Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the wordpress-seo domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/bcm/src/dev/www/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121
love | Page 5 of 51 | Zikoko!
  • Love Life: We Were 40+ and Had Never Married When We Met

    Love Life: We Were 40+ and Had Never Married When We Met

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Michael: I met Chima at a friend’s birthday lunch in 2009. She was a friend of his wife. I’m not sure we’d have gotten to know each other if we didn’t get into a long heated conversation about internal politics between some companies. 

    I’d heard about her. She was about to be CEO of an arm of the company she worked at. And I respected her more that day when I heard her speak. I liked how cleverly she argued.

    Chima: It was a pleasant evening. I noticed him because we sat at the same side of my friend’s living room. Even though he was a fairly known director in his company, he didn’t force his opinions like most of the other people did during the argument. He’d say what he knew and then stop to listen to other people. I thought he was really respectful. 

    So when he called me the next day hoping I wasn’t angry he got my number from his friend, I wasn’t at all. I was glad our interests aligned. It rarely happens that someone makes a good impression on you and you make an impression on the same person.

    True. Did he call just to say hi?

    Michael: I called to ask her to lunch. But it took a while to align our schedules to make it happen. I later learnt that she thought it would be a waste of time, so she didn’t prioritise. However, I kept pushing for it.

    Chima: My lack of interest in a friendship with him seemed to make him keep pushing for a meeting, so by the third week, I felt bad and made time for him. We went out during my ill-used lunch break on a Thursday afternoon.

    How did it go?

    Chima: It was a definitive two hours for us. He told me I was who he’d been waiting for all his life. At first, I said yinmu. I mean, did he really call me there to drop university lines? 

    But you see, he’d also never been married before. 47 and unmarried? I was curious.

    Michael: I explained to that her I ruined a long-term relationship because I was hyper-focused on work and achieving my goals. 

    I was with my ex for close to ten years. In 2003, she broke things off — she’d fallen out of love with me because I was emotionally unavailable. Meanwhile, I was ready to marry her, but she made me realise we’d lost our connection at some point. 

    After that, I focused more on work and my hobbies. It’s hard to get back into the dating pool in your 40s for either gender. Don’t mind what men say.

    Chima: I’d also never been married, because of how important building a high-quality career was for me. I could relate to his story more than he probably thought.

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

    Had you been in any long-term relationships?

    Chima: No. 

    I had, maybe, four boyfriends or suitors in total, and none of these relationships lasted longer than a year. I sense bullshit really quickly, and I don’t like to deceive myself. There were things I wanted in a life partner, and I was ready to stay single forever if I didn’t get someone close.

    My parents, both university professors, raised me to be fiercely independent. I’ve never been invested in marriage as a compulsory milestone in life. I’m much too pragmatic for that. A high quality of life was my main priority, then wide recognition in a field of work, then companionship, in that order.

    Michael: We aligned on that. While I’d most likely have been intimidated by her ideals when I was a young man, in my old age of 47, it was exactly what got me excited about her. I was impressed, and I wanted her to be mine to show off.

    So what happened after lunch?

    Michael: I asked to take her to lunch the same time and day the following week. She agreed.

    Chima: We’ve been doing that every week whenever we’re in the same city since then. We go out to eat lunch together every Thursday.

    Michael: During our second lunch, we talked about our individual future plans, and I told her I was determined to marry her. She responded that I shouldn’t try to mess with her plans and independence. And I told her, “Not on my life”.

    Did you get married soon after?

    Michael: No. We had those lunches for almost a year, enjoying each other’s company and discovering what we liked to eat. 

    Then I attended her church a couple of times to meet with her spiritual parents and worship together. Our first visit to her church made things feel more real; like we were really seeing each other. It was her way of saying she was beginning to take my interest seriously.

    Chima: The turning point in our relationship was in the summer of 2010, when we vacationed together in Cancun. I knew my spirit was accepting that he would be my husband. I felt at one with him. He made the relationship, communication, everything, so easy.

    In what ways?

    Chima: The way we decided to vacation together, chose a spot, and navigated the planning and logistics. I’d never had a smoother travel experience with anyone. Not even my best girlfriends or parents. 

    We just agreed on things. Even when we wanted different hotels or activities, it was easy to find a middle ground that didn’t make me feel bad that I was either shortchanging him or myself.

    Michael: I found that she never became deliberately stubborn or domineering just to prove her independence. I loved how thoughtful and politely logical she was at all times.

    When I noticed her demeanour softened towards me during our Cancun stay, I made arrangements for a ring shortly after we returned to Lagos. I knew the time was right.

    We interviewed these couples five years after we first spoke with them in 2019.
    Watch how their relationships have evolved.

    How excited were the people around you when you announced your plan to marry?

    Michael: Very excited, as you can imagine.

    Chima: My parents were surprised. They thought I’d settled for a life of spinsterhood. To be fair, I thought so too. I wasn’t even thinking about marriage when Michael came into the picture.

    Michael: I’ll have to say finding someone I align with was a relief. A lot of people had previously tried to matchmake me. My mum would bring young women from the village, and I started to have this paranoia that I’d end up settling with someone I was incompatible with.

    Chima, I imagine you also felt the societal pressure to marry

    Chima: I didn’t, really. I always shut down the marriage talk because it wasn’t something I’d ever been excited about. I didn’t see the inherent value in it beyond eternal companionship. And if that was the goal, it was more important for me to end up with someone on the same page as me.

    Michael: Spoken like a true daughter of professors.

    Chima: I couldn’t imagine trying to find someone to marry in my 20s when I was still struggling with my early career and passing all the certification exams. I would’ve been derailed because relationships are high-maintenance.

    Then imagine dealing with a young marriage and young children while navigating the fragile mid-level stage of a financial career. I know a lot of people do it successfully, but I also watched people struggle to balance it. It was much easier and faster for me without all that responsibility. 

    Michael: There’s something to be said about dating as an advanced adult. Romance was much easier between us than it ever was in my 30s, and I wasn’t ever broke. Just a whole lot more settled and secure in my 40s.

    Would you say more people should start dating in their 40s?

    Chima: It depends on your priorities. If starting a family is the most important thing to you, then of course, there’s biologically an ideal period for pregnancy.

    Michael: All we’re saying is it was much easier to court and establish a strong foundation of romance, friendship and partnership when we weren’t also trying to establish a decent career or individual life path. We could both think clearly as we went in.

    Speaking of family and pregnancy…

    Chima: I had a natural birth in 2012, a year after we got married. But after our first child, we opted for surrogacy for the other two. We hadn’t even spoken about children when I got pregnant. We almost took him out. But I’m glad I got to experience that pregnancy and labour.

    Michael: I was terrified when she gave me the positive pregnancy results from the doctors, and for a week, we’d resolved it was wise to abort. We wanted kids, but we were also cock sure it was unsafe for her at 44. But her O&G of about a decade said he’d never seen a more healthy pregnancy. He convinced us, so we decided to take a chance.

    Chima: Right after that, I got implants.

    [ad]

    Michael: Surrogacy was also scary. I’d heard a lot about it. But I still had so many questions. 

    Would the baby have some of the surrogate mother’s DNA? What if she clings to the baby psychologically and never wants to let go? What if the baby doesn’t ever bond with its biological mother? 

    But we did it twice, and everything went fine in the end.

    What was your first major fight about?

    Chima: We fought a lot when I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2018. That’s how I found out that people develop new personalities when they’re sick, and mine was mean. 

    I was so cruel to Michael on my sick bed that when I think back to that time, I feel I ran temporarily mad.

    Michael: It’s like when they say someone is a mean drunk.

    Chima: I’d throw stuff at him when he tried to help me stand or anything at all. I even bit him sometimes.

    Michael: We fought about things like whether she could work and take on projects while undergoing chemo. Things got worse when she had to do a mastectomy.

    We fought about going to church and believing in God for her healing. I was very determined to have her fly to the UK for the surgery instead. 

    She thought I was ruining the faith that would’ve brought her miracle.

    Chima: This went on until the cancer left in January 2022.

    Thank God. How hard was it to get back to normal after a serious illness and numerous fights?

    Michael: Whatever resentment that festered was neutralised by her new clean bill of health. The genuine joy and relief was strong. 

    My wife was supposed to be dying, but she wasn’t anymore. I was just grateful we had a clean slate.

    Chima: I also went out of my way to invalidate all my mean words and actions once I got my strength back. I made it clear I meant none of that, and I’ve been more intentional about kind words and gestures.

    Michael: She spoils me and won’t let me spoil her. So instead of feeling upset about the past, all I feel is gratitude for life.

    How would you rate your Love Life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Michael: We just got a second chance at life together, and it’s been more of a 10 than ever.

    Chima: 10. He’s a reminder of God’s promise to me that his time is the best.

    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.

    YOU’LL LOVE THIS: Love Life: I Fell in Love With My Childhood Friend

  • QUIZ: Is Your Partner Your Soulmate?

    QUIZ: Is Your Partner Your Soulmate?

    Answering some questions the soulmates in episode one of our “Valentine Special: Where Are They Now?” answered is the only way to know for sure.

    Where are our Zikoko Ships now? Find out how three of our Ships are doing five years later: 


    Spoiler alert: it’s lovey-dovey.

    [ad]

  • “We’ve Bathed Together Every Day for 20 Years” — How Older Couples Spice Up Their Relationships

    “We’ve Bathed Together Every Day for 20 Years” — How Older Couples Spice Up Their Relationships

    I love meeting couples who’ve been married for decades, but it always makes me wonder, “How do you love one person for decades? Don’t they piss you off?” More importantly, how do they navigate long-term relationships without losing that “spark”? 

    I asked seven Nigerians who’ve been married for over a decade to share how they spice up their relationships, and here’s what they said.

    Image designed by Freepik

    Juli*, 55 — Married for 25 years

    Our children are in university, so my husband and I have the house to ourselves for the first time in about 23 years.

    We’re relearning how to bond, and sex is a big part of that. Raising children can make you feel like strangers if you’re not careful. There’s almost no time to be together with kids around; someone is almost always tired by the end of the day. 

    But now, we’re taking intimacy seriously. It takes more effort because menopause is dealing with me, but we try not to let three days go by without having sex.

    Omoh*, 41 — Married for 20 years

    We consciously foster intimacy by bathing together. We’ve done it every day for the 20 years we’ve been married, as long as one of us didn’t spend the night outside the house.

    It’s helped us settle many disagreements. You can’t be keeping malice with someone and bathing together. You’ll have to open your mouth and ask them to pass you soap or something. So even when we disagree, it never escalates to not speaking to each other.

    Akin*, 42 — Married for 11 years

    I like to surprise my wife with lingerie and clothes I think are sexy. And it’s made it easier to build excitement in our marriage. I don’t have to think of how to say I’d like to see certain things on her; I just buy and she wears, and it helps us stay attracted to each other.

    Yvonne*, 35 — Married for 12 years

    We used to leave each other little love notes around the house for the other to find, like a treasure hunt. But now our kids can read, and we don’t want to risk any of them finding the notes. So, we moved our treasure hunt to the bedroom about a year ago. Just the thought of finding new places to hide the notes is so exciting. 

    I once found a note hidden inside my shoe. We were even fighting then, so he’d obviously hidden the note some days prior. It melted my anger away.


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


    Grace*, 44 — Married for 18 years

    My husband cooks for me every Saturday and brings me breakfast and lunch in our room so I don’t have to step out till I’m ready. We have a large home filled with children and family members, and it quickly gets overwhelming. But on Saturdays, we get to relax together, and I feel taken care of. I honestly think it’s one of the things that’s kept us together this long.

    Comfort*, 38 — Married for 11 years

    I get random credit alerts with the narration “From your sugar daddy” from my husband at least once a week. We joke that he’s old enough to be my sugar daddy (he’s ten years older) all the time, and I think it’s sweet how he’s consistently kept it up. The transfers are never huge, but just the thought behind it is great.

    Kunle*, 50 — Married for 15 years

    My wife makes pounded yam for me every week. She knows I don’t like the poundo version, and I like how she pounds hers so there aren’t any lumps. So, even though our help does other things in the house, my wife always makes sure she pounds the yams herself. That’s just how selfless she is. Every time I eat pounded yam at home, I remember how lucky I am to have her.

    *Names have been changed for anonymity.


    READ THIS NEXT: “He 100% Wanted Me Too” — Nigerians Talk Crushing on Married People

    [ad]

  • Love Life: I Fell in Love With My Childhood Friend

    Love Life: I Fell in Love With My Childhood Friend

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Tade: We’ve been family friends since before I can remember. We lived in the same neighbourhood, had our clique of friends and our families attended the same church.

    Sonia: The nostalgia! We played with my dolls on weekends. Both the boys and girls. We’d all sit on the floor in my living room, playing pretend in the afternoons.

    Were you guys close then?

    Sonia: No. We didn’t have a bond until she transferred to my school in JSS 3. I was the only person she knew, so she gravitated towards me and my group of friends. We got closer because we had inside jokes most of my friends didn’t understand.

    Tade: We had so much fun in secondary school. We became so close that our classmates, mostly boys, used to tease us and say we were dating. Look at us now.

    Let’s get into how that happened

    Sonia: I wasn’t thinking about relationships in secondary school. I didn’t even have crushes. But I knew I had a special bond with Tade. I had a best friend, but even she knew Tade and I were closer than we were. 

    Tade: We were by ourselves a lot, talking about TV shows, clothes and our plans for the future. When she entered the boarding house in SS 1, we drifted just a little because we spent less time together. But we still had stuff we could only talk about with each other.

    During the holidays, we’d hang out in church, participating in dramas and dance performances. A lot of our childhood friends had left by then, but they were replaced over time with other kids.

    When did you realise you liked each other beyond friendship?

    Tade: After high school graduation, she went to the US for uni. Meanwhile, my parents had started having issues in their marriage, and my brother and I were collateral damage. Things got so heated that they couldn’t agree on what university I should attend. 

    The result? I ended up spending three years at home before I moved to Cyprus to study mathematical engineering. 

    Sonia: I was sure she’d make a new life and forget about me. To begin with, the time difference was even crazier to keep up with than when she was in Nigeria.

    Tade: But somehow, we managed to stay in touch through that and the craziness of studying for exams and term papers. The turning point for us was when we both swindled our parents into paying for me to attend her graduation in 2016. 

    Don’t ask how we managed it, please. 

    I have to

    Tade: We lied. Do you want people to call the police?

    Sonia: She told her parents two different stories about how she had to pay for a special course, and they both sent her money. I told mine that there was a graduation fee. 

    Tade: I actually think back now and feel bad we made our parents cough out money so suddenly. I don’t think I can do something like that again. But I don’t regret it.

    Watch three couples share how time has changed their relationships over 5 years

    You lied, and then, you saw each other again…

    Sonia: For the first time in almost five years. I remember us dancing, crying and jumping in the middle of the arrival hall at the airport. People must’ve thought we were crazy.

    Tade: It was during this visit we had our first kiss.

    Details, please

    Tade: We kissed on the second night. 

    It was the night before the ceremony. We lay in bed after a long evening out with her school friends. We couldn’t sleep, but we were also too wired to talk. It felt like the most natural thing to lean into each other and kiss.

    Sonia: She stayed for a couple of days in my little apartment, and we had to share my small bed. I wanted to do so much more, but we chose restraint.

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

    Why? Was it awkward?

    Sonia: A little. It was a little kiss, no tongues or anything. It’s crazy that I can remember it like it was yesterday. We were both so nervous with each other. We didn’t want to mess things up. I don’t know how we kept from going all out actually. Maybe because the feelings were new, and we were overthinking trying to understand them. 

    Tade: We must’ve known without even having to discuss it that our love was becoming different. There was this new energy between us. I wanted to hug her all the time and for much longer than normal, but I just didn’t.

    Sonia: I kept thinking about the fact that she’d leave soon, and it made me almost depressed. I wanted her energy around me for the foreseeable future. So the visit was rather bittersweet.

    Tade: We even briefly talked about her coming back to Cyprus with me. But I think we both decided that wouldn’t be wise. In the end, I had to go back sad and alone.

    Did you make any decisions about your relationship before you left?

    Tade: Not really. A lot was left unsaid. We just focused on celebrating her milestone. I still had about two years of school left. We were so young. We had nothing figured out.

    Sonia: I threw myself into job hunting and a master’s programme. And we went back to finding time to talk to each other over FaceTime.

    Tade: For the next two years, things were dry and uneventful… except when she helped me write my thesis. 

    Pardon

    Tade: I’m exaggerating, obviously. We didn’t even study the same course, but she’s great with academic writing so she offered to help. She also had better access to research papers and better methodologies based on the American curriculum. It made everything faster. 

    Sonia: She got into a couple of relationships though. 

    Tade: More like flings.

    With girls?

    Tade: Yes. I’d pretty much figured out that I liked women. 

    Sonia: I was too busy having anxiety over my career and future to have “flings”. People tried to get with me, mostly guys, but they never worked out because I was always too impatient and most black guys in the States are arrogant.

    Tade: After I finally graduated in 2018, I moved to Georgia on a work visa. Three months later, she got a new job in DC, and we moved there together. We’ve been inseparable ever since.

    Were you official at this point?

    Sonia: Yes. I don’t know how it happened, but it happened.

    Tade: I think it became clear when she invited me to move to the US and move in with her, and I actually did it. I was scared AF because I had zero plans. My parents wanted me back in Nigeria, but I didn’t want that. I had to get uncles and cousins to chip in on the travel and visa payments. 

    Sonia: I offered to give her some money too, but she refused.

    Tade: It was bad enough I’d be living in her house with no job for some time. 

    When I got here, the first thing we did was make out for hours. It was pretty clear we were official.

    [ad]

    So how’s the last five years been together in DC?

    Sonia: Everything from the shootings to the pandemic, inflation and job insecurity has tested us. But it’s been great having each other to fight the battles with.

    Our relationship has been a dream. There’s no anger or depression that can’t be solved with kisses and cuddles, just lying under our thick bed covers in each other’s arms, crying, ranting, laughing or whatever.

    Tade: Something we picked up recently has been spending Saturday evenings in bed, watching old black and white movies until we fall asleep.

    Do your families back home know about you two?

    Tade: No.

    Sonia: Nope.

    Tade: It’ll probably stay that way for a while.

    Sonia: None of our siblings or relatives know either. We don’t entertain people like that.

    Tade: We don’t hide it from the public, but our life has been pretty insulated. We mostly hang out with work friends and a few people from Sonia’s universities or our secondary school. Most of them know about us.

    Sonia: My high school bestie teases us all the time like, “I knew. I just knew it!” I’m like, girl, chill.

    Tade: We still get side looks from the Naij folks, though. It can be funny at times. Other times, it’s really annoying.

    Tell me about that

    Sonia: It’s mostly the newly born-again guys. Everyone is finding Christ afresh and getting so religious these days. I wonder if it’s something in the air. But I think they mean well. They try to preach in the most polite ways.

    Tade: But it’s still disrespectful.

    Sonia: One time, we were hosting in our apartment because I just got a long-awaited promotion, and we invited up to 15 of our friends. Tade and I were in the open kitchen at some point. She wanted to get some more drinks from the fridge. I followed her and we hugged and kissed a little. 

    I turned and saw this babe giving us a strong stank look. Tade didn’t even notice. But then, the next day, we were talking to the girl on the phone, and she said, “You know you guys can invite me to things, but you don’t have to make out in my face when you know I love the Lord.”

    Tade: I was so angry, I just told her she doesn’t have to come to our house anymore then.

    I’m screaming. Have you guys had a major fight?

    Tade: For sure. We had this major major one recently that made me scared I’d ruined our relationship for the first time. It was over money.

    One of the major aspects of our lives is budgeting. You have to budget well to survive in this country. We budget for all the little things, but we also do it for vacations, major purchases and all.

    Sonia: This was in 2022. 

    We’d been planning to move to a two-bed for some time. When we’d had most of the money together to move, renovate and so on. Tade took most of it to replace her computer and buy some other gadget. I get it was an emergency, but I went crazy because she didn’t even talk to me first.

    Tade: My stuff got wrecked, and I was in the middle of this important project. I’d even lost some of my work in the process. I thought she’d understand.

    Sonia: The shock was mind-blowing because I was already dreaming of our new space. We had our biggest fight ever, and I won’t forget it any time soon. I finally understand why people say proper communication is so important. If she’d only spoken to me before making that decision with our money, maybe I’d have understood or come up with an alternative.

    How did you get past that?

    Sonia: By talking. She slept on the couch for some days though.

    Tade: She made me cry and beg. She only forgave me after I went on my period, and she saw me suffer through my cramps.

    Sonia: I couldn’t stay angry with her while she was in pain. But then, mine started like two days later. It was such a funny, painful mess.

    What does the future look like?

    Tade: The usual. Marriage. Kids. Not sure how involved our families will be in all that, but we’ve made a pseudo-family here.

    Sonia: There’s my career mentor. She and her husband are like parents to us now. We vacation with them a lot. And we have lots of friends turned siblings who’ve been willing to sacrifice large amounts of money, time and favours to help us in so many ways.

    Tade: But it’s not one-sided. We’re there for them in many ways too.

    Are you saying your biological family hasn’t been?

    Sonia: Mine have tried their best, and I’ll always love them for it. I send stuff back home all the time. 

    But they aren’t here. They don’t do much for me in terms of companionship. I have sisters in Atlanta and my brother is in Dallas, but we haven’t seen each other in years. I respect it. They’re building their own families too. 

    Tade: We’re completely estranged. My brother, father, mother and I — we all live separate lives. Besides the occasional WhatsApp call with my brother, I don’t feel much like we’re connected in any way. 

    My father has a new wife with kids. My mum also remarried.

    Sonia: But it’s fine. Everyone gets to find their tribe. We don’t have to be restricted by blood ties. And in the end, what matters most is finding your soulmate and making the most of it.

    True. And how would you rate your Love Life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Tade: 10. 100 even.

    Sonia: 10. I actually can’t imagine doing this life without you.

    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.

    READ THIS NEXT: Love Life: We Left the Country for His Stalking Ex

  • “Our Village People Have Tied Our Destinies Together” — 8 Nigerians on Returning to Their Exes

    “Our Village People Have Tied Our Destinies Together” — 8 Nigerians on Returning to Their Exes

    Today is the day of love and kisses, and everyone is sharing love stories like it’s testimony time.

    So, we completely understand why you might be tempted to return to that person you swore off many moons ago, in hopes that you too might give your testimony next Valentine’s Day. But read these Nigerians’ stories first before you take that leap.

    Derin*, 28

    The first time my ex and I dated, we were together for nine months. It was great but also a toxic because he was reckless with money and always wanted to go clubbing. I was also still in love with my ex at the time. After I passed out of NYSC, we broke up. I was ready to face the real world and adulthood, and he just wanted to evade planning his life.

    About a year later, we got back together. He was going to be in my city and reached out to me to reconnect. We lasted two months this time around. But nothing had changed with him. He was still unserious, and when he randomly asked me to dash him ₦200k, I decided it was time to break things off for good.

    Ebuka*, 26

    My ex and I dated for a year and a half, but we broke up a couple times in between. We were in our early 20s when we met, and we were just in awe of each other until we started drifting apart because of things I’m not even clear about. 

    After a while, she asked for a breakup. Fast forward three weeks later, she came back and was like, “So, you’re not going to talk to me?” I’ve never responded so fast in my life. I’d even been stalking her WhatsApp. We made up, but I still kept my walls up. 

    It went on for a year before we finally broke it off and just stuck to catching glances from afar. Then close to my birthday, she came to my house to talk and we tried to make up, but she was with someone else already.

    Cynthia*, 23

    I don’t think we were ever exclusive, but we saw each other for a year. I hate to admit it, but he was my first love, and I might still be a bit in love with him right now. I got tired of the non-exclusivity and tried to stand on business. It obviously didn’t work because he ghosted me in the middle of exam week. 

    We didn’t speak for a year after that. Then one day, he appeared with a girlfriend and I was ready to take my L and move on. But he kept talking to me, so we became friends. It started feeling like our village people might have tied our destinies together when he asked me out on a date a little while later. We have chemistry, so the date was great. Then he kissed me at the end of the night and I just remembered the hurt he put me through the first time. I’ve been running ever since. But I never run too far because he always catches up and we start talking again. The feelings rise from the ashes, and we continue fooling ourselves.

    We’re currently on our fourth reconnection. I give it two more months before we start exchanging “I love you” again and I run for the hills.

    Mide*, 24

    We dated for five months, and it was rocky, but it was also a lot of fun. It was the first time I really liked the person I was dating, and I wanted to make it serious. But there were too many things going wrong in my life then, and I was transferring a lot of that aggression to her. I called her a day before Valentine’s Day and ended things. I swear, I’m not proud of it.

    I’m not sure how long it took, but I remember missing her terribly and reaching out to her. After courting her for a while, she sent an eight-minute-long voice note, politely advising me to take the friendship route.

    Favour*, 22

    My ex and I dated for six months. He had an insanely huge ego. He would treat me like someone he didn’t care about, so I just decided to end it. 

    Then he called me after a month or two, saying I should come back and we’ll figure it out. I genuinely thought he was doing better, but he actually became worse. He’d yell at me, call me names, then he kicked me out after begging me to move in with him. I’ve never experienced such staggering levels of see-finish in my life, and I genuinely feel like he only wanted me back because he couldn’t handle the fact that I actually wanted out.

    One day, I just stopped replying his texts, went back to get my things and never looked back.

    Bella*, 25

    I went back to them just for the sex. I couldn’t connect sexually with anyone else after the breakup, so I figured, why not?

    The first time we dated was for a year, and it was good, but we had different goals. He said I was too ambitious, and he wanted someone he could control. When we got back together for the second time, I won’t even lie, it was a lot better than I expected. He was emotionally intelligent and honest. But I tapped out mentally when I realised he didn’t know what he wanted.


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


    Daniella*, 27

    My first boyfriend in uni came up with this stupid idea to tell each other who we were crushing on, so I did. He said he had a crush on my roommate, and I told him I was crushing on his friend. After that day, he started acting weird and just stopped talking to me. My friend asked him what the issue was, and he went on this tangent about how I knew he was insecure about his friend and he didn’t know how to feel about my crush. He sent me a message and ended the relationship. 

    I just went to my room, laid on the bathroom floor, and cried my eyes out that day. The next day, he finally spoke to me and said he couldn’t handle being away from me, but the thought of his friend and I made him really insecure. He said he’d thought about it for a while and understood better, so we got back together. We still broke up in the end because he kept talking about how he wasn’t enough for me, even though he loved me. Then he ghosted me again, and that was it.

    Laolu*, 22

    He was my gym trainer, and we were always extra touchy with each other, but we never dated. We fooled around for about six months and only stopped when his girlfriend came back to the country, and I started liking someone else. I had a great time with him and the sex was great. 

    After a while, we started meeting in random places for sex just because. He tried to make it a real relationship at some point, going on about how he loved me and my boyfriend at the time wasn’t good enough for me, but I wasn’t really interested in dating him at the time, so I paid him no mind.

  • QUIZ: Only Real Lovers Can Get 10/14 on This Quiz

    QUIZ: Only Real Lovers Can Get 10/14 on This Quiz

    Choose all that apply:


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

  • True Love Can Be Platonic, and These On-Screen Friendships Prove It

    True Love Can Be Platonic, and These On-Screen Friendships Prove It

    Your soulmate may be the friend who’s seen you go through shege pro max and still stands by you. What is true love if not see-finish persevering? These on-screen friendships prove that just because you aren’t romantic with them, and your genitals haven’t touched, doesn’t mean they can’t be the love of your life.

    Kemi and Sarah in “Blood Sisters”

    Image source: TheGuardianNigeria

    If there was ever an award for the best on-screen friendship in Nollywood, it has to go to these two. Protecting your friend from an abuser, killing the abuser on her behalf, hiding the body together, then going on the run and defying everything including a drug trafficking ring? These babes went through thick and thin together and never did we see the love between them falter.

    Penelope and Eloise in “Bridgerton” 

    Image source: Quora

    Their relationship might be rocky now, but when it was good, it was great. They understood each other, shared similar dreams and aspirations and talked about how much worse everyone else’s life was. We’re pretty sure that’s how you know it’s true love.

    Obalola, Ify and Gift in “Gangs of Lagos”

    Image source: BellaNaija

    If there was ever a time or chance for see-finish to prevail in a friendship, it would have been with these three. They were childhood friends and knew every single thing about each other. However, they still did all they could to be there for one another, even if that meant having a blood bath and filling the streets of Lagos Island with dead bodies because someone had the brilliant idea to kill one of them.

    Simon Basset and Will Mondrich in “Bridgerton”

    Image source: iMDB

    These two prove that you can love your partners deeply and still find your soulmate in your best friend. They knew they could always count on each other whenever they needed help, advice or someone to just tell them they were being foolish in every sense. 

    Didi and Tiwa in “Skinny Girl in Transit”

    Image source: NdaniTV on YouTube

    Are they really your soulmate if you can’t share the most heart-wrenching experience with them and laugh about it mere moments later? Didi and Tiwa’s friendship represents the girlies who’ll be there to console you after that ex breaks your heart for the fifth time, but will continue bringing it up because, why have you let them use your sense?

    Tayo and Lanre in “The Men’s Club”

    Image source: REDtv on YouTube

    There are always those two people in a friend group who clearly have a tighter bond than with the others. Tayo and Lanre are those two friends. They’ve lived together, they’ve worked together, they’ve heard each other have sex… The bottom line is they’ve stuck together despite all the rubbish they put each other through.

    Sheldon and Penny in “The Big Bang Theory”

    Image source: Thetodayshow

    Sheldon might’ve been an insufferable person to be around. But for some reason, Penny always stuck around, even though she had the option to ignore his knocks at her door. Still, like some extraterrestrial force possessed her, she’d open the door and accept Sheldon and all his weirdness into her home every time.

    Aminu and Louis in “The Men’s Club”

    Image source: REDtv on YouTube

    We checked, and in the history of the Nollywood multiverse, there’s never been two individuals as strong-headed as these two. But maybe that’s why they made such great friends to each other. They’d wait till their problem was choking them till they could no longer breathe to ask the other person for help. And that’s only because they knew they’d come through, sit with them and help sort their issue.

    Sarah and Mrs Eket in “The House of Secrets”

    Image source: BellaNaija

    The most beautiful thing about their friendship was it didn’t matter that Mrs Eket was way older than Sarah and her senior at the office. They loved, admired and wanted the best for each other. Through the secrets they shared and the number of years that went by before they saw each other each time, they were the one constant in each other’s lives.

  • The Zikoko Guide to Helping Your Single Friend Survive Valentine’s Day

    The Zikoko Guide to Helping Your Single Friend Survive Valentine’s Day

    Being the single friend sucks. If you’re not constantly feeling like the third wheel, you’re having to listen to your friend rant about their boo, knowing fully well they’ll never take any advice you give.

    Valentine is coming, and if you’re the relationship friend, know that it’ll be the most third-wheel type of day ever for your single friend. But you can help make it better.

    Get them a gift

    Send them money, finally take their advice or buy them something they need; the gift options are endless. The point is to remind them of your love and make sure they don’t feel left out.

    Now’s not the time to match-make them

    I know you want the best for them, but talking stages are stressful as hell. So give them a break on Valentine’s Day. They can continue answering what their favourite colour is in March.

    Break up with your partner

    Hear me out. Nothing screams sacrifice like sacrificing your own relationship so your bestie doesn’t feel alone. At least, then you can spend the day together, discussing how the other gender is scum.

    Or just abandon them for a day

    You can also just ghost your partner to spend time with your friend on Valentine’s Day. You know how people say, “Every day should be Valentine with the right person”? Well, if they’re Mr/Miss Right, they wouldn’t mind picking any of the other days in the calendar to do Valentine things.

    Get them to set their priorities straight

    Not every time love matter. Are they keeping to their New Year resolutions? Or have they forgotten them? Those are more important than plastic flowers and Nigerian-made teddy bears, if you ask me. It doesn’t matter that you yourself are doing love things with your own partner. The focus is your friend.

    Join them to make fun of other people’s gifts

    There’s always more than enough cringe-worthy content on Valentine’s Day and who better to join in judging people than your bestie? They might judge your gifts too, but TBH, someone has to do it. With you being blind from love and all.

    Allow them enter your relationship

    Don’t you want your bestie to enjoy happiness too? Your partner might still cheat one day. But this way, you get to see and approve who they cheat with.


    NEXT READ: 7 Perfect Galentine’s Day Gifts for Your Long-Distance Bestie


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


    [ad][/ad]

  • Love Life: We Left the Country for His Stalking Ex

    Love Life: We Left the Country for His Stalking Ex

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Gbemi: I was standing on the road, waiting for a bus or bike, when this car stopped in front of me and wound down. It was actually the second car that stopped to offer me a ride that evening, but the no in my head immediately turned to yes when I felt the AC blow out of his car. I quickly thanked him and opened the door.

    Muiz: I remember seeing this fine girl standing close to the bus stop. I wanted to get her out of the sun and into my life.

    I’d just come out of a long relationship with someone I was sure I would marry, so I wasn’t thinking about a relationship when I decided to offer her a ride. I only wanted fine company and to give her some comfort.

    Hmm. Were you both going the same way?

    Muiz: She said she was going home, but she lived much further than my destination. I thought I’d drop her as far as I could go, and at least, I’d have made some part of her journey comfortable.

    Gbemi: Unfortunately, it would’ve been hard to get a straight bus home anywhere around where he was going compared to where he’d picked me up from. When I told him this, he felt bad, so I downplayed it. I really didn’t want to get out of his car. It was so chilled and smelt nice. On top of that, he had Keri Hilson, one of my favourite R&B musicians, playing on his radio. I would’ve followed him wherever.

    Muiz: We got to talking. I asked her about work, her family. I’m generally a curious person, so I’m always asking people everything about themselves. But with this complete stranger, I felt particularly interested. I like the way she speaks. Na she learn English pass everyone in Nigeria. 

    I ended up taking her all the way to her house because I wanted to hear more, and I didn’t feel comfortable dropping her on the road anymore.

    So you liked each other already at this point?

    Muiz: When I think back now, I think I loved her already. I’m not normally nice enough to drive complete strangers to their doorstep that’s at least 30 minutes away from where I’m going. I’ve never done that before. But also, I wasn’t tripping in any way I ever had before. I genuinely enjoyed her company like I would a friend that I love.

    Gbemi: I enjoyed how curious he was about my life and how much he really seemed to listen. At the same time, I didn’t get that vibe that he could be a criminal planning to kidnap or assault me. Girls will understand what I mean. I was so comfortable being in his car and talking to him that it didn’t even occur to me until later that night that I should’ve been more on guard. 

    From that day until today, he’s never left my mind for one second.

    Muiz: We didn’t even collect numbers that night. When I left her house, I started regretting, but I still had my last relationship to manage. 

    I’d broken up with my ex when I found out she’d been cheating for a while, but she was still harassing me to get back together. I just wanted peace of mind for a while.

    But?

    Gbemi: Some weeks later, he came to my house to ask about me. 

    He’d come some days before, when I wasn’t home and left a handwritten note with my maiguard. Nothing romantic. It was something like “Just so you know I dropped by. I hope your life is going fine.”

    Muiz: When I finally met her at home, the first thing I asked for was her number. We went to a nearby eatery to chat for like an hour over chips and chicken. After that day, we talked on the phone regularly for months.

    What were you talking about?

    Gbemi: Nothing really. They weren’t long calls. I think the point was this constant need to check up on each other.

    Muiz: One day, we talked about this bulb that just stopped working in my room. Another day, it was how I wished she’d come cook asaro for me in my house.

    Gbemi, did you go and cook asaro in his house?

    Gbemi: Before we got married, never.

    Muiz: I tried my best to make her, but she no gree. 

    Gbemi: I was too busy making it every other day in my father’s house to come and continue the struggle in another man’s house.

    So when did you accept that you loved each other?

    Muiz: One day, I was on the phone with her when my friend, who was crashing at my place that week, told me to just ask her out. He was like the way I was smiling while talking to her was not normal. 

    I thought about it and realised he was right. She really made me happy.

    I remember, when I met my ex, it was chaos from beginning to end. I liked her because she was crazy and made me feel alive. But with Gbemi, I have peace and it’s like I’m in heaven with God’s angels.

    Gbemi: I always looked forward to our calls. They were short and sweet and left me feeling good about myself. It just got to a point when, once I saw his call, I’d drop everything to answer no matter what I was doing or who I was talking to. My siblings used to laugh at me all the time. 

    Also, one of the reasons why I never passed the talking stage with other guys was because they’d always make snarky comments. One time, I made a passing comment about my hair, and this guy responded that he hoped I wasn’t trying to get him to pay for it. Another one, we were at a restaurant waiting for our food when I grumbled about them not giving us garlic bread and water to just hold our belly. He responded that “Are you trying to impress me?” 

    But Muiz never made condescending comments like that. He was always sensitive and thoughtful. I noticed that very quickly.

    [ad]

    How did the asking out go?

    Muiz: It took her a week to say yes. She kept saying she’d think about it, and she wasn’t sure she was ready for a relationship.

    Gbemi: He was the only guy I ever dated. Before him, it was eternal talking stage after talking stage. I don’t count the guys I dated in school because those ones weren’t serious.

    Muiz: Someone somewhere is telling people you were their girlfriend. Not knowing you’ve erased them from your history.

    Gbemi: Sorry for them. 

    I was scared because I felt I liked him too much. I was already thinking of what I’d do if he broke my heart. I sha said okay after a while because he kept sending me gifts. Every day, he’d send me something small: a novel, a pair of earrings, a CD of my best series. I had no choice but to agree.

    What was dating like?

    Gbemi: Nothing changed for at least a year. Except that I went to his house sometimes. We mostly spoke over the phone. 

    He continued sending me small small gifts, but of course, not as often. I still have some of those gifts together in a box somewhere.

    Muiz: It made me feel much better knowing we were exclusive. I just knew I could trust her to be faithful and that made me love her even more.

    Gbemi: Then toward the end of 2013, I met his so-called ex and she did everything she could to frustrate our relationship.

    What happened?

    Gbemi: The first time I met her was at an event I attended with Muiz. The funny thing was I was admiring her from afar. I didn’t even know who she was, but she was dressed so beautifully. I was about to compliment her when someone introduced us, and she just snubbed me.

    Muiz: Then I don’t know how she got Gbemi’s number, but she started harassing her with calls and threatening messages.

    Gbemi: I had to block her.

    Muiz: I thought she’d gotten over me. But the moment she found out I was in another relationship, she started her drama again. There’s no one I didn’t call to warn her, from her mother to her grandmother.

    Gbemi: One day after we got married, we randomly walked past each other on the road, and she just shoved me back. It remained small, I would’ve fallen right on the road, and a bike zoomed past right after. 

    My whole body was shaking, my heart was banging. By the time I’d settled down, she was gone.

    How were you guys able to marry despite her disturbance?

    Muiz: We ignored it as best we could. It wasn’t something that was in our face all the time.

    Gbemi: We also talked about it. I asked about their relationship because I wanted to understand why she was behaving like that. But I think that’s just her personality.

    Did her behaviour scare you?

    Gbemi: It did. 

    Sometimes, I’d think to myself, what if this babe tries to attack us in our home or sends boys to beat me or pours acid on my face? But then, I had to just calm myself down.

    Muiz: I kept reassuring her and doing my best to caution my ex. 

    By early 2014, I knew I wanted us to get married as quickly as possible. I proposed in my sitting room one day, and as soon as she said yes, I went to meet her dad.

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

    How did it go?

    Muiz: Her dad told me, “Uncle, she’s my last born. You have to treat her like an egg.” He made me swear on my life that I would.

    Gbemi: Muiz was intentional about everything. Our parents set a date for six months after the proposal to give us time to plan properly and raise money. At no point during this period did I even think about his ex. My mind was completely at peace because I loved him and I wanted him to be my forever.

    What was it that made you guys so sure of each other?

    Gbemi: For me, it’s his character. He’s a serious-minded person. He’s sure of himself and intentional. He made and still makes me feel secure. 

    He also always shows genuine interest in me and the things that make me happy. My career, hobbies, likes and dislikes? He pays attention.

    Muiz: She’s smart and has always had her priorities straight. She’s good with work and money, but she also always puts me first.

    Then, there was just this sense of trust between us. When I say something, she takes it like that. She doesn’t get suspicious without provocation just because I’m a man. I can’t give a specific example, but I really valued that.

    What was life after the wedding like?

    Gbemi: Beautiful. We had a great honeymoon period without the honeymoon. The ex tried her best to ruin things, but she didn’t succeed.

    Tried to ruin things?

    Gbemi: She was always showing up at events and putting undue attention on us. Or trying to get in touch with either of us through unknown numbers. 

    The worst was when she showed up at my office calling me a husband snatcher. It was so embarrassing. But more for her than me because no one really took her seriously.

    Muiz: I felt bad that she was doing these things. Not just because of how uncomfortable it made Gbemi, but also because this was someone I dated for close to four years. Sometimes, I’d ask myself, “Did I do something wrong to her to make her act this way?”

    But she cheated on me. I will never understand why she behaved that way after. Those were crazy times.

    Did she eventually stop or you got the police involved?

    Muiz: She did not o. We had to leave the country for her.

    Gbemi: I’d been a customer service worker at an international airline for about eight years when in 2017, they transferred me to their office in Jordan. They paid for me to relocate and covered part of the costs for my spouse.

    Muiz: It was a lucky break for us because we’d just found out she was pregnant before she received the promotion. In fact, we had to hide the pregnancy from the company. Let them not change their minds. You know these big companies can be funny at times.

    Gbemi: Come and see us praying to God that my belly doesn’t become obvious before the trip finally happened. That’s how we escaped the crazy ex o. 

    We’re now in Canada with our own travel consulting business, so we’re grateful to God for how everything worked out.

    Sweet. What was your first major fight about?

    Muiz: We have two boys, and if we’ve ever had major fights, it was probably triggered by them.

    Gbemi: We have very different approaches when it comes to parenting. 

    I’d always told myself I’d be the type of parent to understand my kids and talk to them like they had sense. Muiz is much more traditionally Nigerian, although he’s been taking some of my suggestions. 

    Muiz: At the end of the day, I believe discipline wins when it comes to children.

    Gbemi: But I draw the line when it comes to shouting at them. I always disagree with that and intervene when I have to.

    Muiz: We’ve never had a major fight outside of that. I don’t think we ever even argued before we got married.

    How does a major difference like that affect your marriage?

    Gbemi: I see it as part of the package of growing old together, so I try not to internalise it or make it about me.

    He’s gotten better. I’ve noticed him grow much softer, especially with our second son. He’s much more willing to have conversations with them and get on their level.

    Muiz: Parenting as a whole, how much time we devote to caring for the boys, takes a toll on our relationship. There are many times when, between work, the boys, and even school — because she’s studying for an MBA and I’m taking some courses — we don’t have as much one-on-one time as we’d like. 

    But I know one day soon, we’ll find ourselves retired and the kids will have moved out to start their lives, and we’d have all the free and peaceful time in the world. So I’m not worried. 

    If she’s too soft with them, it only balances out my occasional harshness.

    Gbemi: The important thing is he’s a good father and his love shines through most of his actions towards them. And that’s where I come in.

    Great. How would you rate your Love Life on a scale of one to ten?

    Muiz: 10 because I can’t really imagine things being better than this.

    Gbemi: 10. Our journey has been nothing short of perfect so far.

    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.

    READ THIS NEXT: Love Life: We Broke Up 5 Times Because of His Depression

  • How to Have a Fun Anti-Valentine’s Day

    How to Have a Fun Anti-Valentine’s Day

    Valentine’s Day will come and go. But you can have an anti-Valentine’s Day, and have a better time than all the lovey-doves out there, with these tips.

    Swear off love songs

    No space for love songs here. Start by sticking to Omah Lay and Passenger to set the tone.

    All-black everything

    Be the black sheep of the season while everyone obsesses over red and white. We’re talking all-black everything from your head to your toes. It’s not your concern who thinks you look dangerous; you’re a threat to love.

    Behold, our Valentine Special

    We brought back three couples we interviewed in 2019 to share how their relationships have evolved in the last five years. This is the first episode:

    Embrace the single life

    No better time to ride harder for singledom than on Valentine’s Day. Opt to work from home and spend the whole day indoors with yourself.

    Birds of the same feather

    Hit up your fellow Valentine’s Day haters. Miserable loves company, trust me.

    Throw a singles-only party

    Then all of you should throw the liveliest party to rival whatever the relationship people have going on with their ₦350k flowers.

    Stay off the internet

    Disconnect for a day so nobody can oppress you. 

    Go on a solo trip

    Channel your inner Pelumi Nubi and create your own adventure.

    Here Are Things to Consider Before You Spend on Valentine’s Day, According to 9–5ers