ₦35k. 

    Susan: After he sent me the money, I carried him to meet my mother so that if anything happened to me, she could see the boy that gave me the money for the phone. 

    Murphy: So that’s why you took me to your house? I thought you just wanted to show me your place. 

    Susan: Ehn… anyhow. 

    So, when did you both realise you had feelings for each other? 

    Murphy: In September of 2018, which was three months after we met, I realised I liked her. Meanwhile, this babe was asking me to set her up with someone where I worked because I worked in Chevron. Women. 

    Anyways, one day while I was viewing her WhatsApp status, she posted a screenshot of a message of a guy trying to ask her out. The message wasn’t constructed well, and it just wasn’t looking great. I felt I could do better, so I reconstructed the message and sent it to her. She replied with a yes, so I was very happy. 

    Email Murphy sent to Susan

    Susan: That yes was by accident o. I was having a conversation with my best friend and she asked me a yes or no question. As I wanted to reply her, his message came in and I ended up sending the yes to him. 

    RELATED: Love Life: It Was Love At First Talk

    Wow. All that message reconstruction for what? 

    Susan: I tried to delete it after, but he uses GBWhatsApp, so he saw the message. That’s how I entered the relationship. 

    Murphy: Just for me to wake up the next day to a breakup message. 

    You didn’t tell him it was an accident?

    Susan: I didn’t. He was so happy, and I didn’t want to hurt his feelings. But later that night, I realised I didn’t want to be in a relationship, so I sent him a breakup message. He didn’t talk to me for the whole day.

    Murphy:I couldn’t do anything at work. I was distracted for the whole day. It was so bad even my boss noticed.  ___

    Susan: I missed him so much because he was the only friend I spoke to constantly, so in the evening, I called him and told him the breakup message was a prank and he shouldn’t be angry with me. That’s how I entered the relationship again. 

    Murphy: When she called me, I was happy because yes, I was going to be with this person I really liked. Behold, a couple of months later, she broke up with me again. 

    What did he do this time? 

    Murphy: Help me ask her because I don’t even understand how it happened. To make matters worse, she’d resumed school at the time and was ill, so I left Warri to Abraka to go and see her. Just for me to get broken up with.

    Susan: It was evil spirit. But honestly, I felt bad. I didn’t think I was treating him well in our relationship because I was still struggling with the feelings I had in my previous relationship. He was with me a 100% and I felt I didn’t return the energy. I didn’t want to hurt his feelings. When I told him we should break up, he said we should work it out and talk. By evening, we had gotten back together again. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Seven Years In and We’re Still Excited to Be Together

    So, Susan, when did you realise you liked him? 

    Susan: The very last time I tried to break up with him in November of that same year. He had come to see me in school and seeing his face made me feel like I didn’t deserve him. He had been nothing but kind to me, but I felt scared to go through with it because the last relationship I had before him was a very toxic one. I felt I hadn’t healed enough. When I brought it up, he actually agreed we should breakup. He was tired of trying to convince me to be with him, and if I felt it wasn’t going to work, that’s it. 

    Murphy: A king that knows his worth. 

    Susan: He sha gave me a whole speech while a James Arthur’s song Naked was playing on MTV base. It felt like the whole song was about us. 

    Murphy: That song annoys me so much. 

    Susan: Every time we hear that song now, he gives me dirty looks. When he slept off, I started thinking about how much I actually loved him. 

    Murphy: Past tense? 

    Susan: Baby, love. How much I love this person and didn’t want a life without him in it. So, when he woke up, I started confessing all my feelings to him. I told him how I’d ask him out this time if he wanted me to and I’d go on dates and everything. He was now blushing.

    LMAO. Murphy, did you love her? 

    Murphy: From the first month after we started dating. I’m someone that knows what I want unlike Susan.

    Susan: Please, abeg o. 

    Murphy: So, I knew she was who I wanted to spend the rest of my life with. She’s smart, ambitious, pretty, etc. Honestly, she’s everything I want in a woman. That’s why I kept trying. I wanted to have it in the back of my mind that I tried everything possible to make sure it worked out. I’m happy I tried and we’re where we are today. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I Chased Her for Almost Two Years

    So what was dating like after everyone’s head had calmed down? 

    Murphy: I was having a great time. We were friends before we started dating, and I think that greatly influenced how easy the relationship was after she calmed down. 

    Susan: I’m a smitten babe. I am in love with him completely. Dating him is the best decision of my life, and I am grateful every day I get to spend life with him. The only small issue we had was having to deal with different versions of long-distance for a while. 

    Explain

    Murphy: After my internship, I moved back to Benin City while she was still in Delta state. So, seeing her was about a two-hour drive. I graduated in 2019, but she was still in school, so whenever I wanted to see her, I had to lie to my parents I had a job to do in Delta state. 

    Susan: I travelled to him a few times too, but because I was still a student, my schedule was less predictable. We could have impromptu tests or assignments to submit. I liked school and I liked to keep my grades up, so he travelled more. 

    Murphy: Then last year, 2021, I moved out of my parent’s house. When looking for a place to stay, I had a few things to consider. I didn’t want a place that would stress me as much as Benin did in terms of random police checkpoints and the likes, and I wanted a safe place. 

    Susan: He first wanted to go to Lagos but then I don’t like Lagos. It wasn’t a place I wanted to live. So he moved to Abuja. 

    Murphy: In August. And she joined me in November.

    Susan: I moved once I graduated and started house hunting. It was my first time in this sort of committed relationship, and I didn’t want to encroach on his space. I stayed for like three months looking for a house when my mother just told me that I was deceiving myself house hunting. 

    Murphy: I was trying to help her look for the house even though I didn’t want to. 

    Susan: Whenever he stopped helping me look for a house, I’d make it a big deal. That he doesn’t want me to find my own place and all of that. Eventually, I too realised I was deceiving myself and it made no sense to live separately because I would’ve just been wasting money on rent. 

    Tell me about the proposal

    Murphy: Well, I decided I was going to propose to her in May in Dubai. I’d told my friends and we’d booked our flights. After announcing to my friends, I realised I actually hadn’t told her parents I wanted to marry their daughter. So, we had to move our trip so we could see each other’s families. 

    The biggest issue with the proposal is that Susan is very nosy. She’s always asking what I’m doing and where I’m doing it. The day I was to get the ring and propose, we had to lie to her so she wouldn’t suspect anything. We thank God for a successful engagement. 

    Susan: I’m ashamed of myself because he outsmarted me. I had no clue what was going on. We travel regularly, so I just thought it was a regular trip. Plus, he told me he didn’t plan on getting married soon, so I forgot about it. 

    We had discussed marriage a couple of times and had even picked the name of our first daughter, but it’s not something I was in a hurry to do. 

    Congratulations. Now that you’re engaged, do you think anything has changed? 

    Susan: Nothing honestly. Right now, I feel loved. 

    M: You no dey feel loved before? 

    Susan: It has doubled. I don’t just find him as annoying anymore. Now, he’s just cute. 

    Murphy: Nothing has changed for me. At least, she can’t do me anyhow because she no fit komot again. 

    So, when do you think the wedding will be? 

    Murphy: I’d like to say a year from now. We wanted to do it January 2023, but we don’t think that’s enough time. We want to be able to plan it very well. One thing that’s shocked me is how many things there are to do. Ah ah. 

    Susan: Since the engagement, we’ve not actively planned anything and that’s why we want to move it. 

    Murphy: We don’t have a wedding planner because we heard they’re expensive. We believe in ourselves that we’re planners by heart. 

    I will come back to check if you’ve budged and gotten a wedding planner

    Murphy: Hopefully we won’t o.

    Susan: By the Grace of God, we’ll be fine. I’m not scared of anything happening because I don’t think there’s anything that can make me say I don’t want to go through with it. 

    On a scale of 1-10, how’d you rate your love life? 

    Murphy: It’s a 10 for me. I love her.

    Susan: If someone checks all the boxes of something you need in a person, then it’s a 10. M checks all the boxes and then even brings some extra to it. Before him, I didn’t know someone could be so intentional about another person, but here he is. My walking bag of joy. 

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

  • The Ultimate Streets Starter Pack

    Imagine thinking you found the one, only to be served breakfast. Now, you’re back on the streets, but you’re not sure where to start — how about with these must-haves. 

    Ashawo clothing

    Before you even think of entering the streets, you need to know it’s very competitive. So bring your A-game; bodycon dresses, crop tops, sleeveless shirts, miniskirts, ashawo shorts, peplum tops, white trad — whatever makes you feel sexy tbh. 

    Pepper

    EDITOR’s PICK: QUIZ: What Type of Pepper Are You? 

    People on the streets are wicked, so you have to be wickeda. Before they start to move mad, quickly show them small pepper. Nobody will tell them not to mess with you again. 

    Bandages

    You should also accompany it with basic first aid skills because you’ll need them. You’d think that being on the streets would spare you from heartbreak, but wait till you meet Femi or Amaka. Even the bandage may not be able to protect your heart.

    Eye drops

    Nothing can prepare you for the things you’ll see on the streets. But at least, eye drops may help you forget. Just make sure you use them regularly sha so it doesn’t lose potency. 

    Kpankere

    Cane, whip, whatever you choose to call it — whoever says violence is not the answer has never been on the streets.

    READ UP: 21 Crimes You Can Get Beaten For 

    Spoon

    Always have a spoon handy. This is pretty obvious because how else do you plan on chopping people’s money? And if you don’t see the money to chop? Don’t worry, you can still chop breakfast. 

    Anointing oil

    If you don’t have anything else — for your sake and your partners’. On the streets, people are always threatening to move mad, so when they start to act possessed, just bring out your oil and anoint them against evil. 

    Plan B

    No, not the kind you’re thinking of. We mean a backup plan for when the streets fail because it most certainly will. So prepare your mind to join the seminary or convent.

    ALSO READ: 11 Things To Carry With You Before Entering the Lagos Dating Scene 

  • 8 Proven Ways to Help Your Ex Get Over You

    So you’ve just served your lover breakfast. But to make them feel better, you try to stay in contact with them. Don’t!

    If you don’t know how to handle things after serving a person breakfast, I’ll show you how. .

    First, you need to feel bad

    You just showed another person’s child pepper. You should at least feel bad for what you just did.

    Don’t breadcrumb them

    If you don’t know what breadcrumbing is, it’s the unfair act of giving a person just enough attention to keep them interested in you. It’s a wicked thing to do because you’ll just be serving them breakfast more than one.

    Block them and don’t attempt to call them after they block you back

    You don’t want to give them PTSD when they’re trying to get over you. If you feel somehow about them blocking you, just face your front and mind your business.

    But you can Invite them to church

    This is the best time to remind them that they’re your brother/sister in the lord. They came to you trying to find love but they found God. How awesome is that?


    ALSO READ: 10 Proven Ways to Get Over Someone You Love


    Send them your throwback pictures

    Get on your phone and send them the ugliest throwback pictures you have. The ones that’ll make them ask how they fell in love in the first place.

    Disappear

    Just leave them alone. Don’t call or text them. Don’t even act like you’re alive anymore. Some folks call it “ghosting”.

    Move to another city

    You don’t want them running into you at random places. Since you asked for space, it’s best to put plenty of space between yourselves by moving to another city.

    Respect their wishes

    If they don’t want to be friends, don’t try to be friends with them by all means. Respect their wishes so they don’t vex and come after you for serving them the breakfast they weren’t craving.


    READ THIS NEXT: 11 Nigerians Share Their Worst Relationship Break-Up Stories

  • Love Life: We Left Our Partners for Each Other

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

    Oba, 26, and Precious, 27, have been dating for four years. This week on Love Life, they talk about meeting on a group chat, falling into a relationship even though they were dating other people and the one incident that almost broke them.

    What’s your earliest memory of each other? 

    Oba: In April 2018, we were on the same WhatsApp group for queer women, and we were both admins. We met when the group hung out for the first time. 

    Precious: I was late for the hangout because of traffic. When I saw her at the thing, I thought she looked nice. 

    Oba: Me, I felt an attraction towards her. We went to buy suya for the hangout, and while we were together, I caught a glimpse of her ass. It looked soft and thick, and I liked it. When I like something, I chase it. 

    Tell me about the chase

    Oba: It started at the party. We were playing games, and they asked who I liked in the group. I said I liked her. 

    Precious: I was shocked because she’d never shown any interest until that moment. I indulged her, and we talked that night. 

    Oba: But then, she tried to disappear on me. I called her the next day and tried to set up a hangout for just the two of us, but she wasn’t having it. 

    Why Precious?

    Precious: It was odd. We’d been in the group for about a month, and we’d never spoken to each other directly. Plus, she was involved with someone else in the group, and so was I. Yet, there she was saying she had feelings for me.  

    Wait, what of your partners at the time?

    Oba: They weren’t in the room. 

    Precious: Me, I thought it was too fast, and I wasn’t really interested at that time. 

    What changed? 

    Precious: She kept applying pressure. She called and texted me often. She’d send me pictures of herself from work. I appreciated that she’d still try to talk to me late in the night on her way back from work. By the time she got home around 11 p.m., we’d still be talking. 

    We discussed everything on those phone calls. She knew things I’d normally tell my closest friend. That’s how we became inseparable, and the next thing I knew, we were dating. 

    Hol’ up. How did dating enter the picture?

    Oba: No one asked anyone out. Our relationship just started. 

    Precious: Yup. After talking for a few months, I told her I loved her, but this babe didn’t say it back. I felt embarrassed, and I started withdrawing from her. 

    Oba: I really liked her, but it wasn’t love at the time. When she said she loved me, I didn’t want things to get complicated. We were enjoying each other’s company and “I love you” felt like I had to make a decision., 

    But when she started to push me away, I realised how much I wanted her. She wasn’t calling me as often or replying my texts as fast as she used to. We talked about it, and I decided to let go of the thing I had with the other person. 

    Precious: I wish I could say it was that easy to just start our own relationship but things became complicated after that. I lost my job and was breaking up with someone I’d been with for years. That same month, I lost my dad. I was going through a lot and needed to be alone, but I still wanted Oba. 

    Oba: I, on the other hand, wasn’t ready. I was still in a relationship with my ex. 

    But you liked Precious?

    Oba: Yes. My relationship with my ex wasn’t smooth. She’d hurt me, but I was choosing to stay until I met Precious and fell in love with her. When I decided I would break up with my ex, I went to see Precious. But while I was with her, I realised I couldn’t just let go of my ex. I still wanted her in my life. At the same time, I wanted Precious too. It felt like my heart was being torn apart. I told Precious this. 

    How did you take it, Precious?

    Precious: I had a lot on my plate with the loss of my job and my dad. But I knew I was in love with Oba and I enjoyed her as a friend. When I needed to start my business, she helped me design a logo, and she’s so smart — she’s always suggesting things I could do — but at the time, I knew I couldn’t keep her. I wanted her to be happy, so I encouraged her to go to her ex, and she did. 

    READ: Pros and Cons of Dating Somebody’s Boyfriend

    Oba: I’d never met anyone that selfless. I loved that she was willing to let me go. I took the next bus to Abuja to see my ex. On the way there, I saw that Precious had blocked me. Omo, it was hell. My ex became suspicious, and I kept denying I was cheating on her. Eventually, she called off the relationship because she could tell I was distracted. I took some time before reaching out to Precious again. 

    What was reaching out like?

    Precious: First of all, we talked about everything. I didn’t want a relationship with residual issues, so we made a promise to not cheat in the relationship we were starting with each other, knowing our history. We also needed boundaries with our exes. I knew that she’d do anything for her but I was now fully in the picture and I didn’t want the kind of drama that came with exes. After we settled that, we started dating for real. This was in June 2018. 

    June until now, how’s your relationship grown in that time? 

    Oba: We both had some growing up to do. In my old relationship, I could get away with anything, but Precious didn’t let certain things fly. As I am doing something, she’s calling me out for it. I loved her because she made me better, but I hated that I couldn’t get away with anything. 

    Anything like?

    Oba: I’m not proud of it but I had anger issues. I get on a rant cussing everybody out when I’m angry. Precious would allow me to shout and then when I was finished, she’d tell me what I did was wrong. I loved how patient she was with me. Honestly, I don’t know how she stayed through the first two years of our relationship. 

    Precious: We did a lot of work to get to where we are now. We decided what we wanted for our relationship, and every day, we work towards it. 

    Oba: In December 2020, I asked her to be my wife. We’d gone out to get jewellery some weeks before, but she didn’t know I was buying her a ring to propose with. 

    I know she’s a private person, so one weekend, I booked us a hotel room, and I proposed to her there. 

    Precious: I wasn’t expecting it, but I also knew that marriage was the next step for our relationship. That period was interesting for me because we were going to bury her dad that weekend. 

    Wow 

    Oba: Yup, but I just couldn’t wait. We were also going to my family house for the first time, and they don’t know about our relationship or my sexuality. It was indeed interesting, but getting engaged just felt right.

    Funny enough, I never wanted to get married. Before I met Precious, I always said I didn’t wanna get married. The plan was to adopt a kid and call it a day, but after two years in a relationship with Precious, I knew I wanted to marry her and have kids with her. Our relationship is everything I’ve ever wanted. The thing I love most about us is the respect we have for each other. This helped us when I got a job in Dubai five months later and had to relocate. 

    Precious: And then, we didn’t see each other for a year…

    How did respect help with distance?

    Oba: It kept me in check. I didn’t want to disrespect her so I didn’t do things I knew she wouldn’t approve of. I didn’t look at other women or even think of them. It was very hard, I won’t lie. There were days we’d cry on the phone. I was alone in Dubai. I wanted to wake up next to her and the video calls just weren’t cutting it anymore. 

    Precious: It got too much for me at some point. To the extent that this January 2022, I considered breaking up with her. I told her about it. We had survived the first part of the relationship only to now end up apart? I couldn’t deal anymore. 

    Oba: That’s when I started making plans for her to come and join me here. Then, she got a job in March 2022 and joined me a few weeks ago. 

    Great! Tell me about your biggest fight

    Precious: Sometime in 2020, she had a beach hang out with her friends. While she was there, I got a message from an anonymous Instagram account saying they could have Oba if they wanted. As if that was not enough, Oba came back home high as fuck, calling her ex’s name in her sleep. I was so mad and convinced I was leaving this relationship.

    Oba: When I woke up, she confronted me and I was honest. I wanted to have my ex in my life but not at the detriment of my relationship with Precious. We had a conversation about it in which I apologised. 

    Precious: It was a long talk. I didn’t want us to go through the back and forth we had at the beginning of our relationship. She promised me she was here to stay and didn’t want to get back with her ex. Since then, we’ve been good. 

    Sweet! What attracts you both to each other? 

    Oba: She’s a very attractive woman. Her body is so soft, and it’s one of the first things that attracted me to her. She’s also an amazing cook. 

    Precious: I’m attracted to how smart she is. Also, her confidence is insane. When she was chasing me, I thought it was hot that she wanted to be with me. Loved it. 

    Rate this relationship on a scale of one to ten

    Precious: 9 because of how far we’ve come as a couple. This is life, and you really don’t have control over the things that happen. 

    Oba: 8 for us, 1 for me, and 1 for God. I’m proud of how much I’ve grown, and everybody around me can see it, not just her. I know we still have work to do though. 

    READ: Love Life: We Met on Twitter, But I Already Had a Boyfriend

  • Podcasts Might Be the New Pandemic, But These Are Our Faves

    Whether we like it or not, podcasts are the new it-girls of entertainment. Everyone you know is either hosting or listening to one. And while listening to someone talk about their life or experiences for over 10 minutes seems like a chore (and might give off main character syndrome on their part), podcasts seem to be working. But with everyone and their BFF dropping podcasts all over the interwebs, which ones are worth listening to? 

    I did a little digging (and listening), and these are the podcasts every Nigerian needs to get into ASAP. You’re welcome, by the way. 

    1. Mum’s Worst Day 

    Nicole Chikwe is hands down one of the funniest people on Beyonce’s internet. When she’s not dragging her husband and kids for shits and giggles, she’s making fun of herself while reminding us that she’s the most premium pie in Lagos. With all that energy and humour, I’m not surprised that Mum’s Worst Day slaps hard. In a time when women are finally getting the chance to talk about the difficulties of mothering, this podcast is an honest dive into what it means to be a millennial Nigerian mummy. I’m not even a mother (insert meme of Blanca from Pose), but I’m still obsessed with this podcast. 

    2. Tea with Tay 

    Taymesan found his way into our lives with his hilarious Instagram skits and that damn red mug, but guess what? He’s not done yet. Moving into the podcast space (with the red mug again), Taymesan uses his humour and sincerity to get big stars like Nancy Isime and Ebuka Obi-Uchendu to talk about their feelings. Tea with Tay is like listening in on someone’s therapy session, and I’m not going to lie, this podcast gives my inner amebo life! 

    3. Love Life 

    While we’re all complaining about fuel scarcity and the rising price of shawarma (yes, everyone with the one that is doing them), some people are out here finding love. Love, in this economy o! If you’re single and want to repeat “God, when?” until he answers you, then listen to Love Life. If you’re in a relationship and want to finally see that your own love is learning work, please listen to Love Life. This podcast reminds us that even in the midst of chaos, Nigerians will still find time to be doing romance up and down. 

    4. I Said What I Said 

    I Said What I Said shouldn’t even be on this list because you have to be living under Olumo rock not to have heard of it already. Hosted by the self-proclaimed dynamic duo of FK and Jola, I Said What I Said (ISWIS, if you’re nasty) has become an important part of Nigerian pop culture, reminding us that everyone in Nigeria is not alright, and that’s fine. From insightful conversations surrounding polygamy and queer rights to hilarious takes on Nigerian men and the government, ISWIS always gives what it’s supposed to give. ISWIS is the moment, and she is that girl. 

    RECOMMENDED: 5 Nigerian Books We’re Itching to See on the Big Screen

    5. The Backstory 

    The Backstory is for history lovers, aka the guys who knew the car General Murtala Muhammed was driving when he was assassinated or the ones who know the name of all of Lord Lugard’s children. But seriously, history lover or not, The Backstory is an interesting podcast that will help you connect to the past in a fun way. Since they’ve refused to teach proper Nigerian history in schools, we might as well learn from podcasts. 

    6. Due Parenting 

    Nollywood actor Ibrahim Suleiman already told us how much he loves his son in this episode of Man Like. Still, since that declaration of love wasn’t enough, he started a podcast with his wife, Linda Ejiofor, and we’re here for it. Due Parenting offers a lot of backstory into what it means to be a parent these days. Everything here is as real as possible, from the cute “awww” stories to the “Do I really want a small human?” stories. So who wants to go half on a newborn? 

    7. How Far? With Mr. Eazi and Temi Otedola

    Like my professor, Davido, once said, “Love is sweet o, but when money enter love is sweeter.” Honestly, that’s all I can say about How Far? With Mr. Eazi and Temi Otedola. Oh, to be rich and in love. Sweet stuff. 

    8. Menisms

    When I heard two men were hosting a podcast, I immediately started having a headache in my stomach. Fortunately, Menism isn’t filled with the hot Nigerian man takes I was expecting. It finds its sweet spot by not taking itself too seriously, which works really well. Do you want to laugh about post-nut clarity or have an in depth conversation about consent? Anything you want, Menism will serve you with some gin and tonic. But quick question, as a Nigerian man, why are you listening to or hosting a podcast when your mates are out toiling the land and fighting wars? 

    ALSO READ: If You Loved Vagabonds!, You’re Going to Love These Books

  • Love Life: 10 of the Most-Read Love Life Stories In 2021

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


    When I think of a Zikoko series with the most exciting (and often unexpected stories), Love Life comes to mind first. Each time Mariam and I get the chance to interview a couple, we always wonder what their love life is like, and by the end of each interview, we are always surprised, awed, heartbroken, or motivated to go out there and find the love that exists for us.

    We are not the only ones who feel this way. You, our readers, do too. You read each story we put out, share them with friends and sometimes come back to read a particular story, again and again. By our records, here are some of the Love Life stories you enjoyed a lot this year.

    We love you, and that’s why we are bringing them back to you this holiday so you can feel anew, the same joy and romance — and surprise — you felt when you encountered each story for the first time.

    1. Love Life: We Kept Finding Our Way Back To Each Other

    Victor, 31, and Wendy, 29, have been married for three years, and they’ve been friends since they were kids. For today’s Love Life, they talk about finding their way back to each other amidst exes, distance and bad decisions. 

    Read here.

    2. Love Life: We Love Our Partners, But We Can’t Stop Having Sex

    Ijeoma*, 26, and Peter*, 29, have been friends with benefits for 2 months. For today’s Love Life, they talk about satisfying their primal needs while maintaining serious relationships with other people. 

    Read here.

    3. Love Life: When You Know, You Just Know

    Chuba, 32, and Mohini, 27, have been together for over five years. For today’s Love Life, they talk about realising they were perfect for each other, coming back from multiple breakups and navigating long distance.

    Read here.

    4. Love Life: We Have Decided To Let Each Other Go

    Angel*, 29, and Akin*, 37, are deeply in love, but they are trying to go their separate ways. For today’s Love Life, they talk about getting back together after their first breakup and finally choosing to “decouple” due to their religious beliefs.

    Read here.

    5. Love Life: We’re No Longer Together, But We’re Life Partners

    Mezie*, 32, and Oge*, 31, went from friends to lovers to friends who occasionally have sex. For today’s Love Life, they talk about being life partners even though they know they can never get back together. 

    Read here.

    6. Love Life: Opening Our Marriage Felt Natural

    Charles*, 31, and Rukky*, 30, have been together for a little over a decade. For today’s Love Life, they talk about opening their marriage, dating other people as a unit and why communication is the most important thing.

    Read here.

     

    7. Love Life: It Was Love At First Talk

    Akintunde, 35, and ‘Depeju, 26, knew they would marry each other after speaking on the phone for the first time. For today’s Love Life, they talk about fighting for the first few months of their relationship, how they got past that and what it feels like to become parents. 

    Read here.

    8. Love Life: We Fell In Love While Cheating With Each Other

    Farida*, 27, and Favour*, 28, have been together for one year. For today’s Love Life, they talk about cheating on their ex-partners with each other as a form of self-care and eventually falling in love.

    Read here.

    9. Love Life: We Were Made For Each Other

    Uwem, 33, and Blessing, 27, have been together since 2010. For today’s Love Life, they talk about transitioning from being close friends to lovers and eventually getting married.

    Read here.

    10. Love Life: We Were Best Friends In Secondary School, But Now We’re Both Married

    Zikoko love life: best friends to lovers image

    Teslim*, 28, and Chibuzo*, 29 dated for four years and have been married for three. Today on Love Life, they talk about transitioning from secondary school best friends to lovers, starting their tech careers together and how they struggled with long distances before marriage.

    Read here.

    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.

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  • QUIZ: What Will Your Love Life Be Like In 2022?

    Will somebody find you in 2022 or will you remain a single pringle?


  • Love Life: She Made Me a Christmas Tree with 120 Bottles of My Favourite Beer

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


    Hadiza*, 35, and Zikora*, 40, dated for three years before they got married. Today on Love Life, they talk about being friends who travelled together for work, growing into a relationship and getting married despite living in Nigeria where same-sex marriage is illegal.  

    a Christmas Tree with 120 Bottles of My Favourite Beer

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

    Zikora: It was the day she punished me in secondary school. I was in SS 1 when she was in SS 3. The punishment was for everybody sha, but she championed it. She said she wasn’t the one that punished us but that’s my earliest memory of her. 

    Hadiza: LOL. The first time we met, it was at a park in Calabar. She was with her then-girlfriend in 2014. Her girlfriend was my friend and they were with some of my other friends so I joined their table. 

    Zikora: Hadiza came to tell us about this girl that she had met a few minutes before she found us. She decided she was going to go back and look for the girl who had already left. But did she? 

    Hadiza: I still think I should have said something to that girl. My friends teased me about it and after that day, we all started hanging out more. This was around this time I started a weekly meet at my house for queer women. I wanted it to be a consciousness-raising group but these women said it was too serious so the group phased out. 

    Zikora: Imagine me in a queer gathering talking about classism, euthanasia and abortion after a long week at work. 

    Some of us were trying to destress from the work week, dear. It felt like AA meetings, and so the group decided it should be monthly.

    Did you two keep hanging out?

    Zikora: Yea, I got a job in the firm she worked at but in a different branch. 

    Hadiza: Then we started travelling together for work. We would go to London and attend conferences together. During tea breaks, we talked about how much we missed our partners who were back at home in Nigeria. 

    Zikora: We even helped each other pick out gifts for them. We did double dates quite often when we were all in town. Things were going great until my girlfriend broke up with me. 

    Hadiza: That period, everyone was breaking up in our friendship circle. It was 2016. Even my own girlfriend and I started to grow apart and eventually, we broke up. Around this time, I got a job in Abuja and moved, but we stayed in touch. 

    Was this when romance entered the story? 

    Hadiza: Not yet. I wanted her to move to Abuja because I felt like she would enjoy living in Abuja more. She would have more access to finer people to date here and more work opportunities. 

    Zikora: Well, I wasn’t ready when she asked. Calabar was home for me. It’s where I grew up. Moving to a city I didn’t know as much as I knew Calabar scared me. In early 2017, we had to travel to China for a conference. I asked my office to book my flight from Abuja so I chill with her for two weeks. 

    Hadiza: She came to meet me in my one-room apartment that had a small queen-sized bed, which we shared as friends. 

    As friends? 

    Zikora: As friends o. We were very good friends. I was on the streets scheduling knacks every other day.

    Hadiza: I even helped her find people to hook up with. After sleeping and waking up with her beside me every day for two weeks, I caught feelings.

    Zikora:  Then this Hadiza babe wrote me a love letter. 

    Awww, what was in the letter?

    Hadiza: I basically told her I had fallen in love with her and wanted to be with her. I detailed all the things I could bring into her life if we became a couple. I told her to take her time to think about it while I marinated in anxiety. 

    Zikora: LMAO. She read the letter out loud. She said she saw marriage with me, a baby and a couple of pets. Then added, “I know this sounds like a proposal and that’s because it is.” Omo, I panicked.

    Because of small proposal?

    Zikora: LMAO. I panicked because I know her. I knew she was not playing when she said she wanted a relationship with me. More importantly, I was still very much on the streets. I had to end things with everyone before I got into a relationship with her. 

    Hadiza: This girl took three months. 

    Zikora: August 2017 is when we became official to me and then we went on the work trip to China as a couple. When we returned, I went to Calabar to pack my things and moved in with her. 

    Hadiza: We spent Christmas together. 

    Zikora: Hadiza is such a darling. When I moved in, she planned a welcome party for me. During the holidays, she made me a Christmas tree with 120 bottles of my favourite beer. It was the sweetest thing. 

    Hadiza, you know how to do romance o. So what was dating like? 

    Hadiza: Me, I was already in the relationship waiting for her to join me. When she did, we immediately became an old married couple. We did everything together. We particularly like cooking for each other. 

    Zikora: I learned to make vegan meals for her and she learned to cook meat for me. We joined our finances and assigned responsibilities to each other. 

    I’m curious. Did you ever have money issues? 

    Hadiza: At first, Zikora was weird about money

    Zikora: I was the poor partner. 

    Hadiza: When she moved in, she was like, “If anything happens to us, I don’t want to be homeless,” so I put vex money in her account and told her she could do whatever she wanted with it. At one point, she wanted to contribute to the rent because she didn’t like the idea of me paying it alone. 

    Zikora: Hadiza was used to living on her own and made decisions without involving me. For example, her house has always been a safe space for queer people and so she would randomly invite people to stay over for as long as they wanted without letting me know. I like my space, so it was upsetting. I wanted to feel like I owned our apartment too. 

    How did you people resolve this? 

    Zikora: I told her how I felt about it and she started to include me more in her decisions. We decided to get a bigger house with a spare room and I started contributing to the rent. 

    For me, having a spare room in the house is not a priority but it is, for her. 

    Hadiza:  You don’t know when someone is going to be homeless and I want to be there for them. I ask for permission to do things like inviting people over. After we resolved this, things went smoothly. 

    What happened next?

    Zikora: Nothing much. In the first year of our relationship, we travelled a lot. 

    Hadiza: She would travel for weeks and when she comes back, I’d have to travel too. There was a time we met at the airport on her way back from a trip. We hung out for a few hours there, and then I was gone for a month. 

    Wow. How did you people survive this period? 

    Zikora: Video calls mostly plus we were both used to being in long-distance relationships. Before we started dating, we spent a lot of time away from our partners. We coped well then we started fighting. 

    What was causing these fights? 

    Zikora: We were still getting to know each other as partners so it was mostly tiny things that blew out of proportion. 

    Hadiza: I remember one time I ordered a shoe for her and the vendor delivered a shoe three sizes down. I was fine with keeping it and getting another one for her but she wanted me to fight the vendor. We argued about it for a while. 

    Zikora: She still has the shoe sef. That fight was even mild, but the airport fight?  

    Tell me about it. 

    Hadiza: She travelled to Abraka for a training and she was supposed to return the day I was to travel. Her training ended early so I suggested we move her flight a day up. I paid for the change on the website that night excited that I would get to spend an evening with her before I travelled.

    Zikora: On the day of the supposed flight, I made my way to Asaba airport. Only for me to get there and they said I wasn’t on any of the flights for the day. 

    Hadiza: She immediately called me to shout. I was annoyed that she didn’t believe that I actually changed the flight time. Instead, she believed the airport people who were just looking for more money. I went to the airport in Abuja to rectify the issue. There, they told me that it takes 48 hours for changes to reflect. I was so pissed because they lied that no changes were attempted. Eventually, they admitted their faults and decided to apologise to her. 

    Zikora: They called me at night when I was struggling at a hotel where the manager had given my room key to a man because he thought we were together. It was just a bad day for both of us. 

    How did you resolve that? 

    Hadiza: I wrote her a long letter about how upset I was and how we needed to change the way we fight. If you see the way she para that day ehn. 

    Zikora: I am sorry. I was very stressed that day. I recognise now that it wasn’t your fault.

    Since then, we have learned to fight fair. No more raised voices or cussing. 

    Love to hear it. How did marriage enter the picture? 

    Hadiza: I’ve always known that I wanted to marry her. In that letter in 2017, I told her point blank that if she agreed to date me, it would lead to marriage. During the lockdown, after spending the longest time we have ever spent together in each other’s space, I asked her if she was ready for marriage. Initially, she said no but at the beginning of this year, she said let’s just do this. 

    Zikora, why did you say no?

    Zikora: At the time I wasn’t ready but at the end of 2020, I felt closer to her. In January 2021, we started making wedding plans. I wanted us to get married in America because we both liked being in America, but they were dealing with the Delta variant at the time. 

    Hadiza: Crazy things were just happening. We decided to go to the UK but they said we needed a fiancé visa to get married there. We tried Netherlands and Canada — no show either. Eventually, we settled on South Africa and the next issue became finding dates. That was a separate hell but we were able to find a date in March that year. 

    Zikora: On the morning of our flight, the airline said they couldn’t land in South Africa due to COVID restrictions. 

    Hadiza: After taking our money and everything. We had to move our wedding a day up. We told our friends and everybody started looking for flight tickets for us. Luckily, we found a flight and were able to travel the next day. 

    Zikora: Then I fell sick on the way there. See ehn, we suffered for this our marriage o. 

    LMAO. Sorry. Tell us about the wedding!

    Zikora: When we landed in South Africa, I just slept till 2 a.m. then I dragged her out with me. We took a long walk and had snacks on the way. We had so much fun just talking to each other. We came back to the apartment by 5 a.m. to sleep for our wedding by 3 p.m. 

    Hadiza: As Nigerians that we are, we were late for our wedding.

    LMAO. We support it.

    Hadiza: You know something that pained me? Zikora did not cry. It was such an emotional event for me but obviously not for my wife. 

    Zikora: You are not serious. Did you cry? You just had one or two tears in your eyes. Don’t mind her. It was all sweet. We didn’t have personalised vows because we kept forgetting, but we came up with something on the spot. I didn’t want a big wedding so it meant a lot to me that I got what I wanted. 

    Hadiza: Me, I want a big wedding with all my people and we will eventually do that too. We came back to Nigeria the next week and settled into our life as a married couple. 

    What has that been like? 

    Hadiza: Honestly, nothing has changed. Since the moment she moved in with me, it has always felt like we were married. The only difference now is that we have rings to show for it. 

    Do people notice that you two are married? 

    Zikora: Not really. Most people think our rings are engagement rings. 

    Hadiza: Even when they notice it’s a wedding ring, they never think we are married. Nigerians can’t even imagine that. LMAO. 

    LOL. Are you two really going to have kids and pets? 

    Hadiza: My wife has always wanted to experience pregnancy and I want a mini her. 

    Zikora: Yes but I’m also looking forward to my tech career. 

    Hadiza: I don’t believe in capitalism and she, on the other hand, wants to make bastard money. The middle ground is that I get to give out a lot of the money she makes. I intend to be a kept woman while she sponsors all our trips around the world.  

    Do your parents know you’re married? 

    Zikora: My mum does. She knew Hadiza was my friend, but it’s when we got married she really came to terms with the fact that we were together. So far, it’s been good.  

    Hadiza: My parents have always known I’m gay, and my mum is always asking after Zikora. Any small thing, “Where is Zikora?”

    Aww. What’s the best thing about your relationship? 

    Zikora: I love that we are grown-up. This shows in our decision making. We respect each other’s choices, even though we may not be okay with them.  

    Hadiza: For me, it’s that there’s always someone I can reach out to. Even when we were just friends, I knew I could always count on her. 

    Sweet. What’s your favourite thing about each other? 

    Zikora: It’s everything for me but mostly her mind. I love how she thinks and how it complements my own way of thinking. I think of us as a trolley and lever pulley system — where she stops, I start. 

    Hadiza: I really like her breasts, and she is so intelligent in ways that I am not. I am logic smart and she’s science smart. When we have kids, I know she’s the one handling the assignments. 

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

    Hadiza: 10 for me because the relationship just works. 

    Zikora: 10 too. We are both willing to do the emotional work it takes to stay together. 

    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 Chased Her for Almost Two Years

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


    Cassie, 28, and Mark, 28, started dating when they were sure they had the same goals. Today on Love Life, they talk about starting out from an Instagram DM, and how being unintentional kept them apart for two years. 

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Cassie: Mark got me a shoe I posted on my Insta story. I showed my colleagues and said, “I hope it’s not one of those guys that will come and do thread on top of my head because of shoe that I didn’t even ask for.”

    Mark: I followed her on Instagram, but the first time we had a proper conversation was when she posted the shoe she liked. I messaged to ask if it was okay to order the shoes for her and also asked for delivery details.

    Ahan. Cassie, I need your babalawo’s number, please.

    Cassie: Don’t even bother yourself, the juju has casted.

    LMAO. Mark, what was in her Instagram account that made you follow her?

    Mark: Have you actually seen this babe? I mean, how can I not follow her when she is fine and tall. God dey create abeg.

    Cassie, when Mark followed you, what came to your mind?

    Cassie: Honestly? I didn’t really notice. I have a lot of followers and people follow me generally. Even the gesture is something I’m kinda used to. People tend to find me likeable. But the gesture made me pause.

    Mark: Thank God I followed my babalawo’s instructions. See how it worked! 

    So, the gift made you notice him….

    Cassie: You could say so. It basically put a name to mind. When his gift came in, I was more like, “Abeg oh, I don’t have energy for anything but hey I’ll take the shoe sha.”

    Mark: Fear Igbo babes. 

    But look at you running after her. Anyway, what happened after the shoes came in? 

    Cassie: He asked if we could hang out. 

    Mark: She sent me a video of the shoes. About two weeks later, I asked her out for lunch. I knew she was tall from her pictures, but when I saw her in person, I was blown away. That was our first date, and I still have a picture where she was using my time to do content. 

    LMAO. Let a content creator get her views!

    Cassie: Like! Can you let me live, sir?

    How did the date go though? 

    Mark: It was just food and pleasant vibes. I remember having to think of conversation starters because this babe would just answer a question and keep quiet.

    Cassie: A bit awkward for me but he seemed like a sane person. To be fair, everything is awkward for me, LMAO. Besides, the date itself was almost a blind date. He didn’t have pictures of himself and wasn’t Google-able. What else could I have done? I was just slurping pasta and feeling awkward.

    Because the conversation wasn’t flowing smoothly?

    Cassie: I’m not much of a talker, but if the vibes are flowing well, I can be. Bottom line is, the problem was him.

    Mark: At some point during the date, I asked myself what I was doing wrong because she looked bored and was pressing her phone. Omo, when it got to a stage, I said, “Let’s go for dessert.” We went next door for ice cream and just waited in the car for a bit after. That’s when she started taking pictures, and I was just admiring her from the side. 

    Was that how the date ended? 

    Mark: Sort of. I dropped her off at home in Surulere and drove back home to Ikeja where the date was. I had finally gotten to meet her in person, but I also thought she probably would not see me again. 

    Cassie: To be honest, this date wasn’t so consequential. But after it ended, I had the same conclusion too. 

    Mark: But mercy said no.

    Hallelujah somebody. What happened next? 

    Mark: Nothing serious, just a bunch of random Instagram story replies and comments. The next time something significant happened was when Cape Verde airlines came to Nigeria and were doing a bonanza. I don’t remember why, but I know she messaged me and was telling me of an ₦100k return trip to Cape Verde.

    Cassie: I can’t even remember why I reached out to him for that. I think we probably had a conversation about travelling, and the airline thing came up around the same time. 

    Mark: I had just come back from a trip and wasn’t keen on another, but the deal sounded good and I mean, there’s a fine girl to boot, so I said why not. After booking the trip, I realised I could only travel with at least six months validity on your passport, which I didn’t have. 

    Cassie: He ended up not travelling with us. As I was entering the airport, he was leaving. He was so pissed, he barely acknowledged me. I understand that he was going through it at the time, but I filed that behaviour as a red flag. I knew that we could not work, even as friends. 

    Mark: Please temper mercy with justice, my lord. I tried and failed to get a passport but it didn’t work and I wasn’t allowed to fly, even though I got to the airport early and waited in line for about three hours. 

    When Cassie and the other person we were travelling with got there, I was already over the whole thing. Since I wasn’t travelling again, what’s the need for being at the airport? It pained me oh, because Afronation was happening that period and I missed out because of Cape Verde. I messaged her during the trip to get me a souvenir, and she said no because of the way I left them at the airport.

    Cassie: I didn’t understand why he was annoyed, because we talked about this passport validity thing on the group. When he asked me to get the souvenir, I said “No” without remorse. I was still annoyed about his behaviour at the airport.

    Mark: Instead of you to just say you don’t know how to show love.

    Cassie: You and who?

    Looks like all your attempts at going out together always end in funny ways…

    Mark: See ehn. After that one, we just continued chatting on Instagram. Until she put up on her story that she wanted to do a staycation and asked if anyone was interested. Trust me to say yes.

    Clearly, you never learn.

    Mark: Not at all oh. 

    Cassie: Here’s how the staycation works: I decide on a place (Lakowe, IITA, somewhere in Lagos, etc) and rally people together. Sometimes I already have friends in mind, sometimes I need extra people so I post it on my story, we finalise  plans, make payments and move.

    Mark: For me, it’s another avenue to enter.

    A man with intention. I respect that. Were you sure you wanted to date her at this point, or you simply wanted to be friends?

    Mark: I’ll let her go first. 

    Cassie: He sent me a message about liking me and wanting something serious. Like, I just checked my phone one random day last year and saw all of that. I’m my mind I was like ko le werk, but okay sha. I’m not the kind of person to break a man’s heart, so I said something like, “Okay, let’s see.” But I had seen already and knew it was a no for me.

    Why was it a no for you? Was it based on the first date and his behaviour at the airport?

    Cassie: Yes, but omo, my guy was very unfocused. Imagine being on your own and waking up to confessions of love that you didn’t ask for, only for the person to put zero energy into it after that confession. Men? 0/10, please. 

    Thankfully, I wasn’t looking for anything so I grabbed the unseriousness as a way out, and we moved on without ever referencing that conversation again or having any other dates.

    Mark: I said I’d like us to be friends first before dating and that she should let me know if at any point in time it became stressful for her. 

    Cassie: But you sha weren’t moving like someone that wanted to be a friend either ways.

    What would you have wanted him to do in order to “push his file” forward?

    Cassie: Honestly, I was fine. I didn’t even want him to push it further so I wouldn’t have to break his heart. I was just upset because why confess that and then act anyhow? I found it very disrespectful. I’m so big on respect and being treated well.

    Mark: To be fair, I knew I liked Cassie and I’d been thinking about her for a while, so that’s why I sent that message. But in all fairness, I was actually acting like an unserious fellow. 

    How so? What did you do?

    Mark: Asides from staying away after sending her the message? Plenty. During the staycation, she wasn’t feeling well and couldn’t do some of the things planned. Instead of being empathetic, I just said okay and went on to have fun with the rest of the guys there. So, I definitely wasn’t moving right.

    After that staycation, I wasn’t really feeling the vibe, so I decided to not put all my eggs in one basket. But guess what, I was still chatting her up and responding yes to staycations. And you know why? Your man was lost in the sauce.

    Cassie: Men? They will disappoint you.

    In other words, Mark, you decided to shoot your shot with other people?

    Mark: Not really. I wasn’t looking for a relationship with anyone else. In my head, I thought if I would get in a relationship, it would be with Cassie, so all of what happened with other people was me just having fun.

    So you left her to stew. 

    Cassie: LMAO.

    Mark: I guess. It was more like I was hoping beyond hope, if that makes sense.

    What was it about her that made you decide that she was “the one”?

    Mark: I really can’t place a finger on it. Asides from her physical attributes and how open she was, there was just that je ne sais quoi that attracted me to her. I guess somewhere between her smile and her smarts, I was lost.

    Cassie: Na so.

    When and how did you two eventually enter relationship mode? What changed?

    Mark: You should probably ask Cassie. Na she fit answer. Me I’ve been in the mode since, but I think things started changing around our third staycation.

    Cassie: A couple of staycations in, he started acting better. We had a few deep conversations, and he started being more intentional.

    Mark: We had a staycation around Valentine’s day, and I think it was around this time that we had the conversation and I decided to be more serious and intentional. For Valentine, I had to really think well to give her thoughtful gifts. I gave her a book because she likes to read, scented candles and a yoga mat because she likes to lie on the floor. Our friendship kind of grew from there.

    I remember she was supposed to go to IITA with some friends but they were in Ibadan the day before her and she couldn’t sync with their schedule to know where to meet them when she came in. So I went to pick her up and we spent the day going around town, after which I dropped her off at IITA. This was around Easter this year.

    Did you ever “pop” the question? 

    Mark: This happened when we did a West African group trip in July. And the funny thing is she hinted that I should ask her out on the trip.

    Cassie: I was starting to consider him and my friends (who had become our mutual friends) were all for it, so it made me start thinking, “Why not?” I did the most important thing: I prayed about it, got clarity, and afterwards, I was ready to give it a try. We were planning a trip to Ghana, Togo and Cotonou with two other people around this time. I said that I wanted to be asked out properly, and hinted that he can take the opportunity of us being out of Nigeria to ask properly.

    We went to a forest resort in Ghana and he gave me a card and asked me out. LMAO. I gave him the card back and reminded him that I said I wanted to be asked out properly. His reply was “the whole nine yards, you have no idea.” A card didn’t look like the whole nine yards. To be fair, he wrote out all his promises to me in the card so it was kind of like a cute vow. Anyway, he collected the card and went back to the drawing table. When we left the resort to Accra, we got to the hotel and next thing I saw was paranra people, a teddy bear and chocolates. It was really cute and definitely a surprise. This time, I took the card and on the part where it required my signature, I signed it finally, and that was how we began.

    Our first date was on the 25th of August, 2019. The asking out happened in mid-July, 2021. That’s about one year and seven months.

    Almost two years. This man has the gift of perseverance.

    Mark: Na so we see am

    Cassie: Let me tell you how we ended up in a relationship.

    My ears are wide open.

    Cassie: The last staycation we had was at IITA. June 13, 2021. We had been getting closer since April, but on this staycation, I decided to make a move. It wasn’t a move move sha; I just did what my spirit led me to at that point. 

    We were all hanging out together in his own room and I asked, “Would you like to hold me?” I think that jogged his brain a bit, because the next day, he gave the whole “I’ll really like to have something serious” speech again. I said I wasn’t sure yet, but let’s see how it goes. So between April and June, that’s when I prayed about it, watched his intentions, made sure his head was correct.

    How has the relationship been so far? What do you enjoy about being in a relationship with each other?

    Mark:  Being in love with Cassie has been fulfilling. Daily, I experience how much she cares and how kind she is. She’s very creative and always goes all out when she’s doing something for me. My birthday is next week on the 13th and she put together a surprise for me a month before, to celebrate “one month to my birthday.“

    I’ve grown as a person because we always get to have open and honest conversations with one another. She’s so kind, not just to me, but to everyone else. I especially find it sweet that she says hi to random people, especially service providers. This has rubbed off on me. Most importantly, she’s helped me to pray and read my Bible more. We have a ritual of doing a Bible study plan every night.

    Cassie: Mark is fully committed to making my life easier. He’s gentle and treats me with respect. He knows with certainty what he wants, so there has been no obscurity when it comes to the direction of our relationship. I love that there has always been no pressure with him. No pressure to go any further than I may want to at any point in time (team waiting), no pressure to have to be anything that I am not, etc. Ours is a love without pressure, and I find it refreshing. And when we have arguments, he tries his best to approach it with kindness. No raised voices, just proper conversations, vulnerability and openness. It’s just such a joy being with him. The bants we have is an added plus.

    How often do you two fight? And how do you settle it?

    Cassie: Not often. I think I’m the one that starts it most times. We have something we say: “We don’t do that here”. That being anything from raised voices, being unkind with our words, actions, etc. Sometimes in the middle of a disagreement when my brain starts clamping down, he’ll remind me that “we don’t do that here” and it’ll bring me back to earth. 

    Mark: We also have this agreement not to go to bed upset with one another no matter what. This has led to some interesting late night conversations but we are the better for it. There are times when we would be having little fights and I’ll keep repeating 1 Cor 13:4-8 to myself. 

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

    Cassie: 9. I’m not saying 10 because 10 is for God.

    Mark: LMAO. But same. 

    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.


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  • Zikoko Ships Has Something To Tell You

    It’s been exactly a year since we published the first Love Life episode, and  since then, we’ve seen and heard all your ‘Awww’s’ and ‘God When’s.’

    So for this first anniversary, Zikoko is launching a new category called SHIPS, along with three new and exciting products!

    What is SHIPS?

    Zikoko Ships is your stop for all things relationships. Yes, there’s already Sex life and Love life, but we’re thinking bigger. Way bigger. We’re talking about the kind of relationships  you have with your barber, tailor, parents, children, siblings, friends, enemies — you get the gist. No matter the kind of relationship, your stories will be told on Zikoko’s SHIPS.

    Introducing Zikoko’s Love Life Podcast

    With Love Life turning one, we figured it was time to allow you the pleasure of reliving your best stories in the series. That’s why we’ve made the Zikoko Love Life podcast. All your favourite stories of love in one place. Well, multiple places because we’re on every podcast platform there is. Just plug in your headphones, and let the love consume you. 

    Aunty Z! will see you now

    With a great category, comes great responsibilities. We have one more trick up our sleeves.

    There’s someone we’d like you to meet. Her name is Aunty Z! She’s fun, wise, and knows exactly how to help you with your relationship problems. All you have to do is tell them to her and watch her work. If your best friend is not speaking to you anymore because you gave her a small piece of meat and you don’t know how to fix things, ask Aunty Z! If you’re wondering how to reach her, fill this form and look out for her every Sunday at 2pm starting from the 31st of October 2021.

    Wait, there’s more…

    If you think there’s nothing more for Zikoko Ships to offer, then you’re wrong. You’re also getting a Ships newsletter that gives you wise words from Aunty Z! and inside gist on everything Ships related. Subscribe now so you can be ready when it comes. 

    Stay jiggy, and watch out for more from Zikoko SHIPS. We’re just getting started.

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