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Nigerian mother | Zikoko!
  • How to Behave When You Meet Your Boyfriend’s Mother for the First Time

    Since we all know most Nigerian mothers are in love with love their sons, here are some things you should note before you meet your future mother-in-law for the first time. 

    Start crawling from the gate to greet her 

    Imagine trying to greet your future mother-in-law with a hug and a smile? As you enter the gate, take off your shoes and start crawling and you sing her praises. “Oh Lord and personal mistress, I have come o!”

    No make up or artificial nails. If possible, come naked 

    Well, since this is your chance to prove that you’ll be a good wife, might as well come naked. Since we’ve turned a visit to inspection. Let them know what they’re really getting into. 

    Pound yam and fetch firewood

    Because the people that invented gas and pounding machines are FOOLS! You’re an industrious woman that can make sure her boyfriend is well taken care of in true traditional fashion irrespective of the circumstances. 

    When you finish cooking, kneel down and serve your boyfriend 

    A humble girlfriend is a good girlfriend. Your master  boyfriend needs to eat, and as a subservient girlfriend, you have to serve your king while on your knees. If he goes to the kitchen to dish his food himself, you’ve lost the plot. 

    RELATED: How to Be the Perfect Nigerian Mother-in-Law to Your Son’s Wife

    If you’re taller than your boyfriend’s mother, reduce your height 

    If not they’d think you’re proud. How can you as a woman be taller than your future mother-in-law? Does that not mean you think you’re above her? Your better shrink your height.  

    Fetch water in the house before you leave 

    So what if they have running water? Find empty basins and fetch some water. You can even ask your mother-in-law to join you. You can’t spell bondage without bond, innit? 

    Wash all the clothes in the house 

    Dirty or clean, just wash them. Prove yourself. 

    RELATED: 8 Types of Nigerian Mothers-in-Law

    If there’s meat in your food, return it 

    You’re eating meat at your boyfriend’s mother’s house? Is this playing? Who the fuck do you think you are? Better return the meat. How else will they know you’re humble and from a good home? 

    Sing the national anthem

    Nobody wants a daughter-in-law that isn’t patriotic. If you really want to burst her head? Sing the second stanza too. Omo mehn. 

    Mop their compound 

    At this point, you’re thinking outside the box. An innovative queen. 

    RELATED: How to Be the Perfect Daughter-in-Law According to Nigerians

  • 8 Signs Your Mum Is Becoming Your Best Friend

    The mother-daughter relationship during the daughter’s teenage years aren’t pretty. The bickering is unmatched and the tension is unending. But there’s something about growing older that balances things out. Maybe it’s because you truly grow wings?  Well, here are eight signs you and your mum are now besties.

    You know about all the men that could have been your fathers

    If your mum hasn’t told you about her escapades at 25, then you haven’t unlocked the best friend level yet. The moment she tells you about her first love, she’s opening a rabbit hole into her darkest secrets.

    You pick from her food

    Imagine being 13 and using your spoon to collect food from your mum’s plate. The council of African mothers would have descended on you. But these days, you’re taking two pieces of meat from the pot with your full chest and even cutting from her plate. Tell me that isn’t love.

    You talk about the lovers in your life

    Gone are the days of hiding under your blanket to have midnight calls or lying about summer lessons to spend time with your crush. Now you’re showing her pictures of your mumu ex and getting valuable anecdotal advice.

    RELATED: I Still Haven’t Found a Better Gist Partner, Mum

    She gives you the tea

    Nothing about the family is hush hush and no one is off limits. If you’re at the point where your mum tells you who’s cheating on who in the family and who is owing who, that’s your best babe right there.

    You’re always out for brunch 

    Remember when the only response to buying food outside was, “There’s rice at home?” Now the woman is sending pictures of the waffles and sandwiches she wants to try for Sunday brunch. 

    You’re slaying to parties together

    Mummy and daughters that slay together? What more do you need to say when you turn up as baddies with the woman that used to chase you around to cover up. Now you’re wearing the mini skirt version of whatever iro and buba she’s sewing.

    RELATED: These Sequin Lace Styles Should Be in Every Woman’s Wardrobe

    You’re catching flights and feelings together 

    Low key, mums are sugar mummies that spray dollars without having to give any sugar. So travelling together means she can take care of your bills. A girls’ trip is sweet, but a trip with just your mum just hits different. 

    Y’all are drinking alcohol now?

    I was once beaten for drinking fruit wine at home. Now, my mum is mixing beer and Fanta and offering me some. If that doesn’t say bestie, I don’t know what does.

    Now that you know how to tell if your besties with your mum, read this to see how alike you are: 8 Signs That You’re Now Like Your Nigerian Mother

  • Since I Lost My Daughter, Hope, My Life Hasn’t Been The Same

    Following the trending conversation on breastfeeding earlier this month, I made a call for African women to share their experiences breastfeeding for an article. Cynthia* was one of the women that reached out to me, she told me her baby rejected breast milk and was sick at birth so I asked more questions. Here’s what she told me. 


    I met Osaze* in 2015 at the construction firm in Abuja where I worked as an accountant. We dated off and on until 2018 when we became serious. I introduced him to my parents, and he introduced me to his. Soon after, he proposed, and we started planning a wedding for late 2019. I wanted to take things slow, so when we found out I was pregnant in June 2019, I called off the wedding. I didn’t want to be pressured into it.  In the end, I was grateful I did. 

    The first slap came when I was four months pregnant. We had gone to visit a relative of mine, and when we got home, he started shouting at me, saying my relatives were rude to him. I said, “No” and was trying to have a conversation about why he would think that when he slapped me. I left the room and refused to talk to him for the rest of the day. In the night, I told him I couldn’t be in a relationship with him anymore, and I wanted to get an abortion. He started begging me. I agreed to stay on the condition that he would never hit me again. We continued our relationship as usual after that incident. 

    Lost hope

    When our daughter, Hope*, was born, the doctor diagnosed her with hydrocephalus — her head was slightly bigger than that of a newborn baby. I moved in with him so we could manage our baby’s health together. At two weeks old, she had a shunt operation that allowed the water to flow from her head to her intestines. It worked — the size of her head reduced. We had to do a CT scan every two months to make sure the stunt was still draining the fluid from her head. The whole process cost us about a million naira.

    From day one, my baby girl rejected breast milk. I tried to force her, but she would just refuse to swallow. I tried expressing the breast milk into a bottle for her to suck, but she didn’t like that as well. The only thing she liked was formula. She knew the difference between breast milk and formula in a bottle — she would spit out breast milk immediately. I kept trying until she was six months old and eventually gave up.

    The worst part was that she wasn’t gaining weight even with all the food she was eating. She couldn’t sit or hold her head by herself, so the doctors suggested physical therapy. I don’t remember how much we spent trying to make sure she was okay. 

    Osaze blamed me for everything. He believed I was the cause of our daughter’s health issues. On some nights, I wouldn’t be able to sleep because I would stay up watching our baby. All he did was complain and blame me. When she was about six months old, he hacked into my Facebook account. He saw my chat with a guy I was talking to before we started dating. He also read my messages to my friend where I told her what I was going through with our daughter and my mental health. The next day was a Sunday. After church, I was setting up to bath our baby when he came into the bathroom and confronted me about my messages then asked me to leave his house. I didn’t argue with him because I knew what could happen. I went to the room and packed my stuff along with the baby’s stuff. He started dragging her with me. He told me I couldn’t go with her. I told him he couldn’t take care of her well. Before I finished my sentence, he slapped me. Blows followed — one after the other. I had to leave the baby with him. I ran to the police station close to our house. 

    The police wanted money before they made any moves, and when I told them it was a case of domestic violence, they said they couldn’t interfere in family issues. I ran to my pastor. He set up a meeting where he told us to apologise to each other and move on from the matter. 

    I didn’t want to wait for the third time Osaze would hit me, so I moved out of his house one day when he went to work. I stayed with my mum for a few days before getting my own apartment. He wasn’t surprised I left. He just asked to see the baby, and I never denied him of that. He was always welcome to see her at my house. Sometimes, I dropped her off at his place. 

    We started physiotherapy as the doctors recommended, but it was a slow process. She could only manage a strong grip, and she couldn’t even hold on to her bottle. Her head hurt sometimes, and she wouldn’t let anyone touch it. 

    She had such long, curly hair — the kind that any woman would want. I was grateful for little things like that, or when her diet transitioned into solid food and bread and tea was the only thing she liked to eat. I stopped working because she needed more attention. After weeks of physiotherapy, nothing really changed. We continued our routine visits to the hospital and tried to feed her more at home. About six months later, we went for another CT scan and found out that we needed to do another stunt operation on my daughter. Hope was a year and five months old at the time. 

    We started to raise money for the surgery, asking our families and friends to pitch in if they could. One morning, about two weeks before the surgery, I woke up by 7 a.m. to buy bread for her breakfast because I had forgotten the day before. I didn’t find it in any of my usual spots, so I walked around for a bit. When I found bread, I returned home to feed her, bathe her and coo her to sleep. Since the day was still young, I decided to clean the house and do our laundry. I had my bath when I was done and joined her in the room. On my way in, I banged the door by mistake, and I noticed she didn’t move, which was very unlike her — every sound makes her jump. I rushed to her side and the minute I saw her face, I knew she was gone. I called my neighbour to help me confirm, but he was too scared to touch her. I got dressed and carried her to my mum’s house on a bike. Her body was lifeless. I couldn’t tell my mum anything when I saw her. I just gave her Hope to hold, and she screamed. We called her dad later that evening to tell him. He rushed over immediately. He knew she was struggling to survive, so he didn’t fight it. He buried her himself that night.  

    I didn’t cry until a month after her death. My cousin invited me to Lagos. We got drunk, and I started crying. Everything hurts; I still can’t believe I lost my Hope. It’s been seven months since she died and I have been struggling with my spiritual life — I don’t pray anymore. I know I need help, but nothing makes sense. 

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  • QUIZ: Get 10/13 To Prove You Grew Up With A Nigerian Mother

    We’ve agreed that all Nigerian parents attended the exact same training school, but there are some things that are particular to Nigerian mothers. If you grew up with one, this quiz should be beyond easy.

    Go ahead:

    11 Quizzes For People Who Grew Up In Nigeria

    Prove your Nigerian-ness. Take these quizzes.

  • QUIZ: Only People Raised By Nigerian Mothers Will Spot 8/13 Cheaper Items

    If you followed your mother to the market enough times, then you should not only have picked up the gift of bargaining, but you should also be able to automatically tell which items cost less. Well, it’s time to put that ability to the test.

    N.B: We checked 3 different supermarkets to find out which brands were always cheaper.

    Now, see if you can spot the cheaper ones:

  • What She Said: I Don’t Know How To Forgive My Mother

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here. 

    For many young Nigerian women, this week’s interview may mirror the relationship you have with your mother. Strained connections with mothers who barely got to know you as you grew up and are suddenly trying to foster a deeper relationship with you now that you are in your 20s. 

    Describe your mum in one word? 

    Hmm, this is a tough one. Narcissistic, that will be the word. I’m not allowed to say that abi? How dare I insult my mother? But it’s not an insult it’s who she is.

    How would you describe your relationship? 

    Tumultuous. We just never got along. Like apart from the fact that Nigerian parents think they have no business trying to be your friend, my mother and I clashed on every level. It’s hard for me to think up any memory where we were alone together, just chilling. It’s always fighting and abuse. It’s almost like we had some kind of deep dislike for each other. 

    Dislike is a heavy word

    I know, but I literally can’t think of a better-suited word. From as early as I can remember I’ve felt nothing but animosity towards her. When I was 13 I suddenly sprouted breasts like most of my mates, my mother’s reaction to that was to go into my room one day, seize all the clothes she determined to be too ‘revealing’ of my shape and replace them with clothes two sizes too big. I was thirteen for fuck’s sake. No conversation nothing. Of course, when I started crying and raging she slapped me till I shut up about it.

    Do you have any fond memories?

    See ehn even things that should be fond memories are tainted. Like birthdays for example. On my birthday the standard was to get a cake, a dress and take pictures. No party o, nothing else. I used to dread the hell out of it because she’d somehow make it all about her. Imagine someone screaming at you on your birthday about everything and anything. She’d start shouting in the morning about how she already knew I was going to make the day stressful for her and I shouldn’t stress her. Like “can’t you see all I’m doing for you?”.

    On my tenth birthday, for some reason, she invited a couple of my friends from school. She didn’t even consult me, she just went straight to their mothers and they showed up on the day. We hadn’t even started playing games or anything when someone spilt Fanta. She asked everyone to come and be going and told me to go to my room. That was it, birthday over. And trust that she was screaming throughout. By my twelfth birthday, I realised I didn’t want any of it. Like if I’m going to get screamed at and even smacked a couple of times on top birthday cake and pictures, keep it. Just leave me in my room to be reading my books. 

    What’s the most difficult part of your relationship?

    The way she manages to make everything about her. It’s like magic, there is no major life event that has happened to me that didn’t somehow become about her. I remember stumbling on a Reddit thread where people were complaining about their mums who had Narcissistic Personality Disorders and a light bulb went off in my head like that’s my mum. I didn’t even know there was a name for it.

    On the day of my secondary school graduation, she made us leave right after the ceremony because she didn’t want to get stuck in the traffic that would build up when everyone else was leaving. I told her that I understood and she should let me go home with someone else. She said no that I must follow her to take pictures with her and the family at home so she could go and sleep. Pictures that we could have taken in the school. 

    When I graduated from Uni I didn’t want to go for my graduation mostly because of her. She threw a whole fit, called all of our extended family that the reason I wasn’t going was just to spite her after all her years of support. I still didn’t go that was the first time I put my foot down about anything.

    And how has your relationship evolved since then? 

    I now have my peace. See, no is such a magical word I’ve never known such peace since I discovered that if I tell my mother no, she won’t die and I won’t die. It helps that I’ve been financially free since my fourth year of Uni. I always had side hustles. If I wasn’t making hair, I was making food, then I opened my Instagram store and that has been a big blessing in my life since. Because money was a tool in her hands. The way money worked in my house was that it went from my dad to my mum before it reached me. Once it touched her hand she was a god. I’d be jumping through hoops of fire just to collect money for something as simple as a handout from her. 

    How did your dad fit into the dynamic of your relationship?

    How much time do you have? Because that one is a story for another day. He was just very absent. When I think up childhood memories he was like a foggy shadow in the corner. He was there but he wasn’t really there. Long hours at work and even longer businesses trips. I think a lot of my mother’s frustration with him she took out on me. So I guess that’s one way in which he affected our relationship.

    How would you describe your feelings towards her? 

    There’s a lot of hurt. There always has and there always will be. There are just so many painful memories of her being both physically and emotionally abusive I could never get past. I’ve never been able to even bring myself to talk about the worst of it.

    One time she was driving into our estate and saw me talking to a boy she jumped out of her car with the engine still running slapped me to the ground and dragged me by my braids into the car. She was using one hand to beat me and the other hand to drive till we got home. When we got home she just kept on screaming that I was a useless girl and it wasn’t in her house that I’ll get pregnant and disgrace her. She got a pair of scissors and cut half of the braids on my head along with my hair. I had to shave the whole thing. I was 16 and I didn’t even know the boy I was talking to he was asking for my number and I was telling him to leave me alone when she saw us. I have dozens of stories worse than this.

    Have you ever tried to talk to her about it?

    There’s no point it’ll only be a waste of my time. As far as she’s concerned I was a wayward child who needed discipline and the only reason I’m where I am today is because of how she raised me. The truth is I’m where I am today despite how she raised me. Thank God.

    Have you ever tried to salvage the relationship in any other way? 

    No, I haven’t. You can only salvage something that existed before and was damaged abi. You can’t salvage something that doesn’t exist. 

    Do you think she feels the same way? 

    I don’t know how she feels exactly. I know that she has been friendlier since I moved out last year. Hasn’t even screamed at me once. She now has an odd way of talking to me as if we are guys. Like on WhatsApp she can send ‘how far now, how you dey?’ She never used to ask how I was. Like literally, before I moved out, I had never heard this woman say the words ‘how are you now’ to me. If you look through our messages you’ll only find instructions. Things like ‘Make sure to make era and boil rice by 7 pm’.  

    So she’s reaching out? How do you feel about it?

    My initial reaction was and still is ‘leave me, I don’t want’. Just leave me alone abeg, I’ve moved out we are no longer at each other’s throats, I’m not trying to be friends with her. I’ll do what is expected of me as a daughter. The usual obligations, send money, visit occasionally, show up when she’s sick and dying. But I’m not about to form padi padi with her, especially when she has refused to acknowledge the years of hurt and emotional damage she caused. I don’t know how to forgive her and I don’t think I want to.

  • 8 Signs That You’re Now Like Your Nigerian Mother

    Remember all the time you spent side-eyeing your Nigerian mother whenever she did something ridiculously Nigerian mother-y in public and you swore you would do everything in your power to make sure you didn’t end up like her? Well, I have news for you.

    You failed.

    Before you start arguing, read the points below and tell me that that they don’t perfectly describe you now in adulthood. Go ahead. I’ll wait.

    1) Having one nylon bag full of dozens of other nylon bags you consider pretty and will definitely come in handy later.

    I’ll go a step further and guess that you keep all the pretty nylon bags inside the strongest one of them of all: A Bagco Super Sack.

    2) Having enough Tupperware to successfully store food for all 7 years of the Great Tribulation.

    You keep all 3056 bowls and 1528 covers, even though you only use like two at a time. Never mind all the people making fun of you for this. They’ll be sorry when the rapture happens and food becomes scarce.

    3) Your go-to retort when someone says something that annoys you is:

    That and/or “If I slap you ehn, you’ll find all your teeth on the floor”.

    4) Using everything as a weapon in a fight.

    A lot of people don’t know this but the urge to attack someone who has annoyed you with whatever you can lay your hands on is the same feeling your mother struggled with that time she ripped out the car’s seat belt and whooped your ass with it because you decided to be a nuisance in the church’s crowded parking lot.

    5) Carrying a bag full of stuff you might need at some point during the day.

    You’d never know just by looking at it but along with a laptop, that bag contains an extra shirt, pants, and shoes, Imodium, Panadol, power bank, his passport, a plastic bowl containing last night’s leftover concoction rice…

    6) Spending at least 30 minutes pricing every single thing you want to buy in the market.

    If you ever wondered why market sellers have a tired smile on their faces whenever you come by, this is why.

    7) Your default response when someone apologizes to you is:

    You can’t help it.

    8) When you see someone misbehaving and the first thing that comes out of your mouth is:

    What else could it be?

    Click here to find out if you’ve slowly turned into your Nigerian father but just don’t know it yet.

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

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

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

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

    One day for the owner.

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

    This had better be a life or death situation.

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

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

    All weapons fashioned against me shall not prosper.

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

    The heart of man is wicked.

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

    Oga please just respect yourself and go back.

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

    There’s no need for her to talk

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

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

    How you carry your shoulder up during salary week.

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

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

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

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

    So what am I supposed to write now? These are just our favourite Odunlade memes. What are yours?
  • The Stress Of Having Your Nigerian Mother Buy Clothes For You

    1. When you tell your mother you need clothes and she asks if you’ve finished wearing the ones you have.

    Hay God!

    2. When your hear your mother shout “come and see if this shirt is your size”.

    YES!!!

    3. Your face, when your mother says “you’ll grow into it”:

    Be lying.

    4. When you ask your mother to buy adidas for you and she comes home with:

    “What’s the difference?”

    5. When you ask your mother for a suit vs. When you ask your mother for jeans:

    If it is not “responsible” cloth, you are not smelling any money.

    6. When she uses a broomstick to measure your shoe size before going to the market.

    Which one is this?

    7. When she still comes home with shoes that are two sizes too big.

    She will now give you paper to chook inside.

    8. When you ask her to help you buy something and she makes you follow her to the market.

    Hian! On top socks?

    9. When she refused to buy that shirt you liked just because of extra N500.

    Na wa oh!

    10. When she buys your Christmas clothes in July because it will be cheaper.

    Mama the mama.

    11. When she buys you something and you ask her how much it was.

    “Do you want to give me the money back?”

    12. When she buys you and all your siblings the exact same cloth.

    Who is doing ‘and co’ with you people?

    13. You, on that rare occasion your mother actually buys you something you like.

    Wow! So you sabi like this?
  • 13 Reasons Ngozi Nwosu From ‘Skinny Girl In Transit’ Is Your Nigerian Mother

    1. When she woke Tiwa by 5:30am to tell her what the Holy Spirit said.

    Holy Spirit has now turned into gym instructor.

    2. When she showed that she had mastered the art of guilt-tripping.

    Nigerian mothers are the travel agents for guilt trips.

    3. When she had the perfect response to Tiwa’s extreme dieting.

    Nigerian mothers basically invented sarcasm.

    4. When she flawlessly transitioned from dragging Tiwa to dragging Shalewa.

    “You sef… How many men have you brought into this house?”

    5. When she sent Shalewa to clean the kitchen with the ultimate Nigerian mother threat.

    No Nigerian child has ever heard the end of this threat. Can’t risk it.

    6. When she didn’t try to hide how she felt about Tiwa’s first love.

    OUCH!

    7. When she turned up in every Nigerian mother’s Owambe uniform:

    SLAY!!!

    8. When she was very clear about what she wanted for her birthday.

    No time, abeg.

    9. Nigerian mothers and “I had a dream.”

    Oshey, Josephine the dreamer.

    10. Her priceless reaction to Shalewa’s boyfriend buying her a car.

    See the reach.

    11. When she said every Nigerian child’s worst nightmare:

    When you hear this, you know it’s all over.

    12. When she spent this entire visit shouting and gossiping about church members.

    Nigerian mothers forget gossiping is a sin when their friends appear.

    13. When she prayed for her daughters even when she was angry with them.

    How Nigerian mothers show love.

    And if you’re not already watching Skinny Girl In Transit, just start here and go down the rabbit hole of greatness:

  • 30 Things To Expect If Your Bae’s Mother Is Yoruba
    Nigerian mothers are epic, but Yoruba mothers even more so. We found this thread that Wale Lawal shared a while ago about the various things to expect if your boyfriend or girlfriend has a Yoruba mother. And we’re sure you can relate to some, if not all of them.

    1. She has the all seeing eye.

    2. She’s the best cook in the world. Argue with your ancestors.

    2) My mother cannot cook but she can cook better than you. Yes, I know you’re a certified gourmet chef. My mother gave you the certificate.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    3. Your family’s social status will be in question.

    3) “Who is her father?” is what will come immediately after I mention your name. You might be right there, standing beside me even.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    4. The wedding has nothing to do with both of you and everything to do with only her.

    4) Rookie mistake babe. It’s not our wedding. If we’re both Yoruba, it’s our mothers’ wedding. Bride and Bride. Fathers not involved.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    5. For her, prayer is the major master key to everything.

    5) Aspiring Yoruba Mothers, the job is not easy. Prayer is next to breathing. Prayer is punctuation. The moment you feel it, pray.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    6. She knows how to give the epic side eye.

    6) Aspiring Yoruba Mothers, to qualify for your degree, you must take the compulsory course YM112: The Side Eye as Disciplinary Action.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    7. And it’s useful for situations such as this.

    7) The Side Eye will come in handy when your son/daughter brings home a useless woman/useless man.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    8. She asks the right questions.

    8) Yoruba Mothers know how to ask the right questions.

    “Yes, he dropped out of school but Mummy, I love him.” “What is love?” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    9. She believes that your bae wants to kill her.

    9) To be a Yoruba Mother is to be sure that your children, who love you, whom you love deeply, are trying their best to kill you.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    10. And she will remind bae that he or she can’t kill her.

    10) Aspiring Yoruba Mothers, when Kehinde bruises himself, or brings home a rada-rada girl, you must remind him that he can’t kill you.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    11. She will let you know that money is important.

    11) “But Mummy it’s not about the size of the ring, I love him.”

    “This shoelace is a ring?” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    12. You can even be a Yoruba mother.

    12) A Yoruba Mother is also a state of mind. When you forgot the Cosine Rule in that Maths exam and prayed on your pen: Yoruba Mother.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    13. Cane solves all childish behaviour.

    13) A Yoruba Mother brings a cane to school whenever it’s Open Day or Report Card Day, because that’s what her Yoruba child needs!

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    14. And she will find anything around that will work as a whip.

    14) If she forgot her cane at home, a Yoruba Mother is not proud. She will ask if she can break a branch off a nearby tree in the school.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    15. Nothing stops her from dealing with a naughty child – anywhere.

    15) “I’m not embarrassing my son in front of his friends. I’m saving him. Those are not friends, they are a useless foolish bad gang.”- YM.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    16. She says it as it is.

    16) A Yoruba Mother is probably your only source of truth.

    “Jumoke, do you have any friends? You are getting fat and ugly.” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    17. She will snitch on you, then console you later.

    17) One time my Yoruba Mother reported me to my dad. I got caned. Later, she hugged me and told me I deserved it for being a bad boy.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    18. You must be overqualified to be able to date her child.

    18) You may not have standards, but your Yoruba Mother needs to see a CV, reference letter and transcript before that man can date you.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    19. If she takes off her gele, you’re finished.

    19) Do. Not. Let. A. Yoruba. Mother. Take off. Her. Gele. Because. Of. You. Please.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    20. She doesn’t settle disputes.

    20) If Timi and Jide are fighting and Timi reports Jide to you, your responsibility as a Yoruba Mother is to see them fight to the finish.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    21. She’s good for confiding in.

    21) A Yoruba Mother is a natural confidant.

    “Mummy, I think Tunde is cheating on me.” “Why won’t he cheat when all you do is eat?” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    22. She’s a good listener.

    22) A Yoruba Mother listens.

    “Mummy can I have -“ “Shut up, there is rice at home.” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    23. She knows how to gist.

    23) Yoruba Mothers have THE BEST gist (gossip). Please, aspiring Yoruba Mothers, you have to know how to gist. Not everyday twitter-fight.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    24. Let her not hear your complaints.

    24) I don’t think Yoruba Mothers are petty but if you complain about the salt in the jollof rice, please be prepared to cook for yourself.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    25. She’s always right.

    25) A Yoruba Mother is always right.

    “Mummy, there are 8 planets in our solar system now, not 9.” “Upon all you came in last last term?” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    26. Do not try to surprise her.

    26) A Yoruba Mother does not like surprises.

    “Mummy, we’re planning a destination wedding!” “And you’re just telling me? There is Skype.” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    27. She can throw shade.

    27) Can’t really say a Yoruba Mother revels in I-told-you-sos.

    “Mummy, you were right, he was a fraud.” “Good for you. Good and sweet.” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    28. Her bargain skills are out of this world.

    28) A Yoruba Mother is conscious of the nation’s economy.

    “Mummy, the cake is N250,000.” “Ok, we’ll pay N50,000 because of the economy.” — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    29. Her holy grail is Africa Magic.

    29) A Yoruba Mother and the DSTV channel AfMag Yoruba are two peas in a pod. I dare you to change the channel. Just try it.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014

    30. She can order anybody around, whether they’re her child or not.

    30 continued) And the YM may not even be your mother. She may just spot you in the airport and decide you must help with her luggage.

    — WALE LAWAL (@WalleLawal) June 11, 2014 [zkk_poll post=22849 poll=content_block_standard_format_31]
  • Quiz: How Nigerian Are Your Parents?
    We love our Nigerian parents but we are just curious. Are your parents really as Nigerian as you think they are? Tick any of the things you can relate to. [quiz_checklist quiz=”how_nigerian_are_your_parents”]
  • This Nigerian Boy Pretended to Get a Tattoo. His Mother’s Reaction is Hilarious
    African parents (especially Nigerians) are the same all over the world.  But when this chap decided to prank his mother by pretending to get a tattoo. Her reaction is straight out of the African Mother’s Playbook.

    1. She Will Blame Your Friends.

    Because you cannot be the bad one among your friends; they are always influencing you.

    2. She Will Bring the Spiritual Angle.

    In case you don’t know, the Bible [or Koran] is against that thing you just did.  You mother knows chapter and verse.

    3. When She Discovers You Got a Dragon Tattoo.

    You sef no try. A dragon? Are you Harry Potter?

    4. A Holy Book Will Be Quoted.

    This is why you should pay attention in Sunday School.

    5. She Will Close the Door So You Can’t Escape.

    You’re a prisoner in your parent’s house.  If you doubt it, try and pass that door she just closed.

    6. She Will Bring Up Your Health.

    Your mother is concerned about your health.  Because if you die, how will you give her grandchildren and shame her enemies?

    Enjoy the video here.

    And ask yourself, what would my mother do if I came home with a tattoo?