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  • Nigerian Women Talk About Navigating Harassment in “Safe” Spaces

    Trigger warning: Sexual harassment

    When women complain about sexual harassment, the typical question that follows is, “Where were you?” implying that they had to be in a questionable location for it to happen. 

    But what happens when the harassment happens somewhere that’s supposed to be safe? Seven Nigerian women share their experience with sexual harassment in situations where they least expected it’d happen.

    Image designed by Freepik

    At the gynaecologist’s office

    — Audrey, 27

    I went to the hospital for a pap smear, and the male gynaecologist kept saying I had a beautiful face. I was uncomfortable, but I politely smiled and said, “Thank you”. When it was time for the smear, he directed a female student doctor to do it. I was immediately relieved, but my relief was short-lived. 

    Anyone who’s taken a smear test knows you’re naked from the waist down, knees in the air, and entirely exposed when the speculum is inserted. The person performing the test usually sits at eye level of your cervix. In this case, it was the female student doctor. But this guy stood behind the female doctor all through, staring at my cervix. He made it seem like he was directing the student, but he was staring at me, and even commented that I had a “beautiful cervix”.

    When the student was done, she had issues with removing the speculum. So, this guy reached in — with ungloved hands — to remove it. Then he slightly tapped my vagina. I felt violated, but I wasn’t sure if I was thinking too much about it. After the test, he asked for my WhatsApp number so he could “forward the results” to me. I didn’t report him. Who would take me seriously in a government hospital? 

    In her home

    — Nini*, 24

    My dad had a stroke a few years ago that left him mute and immobile. After the initial treatment at the hospital, he was discharged, and my family paid for a physiotherapist to come help with his movement thrice a week.

    I was usually the only one at home when the physiotherapist came, and he soon started flirting with me. I didn’t think he was serious, so I’d just laugh him off. He was much older and really friendly. He would say stuff like, “Shey you’ll be my second wife?” but I didn’t see the need to complain to my mum.

    Then, one day, he asked me to help him move my dad for a particular exercise. When I did, he grabbed and kissed me. My dad’s back was turned, but he was literally in the room! I screamed, and he must’ve panicked because he hurriedly left. He never came back to treat my dad.

    In a place of worship

    — Moyin*, 21

    I used to have nightmares as a 12-year-old, and my typical Nigerian mum decided I needed deliverance. I was taken to one ori-oke (mountain top) for a three-day vigil, and my mum wasn’t allowed to stay with me. 

    It was a youth-focused deliverance program, so every other person was underage like me. On the last night, we had to meet the religious head individually for special prayers. He wasn’t alone when I got to his office. There was one other man and two women holding candles, praying. They made me lie on my back on the floor, and the religious head lay spread out on top of me. I think it was supposed to be a power transfer or healing thing.

    I should note that we were both fully clothed, but the man was moving back and forth on top of me. It went on for about five minutes before I was asked to leave. I only realised years later that this man was actually grinding on me with a full-on erection.


    RELATED: A Timeline of Silence: Why Does Sexual Violence Have Little Consequence?


    At the office

    — Lola, 29

    I once had a boss who, for the one year I worked with him, didn’t hide the fact that he wanted to sleep with me. 

    Anytime he managed to catch me alone, he’d smack my ass or pinch my cheeks. When he noticed I deliberately tried to avoid him, he’d give me never-ending tasks or shout at me for no reason. I endured it for a year because I was dead broke and wasn’t about to leave my salary without having another job lined up.

    In a police station

    — Flora*, 31

    A friend was picked up by the police for riding on an okada, so I went with some of his family to try to get him released. The officer handling his case leered at me all through the time we were there. 

    At first, I ignored him, and he kept frustrating us. But my friend’s brother begged me to try to be friendly with the officer so he’d be more helpful. I plastered a smile on my face, and sure enough, the officer became helpful. When my friend was finally released, the officer went, “Won’t you hug me to say thank you?” I acted like I didn’t hear him and walked out of the station as fast as I could.

    In the library

    — Sarah, 19

    I used to visit a public library close to my home frequently until the day a man exposed his genitals to me. 

    He was sitting across from me, and I noticed he kept fidgeting. After a while, he called my attention and gestured under the desk, implying that I had dropped something. I bent to look and instantly came face to face with his genitals. I was too shocked to say anything, and immediately moved to another section. There were a few other people in the library, but I kept thinking, “What if he comes to meet me here?” So, I just decided to leave altogether. It was crazy.

    With a family member

    — Danielle*, 22

    When I was around 6 years old, there was this uncle who regularly visited. I really disliked him because he always made me sit on his legs even when I protested.

    My parents didn’t mind, but the day I complained to my mum that there was “something in his pocket” that always poked me was when I stopped seeing him at our house. Now, I know what the something in his pocket was, but I wish my parents had prevented him from making me sit on his legs in the first place. That’ll never happen to my kids.


    *Some names have been changed for anonymity.

    If you found this relatable, you should read this next:

    “He Shared My Nudes With His Friends” — Nigerian Women on Being Slut-Shamed by Their Partners


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  • “He Doesn’t Buy Me Stuff” — Nigerian Women on Earning More Than Their Partners

    Every market day, opinions abound on social media about how women earning more than their partners negatively affects the relationship dynamic.

    We asked some Nigerian women who earn more than their partners one question: How does your income affect your relationship?

    Image designed by Freepik

    Eloho*, 29

    I earn almost 200% more than my husband, and I think he resents me for it. Anytime I complain about the cost of things, he’d “jokingly” say stuff like, “If big madam like you is complaining, what about we poor people?” It sounds like a joke, but he’s always making offhand comments like that. I can’t tease him about buying me stuff because he’d say I’m richer than him. 

    I’ve spoken to him about how his comments make me feel, but he’d apologise and then go right back to it after some time. I’ve always had more money, even before we got married three years ago, but it’s as if he only realised it after. It makes me uncomfortable, but it’s my cross.  

    Joyce*, 31

    I walk on eggshells around my husband when it comes to finances. He’s very traditional and believes he should be the one to provide. He knows I earn more but insists we live a life he can afford. One time, I suggested changing our child’s school, and he said he couldn’t afford the fees. When I offered to pay it myself, he was like, “So, you’ll tell people I can’t do my duty as a father, abi?”

    I have to hide any new thing I get for myself or our child because he’d start sulking if he noticed. Another time, I sent money to his account to offset an urgent need without informing him. He just muttered a thank you and went about his business. I haven’t tried it again. A family friend advised me to send all my money to him at month’s end and then ask him to give me an allowance so he’d feel like the man of the house. Me, I can’t give a man that kind of control over my life.


    RELATED: “He Cut Her Braids Short in Public” — 7 Women on Why They’d Rather Make Their Own Money


    Ronke*, 27

    My husband appreciates that I bring enough to the table, so he doesn’t feel a way about me earning more. But he doesn’t buy me stuff. 

    We’re very transparent about how we spend money, and I always tell him before making any payment. I can say I like a particular wig now, and he’ll just say, “Buy it na”. I have the money, but I wish he’d take the initiative and buy me stuff with his own money too. The one time I tried to talk about this, he said, “I thought both your money and my money is OUR money. It doesn’t matter where the money to buy what you want comes out from.” But it matters to me. There’s no surprise or feeling like, “My husband bought me this.”

    Dora*, 25

    I’ve been dating my boyfriend for about two years and only started earning more than him when I got a new job in 2023. When I first told him my new salary, he joked about me putting him on a boyfriend allowance since I now outearn him. But he doesn’t ask me for money, and I haven’t noticed any change in him. I can now afford to take him on dates and send random gifts, which I love doing. He’s done the same for me, so it’s not a big deal.

    Stella*, 28

    I took on most of our wedding expenses two years ago, and have been the primary provider in the house since then. I didn’t think it was an issue because he also spent his money on us. But he lost his job six months ago and doesn’t seem in a hurry to get a new one. The one time I suggested he help me make the market runs since he was home and I was working late, he threw a fit. I can’t ask him to help me around the house because he’d take offense. But I’ve handled rent and other home expenses without a word for years.

    Why is it that I can take up his duty as a provider without complaint, but he can’t assist me with mine?

    Josephine*, 30

    I’ve always earned more than my husband, and he’s a generally good sport about it. But he can also be sensitive. I didn’t know this when we first got married, so every time I returned from the market, I’d rant to him about how everything was getting more expensive. It was harmless gist to me, but one day, he told me he usually felt bad when I complained about money. 

    In his mind, it was because I was spending my own money since he couldn’t afford to pay for all the home expenses. So now, I’m conscious about how I talk about money with him. Money has contributed to many of our fights — he gets mad if I try to talk about his spending habits. It’s just a sensitive topic in our home.

    *Names have been changed for anonymity.


    NEXT READ: 6 Women on the Burden of Being Breadwinners in Their Families

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  • 30+ Nigerian Women on Navigating Body Changes

    In a perfect world, we’d never get wrinkles, and I’d still have my flat stomach from secondary school. But life is a bad belle, which means we can’t escape the body changes that come with ageing. 

    These changes are inevitable, but that doesn’t mean we can’t prepare for it. I spoke to some 30+ women on some of the changes they’ve noticed as they got older, and how they’re navigating it.

    Diane*, 33

    I think there are two phases to the body changes we experience as women: ageing and childbirth.

    I started feeling self-conscious around 24 when I began putting on weight, then I got married at 25 and put on more “happy” weight. I had my first child when I was about to turn 28, and pregnancy and delivery took a toll on me. I only started to feel like myself three years after giving birth. It’s 2023, and I just had my second child. So, I’m just going through the motions, wondering if it’d also take me another three years to feel like myself again.

    Sometimes, it feels like the entire female body system is against the woman and her mind; hormonal imbalances, menstrual cycle and the like. Right now, I’m just going through it. The internet keeps bringing these ads about injections that suppress the appetite to help lose weight my way. 

    Since I don’t have liposuction money, it’s looking like a cheaper alternative. 

    Seun, 30

    Maybe it’s because I just turned 30, but I haven’t really experienced any physical change. Mentally though, I feel more feminine. I was a very awkward young woman, but now I feel like I’ve “bloomed”. I just feel womanly and more in control of my emotions. I don’t have to pander to anyone or hide. To be honest, I wish I had turned 30 sooner.

    Eunice, 53

    For me, it’s ageing and menopause, and it’s a struggle. Physically, I’ve gained more weight that my several diets haven’t been able to shake. I’ve also developed loose skin and arthritis. Mentally, I’m usually tired all the time and more emotional than before. I’m glad to be rid of periods, but the body keeps bringing more struggles each day. It’s like women don’t rest. 

    Moji, 31

    I’ve always been really slim with an iron-board-flat stomach. I even used to joke about wanting to add weight so people would respect my age. My body must have a sense of humour because my flat stomach began to disappear when I turned 27. I wasn’t ready at all. I’ll admit I eat late-night snacks because I work late most days, but I’ve been doing that forever. It just seems to be catching up with me now. 

    I’ve had to be more conscious of how I eat. I’m also considering hitting the gym, but I’m mostly tired all the time now and never seem to be able to “psych” myself into putting in the work. I’m not sure if I’m just lazy or it’s age.

    Clara*, 31

    I’ve had sparse chin and chest hair since I entered puberty, but they’ve grown more since I turned 27. I’ve never been pregnant, but some weight gain a couple of years ago means I have some stretch marks on my breasts. For a while, I didn’t recognise who was staring back at me in the mirror and would wear clothes that stopped at my neck, but I’ve accepted that things can’t stay the same. 

    So, I’m trying to love my body afresh. I’m choosing my clothes now with the intention of flattering my new body and feeling confident when I step out of the house.

    *Some names have been changed for the sake of anonymity.


    You know what won’t change, though? Our love for food. We’re celebrating the Nigerian culture of meat and grill at Burning Ram on November 11. Get an early bird ticket while they’re still available.


    NEXT READ: Men Want to Have Sex With Me but Avoid Me in Public

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  • #BumpThis: 14 Top Albums by Naija Women So Far In 2023

    It’s easy for albums to easily get lost in the pile of the singles 2023 has been choked with. So we went digging into the Nigerian music released so far to discover and rediscover the bodies of work women have blessed us with this year.

    KOLLIDE – Kold AF

    On KOLLIDE, Kold AF’s vocabulary oozes of admirable bluntness and confidence. They hold stead and still leave one open enough to admit that “I’m a hard guy, but I hurt sometimes too.” The EP offers six songs that explore romance, being broke and keeping heart on the sleeve.

    Kold AF is an amazing singer and overall, KOLLIDE is clear afropop and r&b fusion. With a platform like Aristokrats Records (Burna Boy, LeriQ, Mojeed, Novemba) behind her, it’s only up. We’re rooting for her.

    Heaven Has Come – TY Bello

    TY Bello invited other artists she loves together on Heaven Has Come. Listening to the album comes with a feeling that suggests that it’s more than just an album of MP3s and WAV. files — it’s transcendental experiences of worship and praise. The production is excellent, catchy and modern, but won’t make you lose your home training and start throwing legwork anyhow.

    Grey Choir – Christtie Jay

    Christtie as Jay is an innate storyteller and spoken word artist. Her newly-released EP, Grey Choir, beautifully blends spoken word and music,explores self-love, sexuality, relationships, melancholy, grief, and japa themes.

    The sonic palette of the project is just as broad as the array of emotions and topics she explores. On Story Story, guest artist Mo’Believe’s book builds a commentary around Lagos-living.One could almost hear Christtie Jay burst into tears on Hello/Goodbye, the track before the last. Poetry-music projects require attentiveness, including Grey Choir.But you never know what the next track will sound like. Every song is unique and captivating.

    Angel On The Run – Rukmani

    Rukmani’s  EPis Pop-inflected R&B at its finest. Angel On The Run opens with guitar strings that usher in Rukmani. From the first track, Purpose, a song about reconciling past mistakes, to the seventh track, Softies Vibes, a vulnerable expression of self-love, Rukmani’s silky voice keeps calling to her listener.

    Angel On The Run is the music to get cosy to, especially when emotional waves crash over you.

    Winny – WINNY

    On her self-titled debut music project, Winny, a Nigerian reggae artist,  turns her love tales and heartaches into songs. Winny’s voice can quickly become a rude gyal’s weapon, full-blasting in patois. At the same speed, she can be very soft and begs a lover not to leave. WINNY is an exciting body of work; the seven tracks promises that the Nigerian music scene will soon become very fluid and accessible to all styles and genre

    Anger Management – Bloody Civilian

    Beyond being a super producer and sound engineer, Bloody Civilian isn’t your average artist. Check her collaborative effort with Native Records and Marvel’s Black Panther. Even her name. Then check her Anger Management EP. But don’t stop there — dive into the music project and enjoy her brilliant brand of storytelling that’s rare in our popular music scene. Parental supervision, poke-nosing family members, and anti-misogyny are some of the stories Bloody Civilian lays bare in the project. If you’re not jamming to this for enjoyment, don’t forget it anytime you fume angry.

    Kaleidoscope – Lindsey Abudei

    In Nigeria, where niché music isn’t as widely accepted, Lindsey Abudei continues to polish her brand of Neo-soul, alternative R&B. Her new project, Kaleidoscope, is recent proof. 

    The music on Kaleidoscope is cinematic. Asides from her lyricism, the drums are softly tapping, guitar strings jumping and giving Jazz vibes. On days that emotions are high and running, or there’s just stillness — Lindsey’s got us.

    Also, film production companies and theatres need to holla at her and cut her cheques for movie soundtracks ASAP.

    dear diary – RnB Princess

    In five songs, RnB Princess lifts the things that usually stay in a diary to the recording studio,spilling her heart out about unreturned love, jilt and the relationship woes that trouble a Gen-Z lady. The EP features new R&B babes Tsuni and Keziah Mallam — one can liken their collaboration to a girl’s night out, in group support of a heartbroken friend that shouldn’t be left by her pain or loneliness. Nothing is actually hotter than women supporting women.

    Elevated – Mercy Chinwo

    In just six tracks, Mercy Chinwo performs worship songs that’ll put you in thanksgiving mode and waving your hands in the air. But these are not only church songs; they are personal testimonies and declarations many Gospel or Christian music lovers will passionately sing along to. The instrumentals are vibrant, exciting and comforting — she beautifully sings of her belief and spirituality.

    Mercy Chinwo isn’t one of Africa’s most prominent gospel artists for nothing.

    Lifesize Teddy – Lifesize Teddy

    At a time we can count Nigerian female mainstream rappers on one palm, Lifesize Teddy shows up as Mavin’s last signee with her titular EP. She raps and sings well in English and Pidgin English. The PH dialects you hear in her lines are pointers to her home-base, City of Garden. Get in tune with Teddy.

    Pan African Rockstar – Lady Donli

    After a four-year album break, Lady Donli’s sophomore album, Pan African Rockstar comes out and gets on our rotation,blasting funk, percussion and electric guitars. 

    Many considered her first album Enjoy Your Life a classic, and her latest has materials and the making of a classic, too. We’ll give it some time, but this is an album we won’t stop jamming for a while.

    All of Eniolaa – Eniolaa

    She’s a singer who does afropop and other sounds like Amapiano and R&B. Her EP combines these sounds with her girly side and street consciousness. When not moulding Arya Starr and Fave on King Kong, she’s a neo-Fuji star like Asake on Iyele or a blue c-note, worried and gloomy, on Holy Days.

    Lagos 101 – Bella Alubo

     Although Bella Alubo came from Jos, she’s handing us a guide to navigate Lagos. 

    The growth of Bella Alubo has been interesting to see. She went from being a straight-up rapper to becoming an all-around artist. Lagos 101 is a commendable effort. It may be the direction she feels is next for her career, but we still struggle to connect to the music.

    In Lagos 101, she’s singing about having fun and not rushing into love. Even though we found some details about the widespread belief that finding love in Lagos might be the hardest; either you’re the hunter or end up the target.

    More – Grace Idowu

    Grace Idowu is a gospel artist with a commanding voice. One vocal cord moves, and it grabs your attention. 

    More, her second body of work, is a choir-backed seven-track that focuses on eulogising God, strengthening her relationship with the spiritual being and speaking positively into existence. The beats are very hard, but Grace Idowu even goes harder with her rap verse on Joy, our favourite track on the EP. GIf there are love songs to God, this is what they sound like.

    Listen to them:

  • “He Cut Her Braids Short in Public” — 7 Women on Why They’d Rather Make Their Own Money

    We asked Nigerian women to share their experiences with financial abuse and why they’d rather make their own money. And if the stories we got are anything to go by, Nigerian women constantly experience partners withholding money or controlling their spending as a form of control.

    Image designed by Freepik

    Comfort*, 37

    My ex-husband and I had no clear stance on financial issues before marriage. I guess love blinded us, or me. A friend advised us to get a joint account so we could both save for important projects, and we thought it sounded good, so we did it. 

    The first mistake I made was making the joint account my primary account. The second was making my ex the primary signatory. Either of us could withdraw without approval from the other, but he alone received alerts and had the debit card. My ex is an entrepreneur, while I work a 9-5. It meant I was the only one who was sure of a monthly salary. So, we decided to make the joint account my official salary account, and he’d drop money in the account when he made a profit.

    It went well for the first two years, but then his business hit a rough patch, and we started depending on only my salary. That wasn’t an issue until he began to prevent me from accessing the money. Can you imagine that I’d stand before him every day before work to collect transport money for the day? I’ve seen shege. I couldn’t buy sugar in the house if he didn’t release money.

    I complained severely and involved family, but he made it seem like it was because I was the one bringing the money. Then he added cheating to the mix, but that’s a story for another day.

    If I ever get married again, my eyes will be very clear. I work hard to make my own money and can’t depend on anyone again, whether he’s richer than me or not. People are unpredictable.

    Jennifer*, 20

    From everything I saw my mum go through with my dad, it’s just not an option for me to depend on a man financially. 

    He prevented her from working or doing anything to earn money but still gave the impression that he was doing us a favour anytime he provided for the home. He wasn’t struggling, but he seemed to have a thing for using money to show he was in charge. I can’t forget one day when I was much younger, my mum was very ill and bedridden. She was literally crying from the bed, begging him to give her ₦5k so we could call a nurse. He refused. My siblings and I had to go behind his back when he wasn’t around to beg one nurse on our street to help her for free.

    He does the same to us children. You have to do his every wish if you hope to collect ₦2k from him. It’s one reason I don’t joke with my hustle now. I’m not saying it’s bad for anyone to depend on anyone; there are still good people out there. But me, I can’t risk it.

    Joan*, 23

    I just got out of a four-year relationship that was toxic in every sense of the word. He is almost ten years older, and I met him as an undergraduate. He had a business centre in school, and I moved in with him almost immediately after we started the relationship. I even had a falling out with my parents because of that.

    He used to take care of me a lot in the beginning, and even paid my fees. But he was also aggressive and controlling. He collected my ATM card because he didn’t want me collecting money from guys. If a family member sent me money, I had to delete the alert so he wouldn’t see it, and then, transfer the money to a POS agent. Anytime we fought, he’d lock my wardrobe and kitchen because he bought the clothes and food.

    I know better now, and I’m trying my best to make sure I don’t fall into that trap again.


    Did you know we’re cooking THE biggest meat festival in Nigeria? Sign up here to join other foodies and meat enthusiasts to celebrate the one thing that binds our meals together.


    Lola*, 24

    A close friend of mine had her phone smashed and long braids cut short in public. The stupid boy did this because he paid for them, and she had the “audacity” to come to a faculty dinner without informing him first. I’ve learnt from the experiences of others, please. I collect money from men, but it’s only what I know I can refund. So if you move mad, I’ll just ask for your account number and refund you straight up. No time.

    Kemi*, 19

    My dad was the first to educate me about financial abuse. He’s very intentional about his girls not falling into the wrong hands. We had a neighbour growing up who always looked dapper, but his wife looked like someone on the brink of death. She was always begging my mum for food. My mum even used to give her clothes and help braid her hair. It was the same old story; he didn’t allow her to work, but he didn’t take care of her either.

    My dad makes sure he gives me whatever I need. When he doesn’t have, he explains his financial situation and rings it in my ear that he’ll always be there for me. He’s also taught me the importance of working hard to make my own money so no one takes me for a fool.

    Chisom*, 28

    My elder sister works but submits her money to her husband as the “head of the house”. He dictates everything she’s allowed to spend on, even to the last kobo. She seems okay with it, but she’s a shadow of herself. This is someone who enjoyed buying stuff for herself before marriage and wouldn’t be caught dead wearing the same outfit more than three times. Now, she looks like someone suffering.

    I can’t interfere in their marriage, and I can’t even say who’s earning more, but it’s given me the ginger to make my own money and talk about finances extensively before entering any marriage.

    Daniella*, 27

    Living in Abuja means I’ve mostly dated rich kids. I’ve had a partner who paid my rent and expected me not to entertain visitors, both male and female, or go out without informing him. 

    Another one got me a phone he’d already installed spyware on. I found out when people reached out to me that someone was calling them, saying he was my boyfriend. I ended both relationships before they started getting even funnier, but I realise if I depended on them for money, they’d have succeeded in controlling me. It’s all the more reason why I have to work hard. 


    *Names have been changed for the sake of anonymity

    NEXT READ: 6 Women on the Burden of Being Breadwinners in Their Families

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  • What She Said: I Don’t Feel Safe at Home Anymore

    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.

    What She Said - I Don't Feel Safe At Home Anymore

    I have a fear of home invasions. All forms of it: burglaries, armed robbery, break-ins. The crux of that fear is having an unwelcome stranger in my house. 

    It was just a few minutes past 2 a.m. when I woke up to stare at my phone’s too-bright screen. The date was May 24, 2023. I heard a soft click, and the door to my room opened slowly. I was confused, and at first, I thought, “I didn’t close it properly. A breeze must have happened.” 

    But the door didn’t stop opening. The slice of light from the hallway kept widening. It was now clear that someone was on the other end of the door, and they were opening it slowly, trying to make sure they wouldn’t wake me. My flatmates usually knock first. 

     “Who the fuck is that?” I yelled before I realised I was angry or afraid. The door immediately stopped moving. I jumped out of bed — it takes a few seconds because I sleep naked and have to wear a robe — and chased after them, but they were gone by the time I got there. 

    Outside my door, there was a lingering whiff of body odour in the hallway. In the living room, the balcony door was open. My flatmates and I live on the first floor, so this person climbed the railing to get into our apartment. 

    I didn’t know until daylight, but they left a handprint on the wall right by the balcony door. 

    A photo of the handprint

    I slammed the balcony sliding door closed, almost losing my little finger. Then I walked back to my room and stood at the door, trembling. All I could think was, “There was someone in this house. There was someone in our house.” I stood there for a while before I heard someone yelling from the next house. The person must’ve climbed the fence to get into the next compound. When I finally stopped shaking, I went inside, locked the door and texted my flatmates. 

    I lay in bed, staring at my door, half expecting it to open for a stranger to come in and attack me. I couldn’t sleep until 4:56 a.m.

    Now, look. I’m well aware of how careless we were. The balcony has three doors: a burglary-proof door, a sliding net door and a sliding glass door. They were all closed, but none were locked; entry was easy. And my neighbour was robbed the previous month, possibly by the same person. 

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    The following day, I bought the strongest padlock I could find and permanently locked the burglary-proof gate. When I spoke to some neighbours, they told me the security guard in the next compound had seen him jumping the fence. He’d taken my neighbour’s make-up purse, which he’d dumped in the next house. Then he apparently came back that same night and tried to rob some other neighbours. 

    I couldn’t sleep properly for days, so I packed my shit and went to a friend’s house until I felt ready to return home. 

    One early morning in late June, a few weeks later, I heard the soft click of the door again. I opened my eyes and saw a blurry image of someone standing at the door. Before I could fully process my thoughts or the pounding of my heart, I yelled at them, “WHO THE HELL ARE YOU?” As the person rushed toward me, saying, “It’s me,” I realised it was a friend who had come over for a few days, not an intruder. It felt like the whole thing had happened again for a few seconds. Only this time, they actually got into my room to attack me. 

    As my friend comforted me, and I tried to calm my heart, I started laughing because it was too funny. Would I always be afraid of the sound of my door? I’d been so angry that they’d come back, but what did I think my fearful anger was going to do, scare them away? It did before, so maybe it has some power. 

    I check all the doors before I go to bed now, but every time I open my door and hear the soft click, I get a flashback that makes me shake my head. Don’t go to bed without locking your doors, people. 

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

    RECOMMENDED: My Parents Ignored Me For a Year

  • QUIZ: What Type of Feminist Are You?

    It’s cool for women to use the ‘feminist’ tag in conversations, but are you really part of the squad? Take our quiz to find out!

    Recommendation: Read the Egba Women’s Tax Revolt on Citizen History.

  • The Women’s War: Egba Women’s Tax Revolt

    Nigerian women may have had a long history of suffering, but they’ve also had a longer history of resilience. There are many stories of the heroic struggles of women against colonialism. 

    Today’s story, however, takes us back to the late 1940s, when a women-led resistance movement fought against the British colonial system of multiple taxation on women and led to the dethronement of a king. 

    This is the story of the Egba Women’s Tax Revolt.

    Egba women were indelible forces of anti-colonial resistance [UNESCO/The Republic]

    In Colonial Nigeria, government revenue (in the Southern Provinces) came from two sources—import duties (a tax collected on imports and some exports by a country’s customs authorities) and railway freights. 

    Under import duties, the real “moneymaker” for the British was trading German liquor and spirits, and Germany was the epicentre of World War I (1914-1918). Before 1901, liquor duties were three shillings, but by 1901, it increased to as much as six shillings! This resulted in liquor being a scarce commodity during the war.

    The high liquor import duties and shipping difficulties caused revenue from that sector to drop drastically. Which ultimately affected the government’s pockets.

    Undated photograph of German soldiers posing for a picture while drinking beer [Beer and World War 1]

    This is where the Abeokuta people come in. Before amalgamation in 1914, they were known as successful producers and traders of palm kernel, palm oil, and cocoa. The British tried to put export duties on cocoa and palm kernels, but they couldn’t generate as much as liquor import duties once did.

    At this point, Lord Lugard was extremely desperate to get the nation’s finances in order. He had to plead with the British colonial office formally to impose direct taxation on the Yorubas, but the British government took its time to give any kind of approval.

    Even though there was no word from the British, the native rulers felt pressure from the colonial government to generate revenue no matter what. This led to indirect taxation known as the ‘sanitation fines’ in April 1917.

    The “Sanitation Fines” and How This Affected Egba Women

    As the name implies, sanitation fines were monetary penalties one had to pay for not keeping their environment neat and tidy. To make up for the government’s lack of revenue, they needed to catch offenders, summon them to court, and make them pay fines—and market women or rural women were always the easy targets.

    These women had to pay fines of up to five shillings, with an additional eight shillings for court summons, making it thirteen shillings. Sometimes the courts could even decide to inflate prices by close to thirty shillings. 

    The “offences committed” were usually very mundane, like not sweeping the front of their compounds or setting up water pots outside the house with no covers (which could cause mosquito breeding). 

    The sanitation fines turned out to be a successful revenue scheme for the British.  In the Native Courts alone, they made up to £1.6 million from 1.9 million sanitary case offences. It encouraged British colonial officials to further impose stricter taxes on women.

    The “Independent Woman” Mode of Taxation

    After much deliberation, the British Colonial Office introduced the official method of taxation for Abeokuta on January 1, 1918. This was with the approval of the Secretary of the Native Authority, Adegboyega Edun. But right from the start, there was something not quite right with this new tax.

    Adegboyega Edun [Nairaland]

    The model was for every adult to pay an average of 5 shillings per head. Based on the number of adults in a household, the head of the compound was given an amount that the family must pay. This happened to exclude women, as they had to pay a totally different amount of tax altogether.

    This was entirely different from the model of taxation in other parts of the country, which didn’t recognise women as different from men. In that model, “tax for every household will be £1, including the wife, and £10 per annum for additional wives.”

    Despite several complaints, the British Resident bluntly refused to change the system. Women were more prevalent than men in the population, which made the taxation spread wider, and he knew that if he increased the men’s taxes, they may cause ‘wahala’ and riots.

    Ironically, despite his efforts to reduce mayhem, the people were not at all pleased with the taxation system. The income of the people was not considered. They still had to pay customs dues and shop licences, and forced labour was still in practice. This led to the Adubi War of 1918.

    How the Adubi War Solved Tax Problems for Men But Not Women

    On June 13, 1918, 30,000 Abeokuta residents protested their displeasure by destroying railway and telegraph lines south of Abeokuta. Neighbouring Yorubas from the French colony of Dahomey also joined the fight, as they also protested against forced army recruitment for World War I.

    Three thousand British soldiers were used to suppress the revolt, after which 1,000 Egba civilians and 100 soldiers were killed.  

    Despite the bloodshed, the tax scheme was modified. Men who earned less than £40 per year were now required to pay five shillings a year, with women paying two shillings and six pence. Those above £40 paid 1% of their income in taxes, while landlords were taxed 5% of their rental income.

    However, this modification did not favour women. Women expected the government to make the market favourable for them as traders so that they could also profit, but there were no gains whatsoever. 

    Market women were charged as much as £3 for sheds. Those who couldn’t afford it and made use of ‘illegal’ spaces had to pay fines. The industries they could profit from were also limited, as they included only trading foodstuffs, imported goods, and local textiles. And these problems continued until World War II (1939–1945).

     Egba women are unhappy over the multiple taxes [Getty Images]

    In the words of the women’s representative to the Oba, Madam Jojolola, “The women all complained that they derive no benefit from the government. We make no profit on the goods we sell, and yet we have been called upon to pay taxes…”

    The Rise of Women Through the Abeokuta Women’s Union (AWU) 

    The AWU – a combination of market women and the Christian Abeokuta Ladies Club (ALC) – emerged in 1945. Although initially a social club for middle-class women, it morphed to respond to the unending taxes on women and ultimately the brutality of colonial rule. They felt they could do this by uniting both working class market women and middle class women as one.

    Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti was its first president, and the Alake (King) of Egba land in Abeokuta, Ademola, was its first patron. Grace Eniola Soyinka also joined Funmilayo’s leadership. 

    Portrait of 70 year-old Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti[Obioma Ofoego/UNESCO]

    The Soyinka Family in 1938. Wole Soyinka’s mother and father, Grace Eniola Soyinka and Samuel Ayodele Soyinka, with Wole, Tinu, and Femi. [Wole Soyinka]

    To end the taxation regime, they wrote proposals to the Alake of Egba for the following:

    • Replacement of the flat rate tax on women with taxation on foreign companies;
    • Investment in local initiatives and infrastructure, including transportation, sanitation and education;
    • The abolition of the Sole Native Authority and its replacement with a representative form of government that would include women.

    Alongside these proposals, they heavily fought the colonial government with different kinds of resistance tactics. Many women stopped paying their taxes altogether, and they either got fined or jailed. The AWU also wrote several petitions to the Alake between August 1946 and May 1947, but to no avail.

    This eventually provoked the Egba Women’s Protests or Revolt.

    The Egba Women’s Revolt 

    Egba women were indelible forces of anti-colonial resistance [UNESCO/The Republic]

    From Mid-October 1946, Ransome-Kuti and women from the AWU started to hold mass protests outside the king’s palace to demand the removal of direct taxation. The response was brutal, with police deploying tear gas and beating up the women.

    But despite the obstacles, these women didn’t relent. They released a document in 1947 called “AWU’s Grievances”, which contained all their accusations against Alake and the Secretary of Native Authority. Ten thousand women then held another demonstration outside Alake’s palace, which lasted two days, while insulting Alake with different songs.

    Alake’s response was an empty promise on tax suspension. More women got arrested and assaulted, including Funmilayo. 

    On December 8, 1947, over ten thousand women camped outside Alake’s palace and refused to leave until every woman arrested was released. They stood resiliently and remained until December 10, when they released the women.

    Thousands of women come to show support for Funmilayo Ransome Kuti and the detained women. [Ransome-Kuti Family Archives]

    However, the women didn’t get their demands met until three years later, in January 1949. 

    The British removed the Alake from the throne, the tax was removed, and four women were established in seats of power. 

    It is worthy to note that both the tax and the Alake later returned, but for a while, the women won.

    The Impact

    It is sad to see that market women are still being taxed without inclusive consideration in 2023. 

    A Nigerian marketplace. [Google]

    In an article by TechCabal, market women are revealed to make little profit on their income as a result of various taxes for the local government, Lagos State agency officials, Kick Against Indiscipline officers (KAI), etc.

    In July, the Nigerian Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) announced the Value Added Tax (VAT) Direct Initiative, a way for the federal government to collect Value Added Taxes (VAT) from market women and reduce multiple taxation. 

    Will the VAT be effective? Will it lead to another women’s revolt? We’ll see what becomes of this.

  • 30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2024

    The hair game is forever changing, so if you want to stay on top of the latest hairstyles for Nigerian ladies in 2024, you need to pay extra attention.

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Whether you’re going for low-maintenance or simple and easy-to-wear styles, you’ll find something that fits your style in this list.

    Hairstyles with attachment for ladies

    Not in the mood to rock your wigs or handle the stress of sew-ins?? Don’t worry, the game has changed in 2024 and these attachment styles are some of the latest hairstyles for ladies. There’s no way you’re stepping out without causing good commotion.  

    Jumbo Senegalese twists

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Instagram/@ tricedabraider

    This is a great option if you’re looking to breeze in and out of the salon and still look hot.

    Criss-cross Ghana weaving

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Instagram/@iamcreation_of_beauty

    Think of this as an elevated and playful version of the regular all-back braids. 

    Stitch braid

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Instagram/@neyhairs

    Are you even a hot girl if you haven’t jumped on the stitch braid hairstyle in 2024?

    Ziz-Zag stitch braid

    Source: Instagram/@neyhairs

    Go for this if you want to add extra pizzazz to the regular stitch-braid hairstyle.

    Goddess braids

    Source: Pinterest

    What’s not to love about goddess braids? You’ll feel like a goddess with this hairstyle, though you also have to spend a lot of hours at the salon.

    Ponytail with bangs

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Pinterest

    Because regular ponytails are so 2010. Try this ponytail hairstyle for an extra edge.

    Knotless braids with curly ends

    Source: Pinterest

    This hairstyle had the girlies in a chokehold in 2022 and still does, especially the version with curly ends.

    Boho stitch braids

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source:  Source: Instagram/@neyhairs

    This hairstyle is a combination of boho and stitch braids. Think of it as an extra way of rocking stitch braids.

    Simple hairstyles for ladies in 2024

    Nothing beats the feeling of knowing you can still look good on a budget. If what you’re going for is a simple, laid-back style that still fits with the latest hairstyles for Nigerian ladies in 2024, we got you covered.

    Cornrows

    Source: CuteAfrik Afro

    Cornrows are a lifesaver, especially when you don’t want to do too much with your hair. You can even do it yourself if you have the time.

    Bantu knots with curls

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Black beauty bombshells

    Bantu knots has been around for a while and is always a hit. 

    Two-row cornrows

    Source: Pinterest

    Before you roll your eyes and ask, “Cornrows again?” Listen, cornrows are simple, affordable, classy and versatile. They also don’t look like your regular cornrows.

    Ponytail

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Pinterest

    Nothing screams “I can’t kill myself” like a ponytail. It’s a lifesaver when you don’t want to do too much with your hair.

    Jumbo braids

    Source: Pinterest

    You’ll satisfy your craving for braids and still be out of the salon between 30 minutes to an hour. 

    Jumbo Box braids

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    This is another great option if you want braids but your bank account and patience level are saying something else.

    Braided ponytail

    Perfect for when you want to do something different with the regular ponytail style. It ranks high as one of the latest hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2024. But the girlies are now using ombre sha.

    Zigzag braids with beads

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Instagram/ @mk.lillle

    The curls give a fresh breath of life to hairstyles that would have been better left in 2000 and this ZigZag braid is proof.

    Chic loc hairstyles for ladies

    Maintenance might be a handful but locs are great if you don’t like making weekly trips to the salon. Thanks to the locticians committed to making their customers look good, there’re many options to choose from these days. 

    Starter locs

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Instagram/ @dreads_and_natural 

    For when you’re just starting on your loc journey. 

    Bantu locs

    Instagram/ @dreads_and_natural 

    Who says you can’t rock your bantu knots because your hair is locked? 

    Bob locs

    Source: Pinterest

    A fun way to style your locs especially if they’re lengthy.

    Jumbo bun locs

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Intagram/@dreadsbytms

    To rock this style, you need at least 5 years old locs or get loc extensions.

    Macrolocs in cornrows 

    If you already have macrolocs, this is a fun way to retwist them. We already agreed that cornrows is bae right?

    Side swept locs

    30 Latest Hairstyles for Nigerian Ladies in 2023

    Source: Hair Adviser

    Another fun styling option for anyone with lengthy locs. 

    Blonde dreads

    Source:locs_guru

    Dyeing your locs blonde for Barbie season is nothing but a hot serve. 

    Dyed locs

    If going completely blonde is too much for you, consider an ombre style. Black and honey brown is a mad combo that bangs in 2024.

    Microlocs

    Source: Instagram/@nigerianlocs

    A versatile option that still lets you make your regular braids. 

    Low cut hairstyles for ladies 

    You want to pour water on your head? Escape the headaches that come with new hairstyles? Sleep in any position you want? Then a low-cut’s probably your best option, and the game has changed in 2024. What are the latest low-cut hairstyles you can try ? Let’s go.

    Blonde low cut

    Source: Instagram/@nancyisimeofficial

    No one rocks a blonde low cut better than Nancy Isime…until you try sha.

    Low-cut with double side parting

    Source: Instagram/@hayub_haircut

    The side-parting is the steal here. Just the barber’s hand is straight

    Blue waves cut with etched sides

    Source: Instagram/mastercut_lekki

    The question’s not why blue, it should be why not? Those etched sides are to die for by the way.

    Pink curls with side shave

    Source: Instagram/@mastercut_lekki

    Hop on this style if you’re not on a complete low cut. You can also change the color to suit what you want, but we recommend Barbie pink. 

    Complete clean shave

    Source: Instagram/the_oddity

    You might need some courage to rock this look but it’s a stunner for real.

  • Nigerian Men Are Killing Nigerian Women. And The Law Is Quiet

    Trigger Warning: This story contains descriptions of violence and abuse against women, including murder. If you are sensitive to these themes or have experienced trauma related to these topics, please be aware that this story may be triggering. For more information or support, please visit here

    A quote by the women’s rights activist Zainab Salbi goes, “It seems that violence against women has been tolerated for so long that the world has become numb to it”. Unfortunately, this rings true particularly in Nigeria, as every year we see countless cases of violence and abuse that claim the lives of women, yet mere hours later, society carries on as if nothing has happened.

    On July 17, 2023, popular Nigerian punter Benjamin Best, also known as Killaboi, confessed to the murder of his girlfriend, Augusta Osedion. According to him, he “mistakenly” stabbed her to death during an argument and fled the scene out of fear. 

    But what makes this case even more disturbing  is that, in Killaboi’s Instagram confession, possibly seeking  public sympathy, he described the relationship as toxic and disclosed his ongoing battle with suicidal thoughts since the incident. 

    Unfortunately, we are all well aware that if we were in a society that worked, Killaboi should already be facing the full force of the law. 

    Now, women are again being reminded that the world isn’t safe for them.  Let’s take a look at a few women who had partners who brutally murdered them in the previous year.

    Ogochukwu Anene, January 2023

    On January 11, 2023, news broke of how Ogochukwu Anene, a mother of five, was allegedly beaten to death by her husband over a loaf of bread. According to their first child, an argument broke out when Ogochukwu asked her husband, Ndubisi, why he finished the bread without leaving some for the children. 

    In a fit of rage, the man responded by beating her with a mirror, which resulted in her bleeding internally, and she died a few days later in the hospital. Unfortunately, there have been no tangible updates on whether or not Ndubisi paid for his crimes.

    Download the Citizen Election Report: Navigating Nigeria’s Political Journey

    Nana Fadimatu, May 2023

    Nana was a 38-year-old woman allegedly murdered by her 56-year-old husband, Aminu Abubakar. A statement from the Police Headquarters in Yola revealed that Aminu had heard that Nana had plans to get married to another man the next day, and in a jealous fit, he hit her on the head with a pestle, causing her to fall unconscious. She was later proclaimed dead. 

    Aminu was arrested by the Police of the Shagari Divisional Headquarters, and investigations are ongoing. 

    Esther Aya, January 2022

    On January 8, 2022, Ovye Yakubu allegedly beat his wife, Esther, to death during an argument over fixing a window net. According to a family member, Ovye attempted to stop the carpenter that his wife had hired from fixing the net, but she persisted on the carpenter finishing his job. This enraged the man, who resorted to assaulting his wife, leading to her death.

    Evelyn Alifiya, February 2022

    Evelyn’s husband, Joseph Wisdom, strangled her before the police discovered her body on the apartment floor on February 23, 2022. Reportedly, the couple had been having issues for a while, and Joseph had constantly threatened to kill his wife. 

    However, arrangements were being made by Evelyn’s family for her to leave the house, but things came to a head when she found a gun in Joseph’s bag. She had plans to report this to the police, but he found out and killed her before she could. 

    According to the FCT Police Spokesperson, Josephine Adeh, the husband has been apprehended, and hopefully justice will be served. 

    Itunu Chigozie, March 2022 

    Itunu, pregnant with a child, died after a series of assaults from her husband, Bonus Emmanuel Chigozie, who works as a Master of Ceremonies (MC). Reportedly, Itunu was abused repeatedly during the four-year marriage. On March 10, 2022, after being allegedly assaulted again, she was rushed to the hospital, but neither she nor the baby survived. And Emmanuel has neither been arrested nor prosecuted for his crime yet.

    Mercy Samuel, April 2022

    Mercy was a 23-year-old mother of two who lived with her husband, Matthew, in Jos. However, she died brutally at his hands when he allegedly ripped open her stomach and disembowelled her during an argument. He also took her phone so she couldn’t call for help, and although she was found and rushed to the hospital, she eventually died. Matthew is still on the run and has yet to be found. 

    Osinachi Nwachukwu, October 2022

    Osinachi was the voice behind the hit gospel song “Ekwueme”, which captured the hearts of many churchgoers. However, she tragically passed away at 42, and it was revealed that she had been a victim of domestic violence for many years.

    Despite what her husband and manager, Peter, initially led the media to believe that she died from lung cancer, the late Osinachi’s first son disclosed that his mother died from the injuries she had sustained from the abuse. Peter had allegedly kicked her in the chest, which resulted in a blood clot that eventually led to her death. Currently, Peter is being remanded at Kuje Prison and is awaiting judgement. 

    According to the Lagos State Domestic and Sexual Violence Agency (DSVA), 2,543 cases of abuse were reported between January and September 2022; about 2,340 were women. Also, according to a 2020 report from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), about 81,000 women and girls died worldwide, with an intimate partner or family member being responsible for 58% (47,000) of these deaths. 

    Also read: How Can Victims of Abuse and Sexual Violence Get Help?

    Clearly, if there has ever been a time to be angry, it’s now. Nigeria and Nigerians need to change at the core of our being; we must be empathetic towards women and their struggles. 

    One sad trend that can be noticed when issues like these arise is how the victims are blamed and excuses are given for the man’s actions. 

    Women don’t deserve to die because you think they’re “rude”, “loud”, “immoral”, or “materialistic”. When cases like this happen, it’s not the time to tell or advise women on how to be “better” daughters, friends, wives, or girlfriends. 

    From birth, much energy is put into educating girls on how to survive in “a man’s world”. But, it’s high time that society channel some of that energy into teaching boys to be better humans.

  • What She Said: Growing Up With A Pastor Mum Was Hard

    What She Said: Growing Up With A Pastor Mum Was Hard

    Tell us about your childhood

    There was food and shelter, but emotional safety was missing. Whenever my mum came back from work, everyone would scramble because she was always angry about something. Sometimes I used to avoid even sitting in the living room because I might be sitting the wrong way, and she’d lash out.

    That level of uncertainty led to anxiety, hypersensitivity, and over-analysing. I was always anxious about the smallest of things.

    I’m assuming this affected your relationship with others, like your siblings?

    I have three sisters, and our relationship is beautiful. We understand each other on many levels. I think we bonded over the trauma of living with a mum like ours. But I haven’t explored this conversation with them, to be honest. 

    Let’s talk about your relationship with your mum

    Growing up, like every Nigerian girl, you think your mum hates you at some point. Mine was even more intense because, as I said before, my mum is a pastor, and there were lots of religious and vigorous religious activities always going on in our house. It definitely played into my personality traits. The only friends I had were from church, I didn’t have many outside church. 

    It was all very stressful; going to multiple churches, having pastors come in and out of the house, being a Christian, your parents having certain expectations of you. Now that I’m older, I sort of understand and sympathise with them because I recognise how difficult raising four girls must have been. I’m pretty sure it wasn’t their intention to create that kind of environment, but that was the result.

    It was intense; there wasn’t a choice to be anything but a Christain girl. But even then, I didn’t believe in the patriarchy, I’d always questioned that. But life outside of religion was difficult for me to navigate, and still is. Now I ask questions about who I am outside of that very intense Christian upbringing, and sometimes I don’t have the answers. 

    Now our relationship is a long-distance relationship. We touch base, but nothing too in-depth. I don’t feel like I can really talk to her, we’ve never had that type of relationship, but I recognise that she’s mum, and I know that if shit hits the fan, she’ll be there for me. 

    How does your healing impact interactions with friends?

    If I’m in a gathering with friends, I’m able to notice when I’m overextending myself or people-pleasing. I’m also reluctant to ask for help or accept it. It stems from being hyper-independent from a young age. I’m the firstborn; my sister (the middle sibling) has always been closer to my dad, and my mum was more concerned about my younger sister because she’s deaf, so she had special needs. I was mostly left to figure out myself and also take care of everybody else in a way. I was usually the one they’d ask about laundry or cooking. 

    Growing up like that, you just get the sense that you’re your protector and provider. I guess that’s why it wasn’t too difficult for me to leave my parent’s house. I remember going to university and thinking, “Whew, this is nice!”

    Being on my own has been my way of feeling like I have control over something. My therapist was telling me recently that I have to be okay with relying on people sometimes but also understand that they won’t always be able to come through for me.

    Let’s talk about leaving home

    In 2018, when I was 24, I moved to Ghana for a scholarship programme. I felt relief but also a little sad. Leaving family and friends was scary, but it also felt freeing. It was like breaking away from the pressures, the belief system, and just the environment. 

    What belief system?

    Christianity. My mum is a pastor and fervent Christain, so we were always in church or going for church programmes or hosting house fellowships. Being away from home and indoctrination, you’re faced with more in-depth interactions that aren’t coloured by religion. Sometimes you start to see the cracks in your existence. 

    A big example is when I lived with my friend; we had a big fight, and it was about me not being able to express my needs and concerns because I avoided negative reactions. This stemmed from just trying not to make my parents angry, and that felt normal because, as a child, my life was easier if I could avoid it. But as an adult, I had to confront and work that out. 

    So those interactions force you to see the places where there are issues and what you need to solve. I only started to recognise emotions for what they are when I moved away and had to interact with other people on many different levels. Growing up, emotions were always shut down because, in Christianity, you’re not allowed to be afraid as a child of god or feel anxiety or anything. In a religious setting, you’re either happy or sad, and if you’re sad, you have to go and pray. I remember my dad always saying, “You can’t be afraid because you’re a child of God.” But it never stopped me from feeling the fear, even though things usually worked out. So you never explore or confront what you’re afraid of or anxious about. 

    Outside of the bubble of Jesus being your joy, you have to find happiness in yourself. You start to ask yourself what makes you happy etc. Being present in your own body and life helps you recognise all these things. So now I’m identifying and recognising emotions like anxiety and hypervigilance and stuff. They’ve always been there, but I now have the language for it. And I know there are other ways to exist. The biggest part of my healing journey is being able to recognise what is outside that bubble. 

    So, I take it you’re no longer a Christian?

    No, and it wasn’t an abrupt decision It took some time to get there and for me to even acknowledge it. Once I left home, there was less pressure to go to church, to pray, to do all these things. And that meant that sometimes I didn’t do these things, and I was okay. I didn’t get attacked by demons or anything of the sort. It was in the little things; for instance, if you dream about eating, the church would have told you that you’ve been poisoned spiritually and you have to pray, but I’ve had that dream, and nothing happened. I’m alive and well.

    So as you shift away from that, you see that it’s not that deep. And you even start to question those beliefs. Sometimes you meet other people that are living life completely differently. For instance, one thing that intrigued me when it was still very early on when I first moved. I went for some sisters’ fellowship, and everybody was wearing trousers with nail extensions, they didn’t cover their hair, but I could see that they were very much rooted in their beliefs like other Christians. It was bizarre to me because I’m coming from a background where they’d have told those ladies that they were going to hell for wearing extensions, so it made me think about things differently. There was a lot of fear-mongering, and it felt like normal human things were things that would take you to hell and have horrible consequences.

    You see things that help shape your narrative and change your mind. I’ve also been doing a lot of learning; like, I saw a TikTok about how Christianity is a colonisation technique. So I’m getting a lot of information from many places and making my own inferences. 

    RELATED: Growing Up around Juju Made Me a Stronger Christian

    How did your parents take it?

    It was a disaster the first time we had that conversation. I came to Lagos to visit, and one day, said I wasn’t going to church. They sat me down and talked and talked. The fear-mongering came up, and one of our family pastors called me every week for two to three months until I eventually stopped picking up his calls. 

    The second time around, I was much bolder, and said it was my decision. My dad was like, “What do you mean it’s your decision?” and I was like it’s just is. I don’t need to defend or explain it. And he was like, “Where is all this coming from, who have you been talking to?”  And I reminded him that I’m almost 30 and I can make my own decisions outside of other people. He asked if I was going to change my mind, and I said we’d see how it goes. 

    I guess they have a fear of me missing heaven, and there’s also the idea that if you don’t stick to God’s plan, your life won’t turn out the way it’s supposed to. You could end up destitute or poor. I guess that’s what they’re afraid of. 

    How has the healing affected your relationship with your partner?

    It’s been helpful. Now some of the things I’m also aware of is seeing the patterns in other people. A lot of things happen because we fear vulnerability, because growing up, it wasn’t accepted with kindness or patience. And that shows up in different ways for different people. So now I tend to recognise it in my partner, and I can usually point it out and redirect the conversation to a healthy place. 

    Due to the few things I have learnt (I’m no expert, please), I’m able to help him navigate his own hurt too. 

    That’s sweet. What are the daily steps you take to make sure you don’t regress?

    Regression is normal. Some days, I don’t have the bandwidth or capacity to do the exercises that are required to grow, and that feels like a regression. But it’s all part of the healing process. 

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    What sort of exercises?

    The most recent one is something called identifying and separating facts, feelings and sensations. I learnt it from this book I’m reading: Becoming Safely Embodied by Diedre Fay. 

    So facts, feelings and sensation is essentially dealing with an upsetting or triggering event like this: you identify what the facts are, what you’re feeling and the sensations in your body. The idea is to write it all down, then circle the facts, and then underline the feelings and sensations. Then you read only the facts a few times. When I tried it, I found that the more I read the facts, the less intense the feelings. When I started to feel calmer, I went back to read the feelings attached to it and found it easier to work it out. 

    What other tools do you use?

    I spend like 15 minutes meditating every day in the mornings. I also try to focus on core wounds. For instance, if I’m feeling unsafe, I spend a few countering the belief system by stating the facts around it. So questions about safety in my job, my relationship, my finances, my career, emotionally and mentally. I list these things and just counter the feelings with these facts.

    Another thing I do is: at the end of the day, I do something called guilt and shame journaling. I look back at my day and list the ways I felt guilty the point is to identify them and find the ways I’m innocent and the ways I’m being realistic in my expectations. For instance, if I’m feeling guilty about taking a nap because I was tired, I claim innocence because it happens sometimes, I’m only human.

    I exercise and try to sleep, these two things are really helpful. Having routines are also very helpful. 

    Any last things you want to share?

    Self-development and self-healing work is hard. We all need support. It sounds nice to be self-aware, but it’s a lot of hard, painful work. But if I can see myself navigating life a lot calmer, more peaceful, more secure and just generally better, then it’s all worth it. 

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

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  • Why Nigerian Women Should Keep Their Family Names

    Have you seen this tweet?

    A few days ago, a conversation started on Twitter about mothers giving children their maiden names, particularly if they’ve been estranged from the child’s father. 

    This, of course, is to primarily make life easier for said mothers, particularly in situations where the approval of both parents would be needed for certain processes like specialised medical procedures and visa or passport applications for a minor.

    This discourse led to debates on gender equality and women’s rights. Some people also claim it’s not unusual for women to retain their maiden names in certain Nigerian cultures, like the Igbo culture. 

    But where does the Nigerian Law stand on this?

    According to the Marriage Act and other legal frameworks in Nigeria, no Law requires or demands a woman to take up her husband’s last name. The issue of name-changing is solely based on traditional and customary practices in Nigeria. 

    Also, the Nigerian Law makes provisions for the rights to personal dignity and freedom of thought and expression; as such, every woman has the freedom to decide whether or not she wants to keep her maiden name. 

    Zikoko Citizen reached out to some women, and they shared their thoughts.

    Here’s what they said:

    Precious believes keeping your maiden name is the best option for any woman. According to her, having your husband’s last name is a “colonial influence,” which creates lots of stress with documentation updates and is “extremely stressful and unnecessary”.

    On the other hand, Zainab has no issues with taking up her husband’s last name. For her, even though she’s fine with keeping her maiden name, her spouse’s feelings are a priority in making such a decision. “If he’s cool with it, I’d replace my middle name with my present last name; if he’s not, I’d gladly replace my last name with his,” she says.

    Download the Citizen Election Report: Navigating Nigeria’s Political Journey

    Bisola also shares this sentiment, saying that although she hasn’t given it much thought, she doesn’t mind giving up her maiden name. 

    But Bisola understands it might be difficult for women who have already established themselves using their maiden names, she says, “Couples should compromise to have a hyphenated last name to pass on to their children.”

    A hyphenated last name is the combined name of two spouses, for instance, “Ojo-Hassan”. She also adds that this would give women a chance to carry on their father’s legacy, “Some families only have female children; imagine if they all went on to take on their husband’s last name? That would mean that if their father dies, the family name dies with him.” 

    Also in support of hyphenation is Lisa; she thinks this would make the lives of women already successful in various fields easier, particularly in academia, where research papers have been published using their maiden names. 

    Chioma, who’s a queer woman, also encourages hyphenated last names. She says, “Although my partner and I have agreed to keep our maiden names, we’ll be giving our children a hyphenated last name as we want them to have both our names”. For them, it allows and empowers them to build a “new” family unit.

    Clearly, many Nigerian women think it’s time for everyone to let go of their beliefs about taking up or compulsorily giving children their partner’s last name. A significant amount of support is also needed from the government to make life easier for women who choose to do so. Women-centred NGOs like the Wevvo Foundation and Fatima Balaraba Foundation have started a petition to the Nigerian Immigration Service to implement its policy on accepting consent letters from mothers to process passports for minors. With this, we are optimistic about the level of choice everyone gets to enjoy with names, naming, and being named. 

    You have the opportunity to add your voice to this fight by signing the petition.

  • “He Shared My Nudes With His Friends” — Nigerian Women on Being Slut-Shamed by Their Partners

    Being bullied based on an actual or perceived sexual character is something many Nigerian women are familiar with. I mean, we’re a society that calls women “ashewo” for travelling alone or just having money.

    It’s our “normal”, but no woman expects to be slut-shamed by a significant other. Yet these seven Nigerian women have experienced it.

    “He shared my nudes with his friends” — Dordor, 23

    I was 20 when I started dating this 35-year-old man. The age gap was serious, but I was going through a lot with my family, which made me run away from home. He was there for me, even though he also had some drama of his own — he’d just been dumped by his baby mama. Somehow, we grew close and started a relationship. 

    Eight months in, he gave me his phone to do something on his WhatsApp. I’m not the type of girlfriend who wants to know what you’re doing on your phone. But that day, I found his chat with his married friend who lives in Canada. Lo and behold, there was a gif image of my vagina. I was shook. 

    I scrolled through the chat history to find several sexual voice notes I’d sent to him. It turns out the guy was bragging about my sexual nature to his friends; I was the smallie he’d deflowered.

    I read everything and just kept quiet. When he came back and noticed something was off, he asked, and I confronted him with the evidence. You won’t believe the MF denied it. I left his house so I wouldn’t break a bottle on someone’s head, and he kept calling and threatening me not to leave him. I blocked him everywhere. The following day, as early as 6 a.m., I got a voice note from him — via a second number I’d totally forgotten about — begging me in the name of God. LOL. The relationship ended there.

    “He claimed I was exposing myself… while breastfeeding his child” — Nina*, 27

    I always thought my husband was a sensible person until we had our son in January [2023]. 

    As a first-time mum, I had a difficult time adjusting to my reality. My mum left after one month of omugwo, and I was basically on my own till my husband returned from work every night. I think I even had postpartum depression.

    When our son was three months old, we attended a friend’s wedding. It was my first time at an event after giving birth, and this boy was seriously showing me pepper. He kept crying, so we were juggling between petting and feeding him. At one point, he refused to take the bottle, so I had to breastfeed. I noticed my husband’s face change and asked what was wrong. He said, and I quote, “See how you just brought out your breast in this crowded place. Those guys were staring and lusting at your nipples. You should know how to cover up. Your whole breast is out.” 

    I don’t know whether it was the frustration, but I gave him a good piece of my mind right there. I’m sure the table beside us heard my voice. My husband started begging and promised never to try it again. He hasn’t tried it again.


    RELATED: What It’s Like To Do Motherhood With a Partner Who Cares


    “He wanted me to cut my friends off” — Ogo, 24

    I have mostly male friends, and I met my ex-boyfriend at a party hosted by one of these friends. That’s why I’m still shocked he woke up one day and told me to stop talking to my male friends.

    We’d been dating for about six months at the time, and he knew I’d been friends with most of these guys for years. Even my friends’ girlfriends knew me and had no problem with me. 

    He started by dropping murmurs about how I felt comfortable being around guys when I know I have a big ass. Talking about, “What if they think you’re giving them green light?” or “Don’t you think they’ll hit it if you allow them?”

    The complaints soon progressed to, “No one wants to be just friends with a fine babe like you”. Foolish lover girl that I was, I thought he was just joking. The straw that broke the camel’s back was when he tried to prevent me from attending one of the guys’ birthday parties. His reason? I looked too hot, and he thought I’d stopped talking to the guy. I dumped his insecure ass.

    “He hid my thongs” — Favour*, 22

    I started wearing thongs about a year ago because I was tired of the noticeable lines normal panties show when you wear a tight-fitting outfit. 

    The first day my boyfriend at the time noticed it, he went bonkers. According to him, only sex workers and strippers wore thongs. He also said it’d attract undue attention from men. I thought he was joking, but the next time I went to his place for the weekend, he took my thongs from my bag and hid them while I slept. In the morning, I couldn’t find them so I asked him. He said I was proving stubborn and that he’d rather buy me dozens of new underwear than allow me to wear thongs again. Funny enough, I didn’t break up with him then because I thought his offering to “protect me” was romantic.

    “He accused me of wanting attention at the pool” — Lizzy*, 26

    My ex-boyfriend and I planned a pool date. I don’t know what he expected me to wear, but he was visibly shocked when I turned up in a bikini. I started getting attention from other people there — male and female alike — and he took offence. He said I deliberately wore a bikini because I wanted attention from men. I had to tie a wrap around my waist till we left.

    “He wanted me to stop posting on social media” — Abby, 20

    My ex had issues with guys commenting on my pictures on Instagram. Ironically, he also used to drop “likes” on other girls’ pictures. 

    According to him, likes were his way of acknowledging he saw your post, but comments meant you liked what you saw so much you had to talk about it. He said posting pictures and allowing comments suggested I wanted validation from other men when I already had him. I didn’t stop, and we later broke up because he cheated on me.

    “He insulted me on the first date” — Toyin*, 27

    From our talking stage, I really should’ve known this guy was “traditional” when he said he believed women shouldn’t work and should be taken care of by their men.

    We decided to meet up for a first date after talking for three weeks, and I wore a bodycon dress. The date was okay, but when it was time for him to drop me off, he said something like, “If not that I know you’re a good girl, I would’ve mistaken you for someone who does hookup”. He then advised me about dressing in certain ways to avoid sending the wrong message. He also talked about how it was only hookup girls who wore anklets (I was wearing one). 

    I calmly listened to all he said and blocked him everywhere immediately after getting home.

    *Some names have been changed to protect their identity.


    NEXT READ: “Nobody Can Call Me a Burden” — Nigerian Women on Going 50/50 Financially With Their Spouses

  • Naturalistas, You Should Definitely Try These Afro Hairstyles

    There comes a time in every naturalista’s life when trying to figure out a cute protective style suddenly becomes rocket science, or you simply don’t have the time to. The afro comes in handy, but you don’t have to stick to one afro style.

    Switch up your ‘fro with these hairstyles.

    Afro with side plaits

    Afro with side plaits

    Image: Sunika.co.za

    You don’t need to have expert plaiting skills to achieve this look. Add two or three simple flat twists, secured with bobby pins, to one or both sides of your head, and you’re good to go.

    Twist out afro

    Twist out afro

    Image: Natural Hair Mag

    This look can be achieved by styling your damp, moisturised hair in large twists (preferably the night before), allowing it to dry completely before untwisting, and using your fingers to comb them out slightly.

    Side part afro

    Side part afro

    Image: Glory Okings

    Whether your ‘fro is short or long, this style will look good, and it’s easy to make too. Just comb your hair out and part the side you prefer.

    Full afro

    Full afro

    Image: All things hair

    TBH, rocking a full afro involves serious skills. You’ll have to make sure your ‘fro stays full, round and doesn’t bow to humidity. But once you hack it, you’re sure of a bold, beautiful look every time.


    RELATED: 8 Natural Hairstyles That Won’t Stress Your Life


    Low afro

    Low afro

    Image: Marsai Martin on Instagram

    If you have fuller hair, you can also try a low afro. Just be sure to use enough conditioner and bobby pins or other accessories to hold your hair halfway down.

    High ponytail afro

    High ponytail afro

    Image: All things savvy

    For better hold, use a shoelace or satin hair tie to keep your ‘fro in place. The idea is for it to be firm, but not too tight.

    Low ponytail afro

    Low ponytail afro

    Image: Jumia

    If your ‘fro isn’t long enough for a high ponytail, you can also go low.

    Double afro puffs

    Double afro puffs

    Image: Coils and glory

    When one ponytail isn’t enough, do double.

    Mohawk afro

    Mohawk afro

    Image: Byrdie

    There’s absolutely nothing boring about a mohawk. Best believe you’ll be turning heads with this look.


    RELATED: 12 Hairstyles That Make Transitioning To Natural Hair Easier


    Afro with bangs

    Afro with bangs

    Image: Latest hairstyles

    This style might be tricky, especially for 4C hair, but it can be achieved by styling your hair like you would a twist out, with lots of water and mousse, and positioning it how you want it to look immediately after, so it dries like that. Keeping it that way throughout the day may be tricky, but it can work.

    Half-up afro

    Half-up afro

    Image: Hot beauty health

    Why choose between a ponytail and a full afro when you can have both?

    Afro with cornrows

    Afro with cornrows

    Image: Hairadviser

    If you’re one of those witches insanely talented people who know how to make cornrows on themselves, this style is a stunning alternative to a full ‘fro.

    Short afro

    Short afro

    Image: Junior Green

    Short hair? You can also rock your ‘fro with style. For volume, comb out your natural hair or play with whatever accessories you like. The goal is to be your best fashionable self in whatever hairstyle you choose.

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    NEXT READ: 20 Stunning Ghana Weaving Styles to Try Out in 2023

  • It’s an Honour for Women to Steal Your Clothes. Here’s Why

    Women go through a lot in this life. When we’re not being subbed for being unable to decide what to eat, we’re getting called out for simply “borrowing” the clothes of our partners and friends. Why this?

    See, people need to understand that the best thing that could happen to you is for a woman to claim ownership of your clothes. I’ll explain.

    It’s the greatest compliment

    A woman actually put clothes you bought on her body? She definitely thinks you’re stylish and have great taste. What greater compliment could there be?

    She’s being considerate of your pocket

    She knows inflation isn’t smiling, so she’s saving you from buying her clothes as gifts. She’s recycling and doing her part in saving the earth. Get you a considerate queen.

    And preventing wastage

    Tell the truth, is it all the clothes in your wardrobe you wear at once? There are shirts you probably haven’t worn in three months. Why should they waste away when your babe can put them to good use? Again, get you a considerate queen.

    You’ll always be on her mind

    Anytime she wears your clothes, she’ll remember you. Do you know what it means for a woman to have you on her mind? Same brain space she’s using to store birthdays, fights from 1997 and period dates? Better appreciate it.

    She trusts your judgement

    Any woman that wears your clothes trusts you. I mean, you could’ve easily stolen the cloth from a person’s grave or from a vengeful ex who has vowed to disgrace you anywhere they see you wearing it. 

    It’s her way of showcasing you to the world

    Think of it as her way of telling people who she’s with without showing your face, AKA soft launching. It’s possible people have seen you in that outfit, so when your babe wears it, they can tell that both the outfit and the person wearing it are all yours.

    At least you know it’s in good hands

    Because no one will show more care for a piece of clothing than a woman. Honestly, all your clothes are better off with her.

    Would you like more relatable, women-focused content like this? You should subscribe to our HER newsletter.


    Catch the crazy dating stories of our 40+ anonymous writer, once a month from Sunday, June 11, 2023


    NEXT READ: Every Girl Is at Least One of These 10 People When Seeking Advice

  • 70+ Sweet Words to Make Any Woman Feel Special

    If there’s one thing you can never go wrong with, it’s telling a woman sweet nothings to make her feel special. So whether you’re trying to leave the friend zone or you want your partner to fall in love again and again, this article will help you do just that.

    Sweet words to make her feel loved

    Image: Zikoko memes

    You love her, but does she know? This list of cute things to send her will help her get the picture.

    • Take inspiration from Davido: “If nothing lasts forever, you and I will be nothing forever.”
    • I’ll only stop loving you when hell freezes over.
    • I love you more than I did yesterday but less than I will tomorrow. 
    • You complete me. Now, I know how Adam felt. 
    • Who needs NEPA/a transformer when you light up my life?
    • With you by my side, even Lagos traffic feels like paradise.
    • You’re easily the best part of my day, every day.
    • If no one is perfect, then your middle name must be “no one”. 
    • I’ve never been this happy to release my mumu button. Just take it. It belongs to you.
    • Every time I think about you, there’s this weird fluttering in my stomach. I don’t know if that’s what they refer to as butterflies, but I don’t mind it.

    Sweet words to make her laugh

    Image: Zikoko memes

    Even after she’s done reading these, she’ll remember them much later and laugh.

    • Are you oxygen? Because you’re the reason why I breathe.
    • Don’t tell my mother, but I fit die on top your matter.
    • Roses are red, violets are blue. I think you have a really cute laugh, so I hope this makes you laugh.
    • I’d say I can’t breathe when you’re not near, but we’re not in Bridgerton, so , “Have you eaten?” They practically mean the same thing.
    • Your middle name should be Google because you’re always right, and you have everything I’ve been searching for in a woman.
    • Not to be unoriginal, but when I look into your eyes, all I see is your waist.
    • If this was a Nollywood movie, we’d probably need to investigate if you gave me a love potion. You’re always on my mind.
    • Baby, you shine brighter than a bald man’s head.
    • Anytime I’m sad, I only have to spend a moment with you. Seriously, how do you do it?
    • I was listening to MC Galaxy’s Fine Girl, and I think he was talking about you. Because, really, na who born this fine girl?

    You know what she’d really love, though? Tickets to Zikoko’s HERtitude! Click here to buy some for her


    Sweet words when you miss her

    Image: Zikoko memes

    Why just stick with, “I miss you”, when you can wax lyrical with these options instead?

    • You’re my happy place, and you’re not here. In summary, I’m not happy. Please fix it because I miss you.
    • Distance may keep us physically apart, but my heart is never far from you. Can’t wait to see you again.
    • I just wanted to let you know I’m thinking of you and counting down the minutes till I get to see you again.
    • I miss the sound of your voice and laughter. Phone calls just don’t cut it anymore. 
    • When you’re not here, I feel incomplete. You’re that one missing piece of the puzzle that’s my life.
    • You know how it feels when you lose something valuable? That’s how I feel right now. I can’t wait to hold you again.
    • You’re the ewa agoyin to my bread and the akara to my pap. I can’t live without you. I miss you more than you know.
    • I miss your beautiful smile, sweet voice and everything about you. Come back to me soon, my love.
    • Distance may be trying harder than Nigeria’s wahala right now, but my love for you knows no bounds. I miss you, my darling.
    • Like smoky jollof, you fill my thoughts. No, I’m not hungry. I just really miss you.
    • Me without you is like a phone without internet connection; plain useless. Come back soon.

    Sweet words when she’s angry with you

    Image: Zikoko memes

    You offended your babe, and now, she won’t talk to you? It might be over for you, but try sending her these cute texts first. There’s no harm in trying.

    • I messed up, and I really hope you forgive me. Can I send my apology to your bank account?
    • I really don’t like fighting with you. What can I do to make it better?
    • We both have coconut heads, but I guess I really love your coconut head. Forgive me?
    • You mean everything to me. I hope you remember that, even in moments like this.
    • I messed up. I know I don’t deserve your forgiveness. But I love you, and I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me.
    • I know you can’t stand me right now, but how do you look so good even when you’re angry?
    • I hate this so much. Can we make up already?
    • I know I hurt you, and I’m truly sorry. You mean everything to me. I want to make things right. Can you forgive me?
    • I don’t have any excuses. For my sake, I hope you’re as forgiving as you’re beautiful.
    • The Bible said something about not letting the sun set on your anger. Sounds like really good advice right now, don’t you think?

    RELATED: 50+ Unique Birthday Messages You Can Send a Friend


    Sweet words for when she’s sad

    Image: Jasmine Carter via Pexels

    No one’s in a good mood 100% of the time. These texts might be just what she needs to feel better on a sad day.

    • I know things aren’t the best right now, but I promise they’ll get better. You’re strong and resilient, and I’m always here to help you through it all.
    • Shit happens, but I want you to always remember you’re loved and cherished. You bring so much joy into my life, and I’ll do anything to make you feel better.
    • Remember you have one super fan — Me. I’ll always support you.
    • Hey baby, I’m sorry you’re feeling down today. Don’t forget I’m here for you. Sending you all my love and support.
    • You came into my life and filled all the dark holes in my heart; I intend to do the same for you every day.
    • You’re a correct babe, and that’s how I know you’ll get through this. I love you.
    • Nothing do you. This too shall pass, and I’ll be there with you till we get to the other side.

    Sweet words to text her in the morning

    Image: Ketut Subiyanto via Pexels

    Looking for sweet nothings to say that’d put a smile on her face when she wakes up? We got you.

    • Good morning, beautiful. I hope you slept well. Have an amazing day ahead of you.
    • Rise and shine, my love. I’m so grateful to wake up to you every day.
    • Thinking about you this morning, and I already feel like I can achieve anything I set my mind to. I hope you have a day as extraordinary as you are.
    • Every morning reminds me that I really hit the girlfriend jackpot with you. I’m so blessed.
    • Waking up to your smile, whether you’re with me or not, is the best way to start my day. Good morning, beautiful.
    • I wanted to wish you a day as beautiful as you are, but that’s impossible. Have you seen your beauty? Good morning, my love.
    • You make every morning better just by being in my life. Thank you for making me the luckiest guy in the world.
    • I never thought I’d find someone as amazing as you. The universe must really like me. Good morning, my love.
    • I hope this day brings you all the joy and happiness you deserve. Good morning, my beautiful one.
    • Here’s to hoping the traffic clears immediately you step out this morning. I love you.
    • Just thinking of you this morning makes me smile. Good morning, baby.

    ALSO READ: How To Put Together The Perfect Good Morning Message For Her


    Sweet words for when she’s stressed

    Image: Zikoko memes

    Life happens, but with these sweet texts, your special woman will know she’s never alone.

    • How would you like me to support you right now? Just name it.
    • I just sent money to your account. Use it to hold body.
    • I’m so proud of how you’ve balanced everything lately, even under so much pressure. You inspire me each day.
    • Remember to eat something today.
    • I know you have a lot going on right now. I’m just a phone call away.
    • You’ve done so well already; I know you’ll see this through. I believe in you.
    • I hate to see you stressed out, my love. Just remember you’re strong enough to handle anything life throws your way. Plus, you’re not alone.
    • Remember to take breaks and take care of yourself. Your health and happiness are my top priority.
    • I wish I could remove all your stress, but I’ll do everything possible to make things easier for you. You’re not alone.
    • Remember that this stress is temporary, but our love is forever. I’m here to support you through it all.
    • You’re doing an amazing job, my love. Keep pushing through, and remember to take care of yourself.
    • Just remember that I love you and am always here for you. We’ll get through this together.

    NEXT READ: Good Night Messages You Can Send to Your Crush With Confidence

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  • Talk True: Is Period Syncing a Real Thing?

    Talk True is a Zikoko limited series for medical myth-busting. With each episode, we’ll talk to medical professionals about commonly misunderstood health issues to get the actual facts.


    Eight out of ten babes probably share this experience: They were living with other ladies for a while, and suddenly, they realised their menstrual periods had synced.

    It’s such a widespread notion that one hardly knows when or how it started; we’ve just come to accept it. But is it based on scientific fact or tales-under-the-moonlight material? An internal medicine practitioner, Mary says it’s more of the latter.

    What’s period syncing?

    “We weren’t taught period syncing in medical school, and that’s largely because it’s not backed by extensive research,” Mary says.

    Period syncing describes a popular belief that women who didn’t have synchronised periods before will begin to when they stay in close proximity long enough. It’s also known as Menstrual Synchrony or the McClintock effect.

    Dr Martha McClintock was the OG babe who started it all. In 1971, she studied a group of 135 women living in a college dorm and concluded that the female pheromones communicate with each other due to physical closeness, triggering period syncing. 

    Something about the moon?

    Period syncing isn’t limited to close proximity with other women. Other reports claim menstrual cycles also sync with lunar cycles, meaning that periods can be tracked with the different moon phases.

    According to this study, if menstruation starts during the full moon phase, it’d mean the woman is most fertile during the new moon — a claim Mary insists has no scientific basis.

    “It’s a thing in some cultures — definitely not common in Nigeria, though — but no, you can’t sync with the moon.”


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    It all comes down to mathematics and coincidence

    Mary explained that, while there’s little scientific evidence to prove syncing is due to hormones or lunar cycles, there’s actually a valid mathematical explanation.

    “Women have different menstrual cycles, and over time, they’ll overlap. For instance, I have a 28-day cycle. This means I won’t start my period on the same day of each month because my cycle doesn’t span a complete month. I can start on the 15th of month one and start on the 18th of the following month. I may even see my period twice in the same month. This probability is higher in those with 26-day cycles, and if such a person is your roommate, your periods will overlap at a point. 

    It’s different from someone with a complete 30-day cycle who always menstruates on a particular date. Even then, if you live with someone with a different cycle length, overlapping is a possibility.”

    It also explains the moon thing. When the early people — read as “our ancestors” — still relied on lunar calendars, it was just natural to track the menstrual cycle with the lunar cycle as both timelines share an approximate average of 28 days. It wasn’t universal, as there would’ve been women with different cycle lengths, but it kinda worked. Again, mathematics.

    What do current findings say?

    Quite a number of recent studies have debunked the McClintock effect.

    “A 2006 study by Human Nature and another one by Oxford University provided data which demonstrated how unlikely it is for women to disrupt each other’s menstrual cycles just by being in close proximity to one another.”

    What can actually affect your period?

    Since science has agreed that your female bestie doesn’t pose a threat to your menstrual cycle, here are some of the factors Mary confirms can actually affect your period.

    “Stress and medication due to certain chronic illnesses can either delay your period or bring it on early. Birth control pills also alter the levels of certain hormones in your body — specifically progesterone and estrogen — and these control when, or if, you see your period.”

    The takeaway

    Menstrual cycles don’t converge; they diverge — increase indefinitely — during the course of life. If you do feel a connection with the other women in your life, it’s probably a coincidence. 

    However, if you’ve “synced” with the women you live with before and then experienced an “out of sync” period, it doesn’t mean anything is wrong with your cycle.


    NEXT READ: Talk True: Are Toilet Infections Actually a Thing?


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  • “I Was Horny All the Time” — Nigerian Women on Their Positive Pregnancy Experiences

    We’ve heard the terrifying pregnancy and childbirth stories and seen the funniest things pregnancy hormones have made women do, but what about those who got the better end of the stick in the reproduction lottery? They’re people too.

    So, we asked seven of such Nigerian women to share how their pregnancy and childbirth experiences differed from what they expected.

    “I was horny all the time” — Lade, 35

    I have two kids, and my first pregnancy was the standard “preggy mama” starter pack. Nausea in the first trimester, crazy food cravings in the second, and a three-times-larger nose in the third trimester.

    But you see the second pregnancy? I was cruising all through. No nausea or strange cravings, and I was horny all the time. In fact, my husband was running away from me because he was convinced all the sex we were having could harm the baby. The horniness stopped after childbirth, and even after eight weeks I didn’t want. He became the one begging for sex up and down.

    “I had my baby within an hour” — Yemi, 29

    People used to tell me first-timers have it difficult in childbirth. Even my doctor told me we couldn’t take chances, and that we needed to be prepared for an extended delivery process. So, I expected the worst.

    But the day came, and I had my baby within an hour. I was far gone before I realised I was in active labour. I thought it was Braxton Hicks contractions — I’d had them some weeks before — so I delayed going to the hospital. When I got there with my mum, the nurses discovered I was close to 8 cm dilated. I was immediately wheeled into delivery, and an hour later, I was out with my baby.

    “I was a ball of energy” — Mimi*, 25

    It seems fitting that pregnant women should feel tired, right? I mean, we’re literally growing another human being inside of us. But me, I was a ball of energy all through. I never had the pregnancy waddle, and it’s not like I was this fit person before pregnancy. I even rearranged the whole house once because I was bursting with energy. My friends were always telling me to calm down. 

    My son is two now, and I’m beginning to understand why I was so energetic. The boy doesn’t know how to sit down in one place.


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    “I didn’t know I was pregnant for the first six months” — Joke*, 29

    I always thought these “unaware pregnancies” was a scam until it happened to me. I was six months pregnant before I knew. And how did I know? I started to feel strange movements in my stomach at night, which I initially attributed to gas, but I decided to see the doctor when it became consistent. Voila! They saw a baby in my uterus.

    Nothing could’ve prepared me for it. I still had my periods consistently, and no nausea, sickness or any typical pregnancy symptom. I also didn’t have a bump till two weeks before I put to bed. I’m sure my neighbours lowkey think I stole a baby. 

    “Post-birth recovery was really smooth” — Debby*, 28

    A church member told me that the first poop after giving birth would be painful, so I dreaded it even slightly more than childbirth. I’d also heard many stories about post-birth difficulties.

    Thankfully, my post-birth recovery was really smooth. The poop was still painful, but it was more constipation-ish than the crazy pain I expected. I also had an easy breastfeeding experience, and holding my baby in my arms for the first time wiped away any pain I thought I had. Now, I know why many of our mothers went through this five or six times.

    “I didn’t have stretch marks” — Moyin, 27

    This probably sounds shallow, but stretch marks were one of my biggest concerns with pregnancy and childbirth. I know many people who developed stretch marks and even called it a “badge of honour”. I appreciate the sentiment, but I didn’t want them. For context, I do a bit of modelling, and I didn’t want lasting scars.

    I must’ve used everything in this world during pregnancy. Shea butter, coconut oil and every anti-stretch mark ointment I know. I also didn’t scratch my belly at all. It worked. I’m four months post-partum now, and zero stretch marks.

    “There was no weight gain or huge nose syndrome” — Hannah*, 30

    Weight gain and “huge nose syndrome” is like the hallmark of pregnancy, based on what I’ve seen and heard. But I was pleasantly surprised I didn’t experience either. I practically maintained the same shape throughout my pregnancy, minus the belly, of course, and you couldn’t tell I was pregnant by merely looking at my face. 

    It wasn’t a one-time thing; it was the same experience for my two pregnancies, and I’m grateful for that.


    *Some names have been changed for the sake of anonymity.


    NEXT READ: “It’s a Personal Hell” — 7 Nigerian Women on Trying and Failing to Conceive

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  • 12 Women Share What Being a First Daughter in a Nigerian Home Is Like 

    Being the first daughter in a Nigerian home comes with a lifetime of responsibilities, work, and hurt that sticks with you long after you’ve left.

    In this article, 12 women talk about their experience as first daughters and how it has affected them.

    Kimmy, 23

    Growing up as the first daughter in my family, I automatically became my dad’s favorite. That didn’t help much, though. Even though I have an older brother, my status as the first daughter made me responsible for everybody. They’d come to me first if they needed something or if something went wrong. I had to take responsibility for everything — from caring for my siblings to doing the chores around the house. I had to become their mother, never mind that I was a child myself. 

    It was fun before it became very stressful, and I started to dislike all of them. 

    Now that I’m older and in school, I don’t like people in my space and prefer to be left alone. It’s why I hardly go home. Also, I’ve learnt to stand up for myself a lot more now, and they’ve given my brother back most of the firstborn duties.

    Nnenna, 21

    I will blame my parents for everything. I grew up taking care of everybody at home for some odd reason. Because of this, I gravitate towards partners that are super caring and don’t stress my life. I get enough stress from home already. 

    Also, I was in charge of all the money in the house when I was younger, and we weren’t financially stable. Making money decisions at that age taught me how to save. Now, I’m a compulsive saver. I stick to my savings plans and won’t touch the money, even if I’m dying of hunger.

    Perhaps the biggest consequence of being the first daughter is that I hold things until I can’t anymore.  It’s a bad habit that I’m unlearning, and I feel like I have to break my back before I deserve appreciation. 

    Shalewa, 20

    It’s like a trinity thing for me  — I’m the first daughter, the only daughter, and the last born. 

    Growing up wasn’t a worthwhile experience. I got the “ only daughter” treatment more than the “last born” one.

    Things took a turn when I was 12, and decided I wanted to do the dishes. From that day, my parents decided I would be responsible for all house chores and put all the homemaking business in my hands.  Since that day, I’ve cooked, cleaned, and picked up after four grown men (my three brothers and my dad).

     I’m fine doing it, but I hate that they make me do it cause I’m a “woman” if I was a man, they wouldn’t move all the work to me and turn me into a mini housemaid. 

    Besides the daily homemaking chores, I maintain the peace in the house so my brothers don’t remove each other’s heads, put medication on wounds, and do the grocery runs. I’m barely 21!

    Yomi, 22

    I’m the first daughter in a family of 4.  I got my first taste of the first-daughter treatment when my parents were dealing with some issues in their marriage. I was closer to my mum, so I became her adviser and shielded my sister from everything. 

    As I get older, I’ve realized that  I don’t know how to rely on people to provide for me I’m used to helping people. and it takes everything to ask for help. b 

    I look out for people the same way I did for my sister. Right now, all I think about is shielding my sister from the harsh realities of life.

    My life as the firstborn and first daughter means feeling choked by responsibilities — the ones I have already and the ones that are yet to come. 

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    Nma, 25

    I’m my mum’s first child. But my dad had his kid when he was in secondary school — a daughter. When my parents got married, she lived with us. She was way older than my siblings and me, SO first-daughter duties didn’t start for me until my mum died when I was nine years old.  and I moved in with an aunt. 

    When I hit my 20s, I started to help out the family financially. I currently pay my youngest brother’s school fees and drop money for groceries. 

    As the first child, I rarely had anyone to confide in or had the luxury of people babying me, so I seek that in my romantic relationships. I enjoy being taken care of emotionally, and I sometimes micromanage my man because he’s a middle child, and you know how they can be.

    Princess, 20

    I had to take care of my junior siblings at 9 because my parents were busy with their businesses, so I act older than I actually am. My parents expected a lot from me because of my younger siblings, and I won’t lie; it wasn’t fun. 

    My siblings ended up being spoilt by my mum as I was the only one doing everything. 

    Now, my parents look up to me as the only person they can trust — my siblings can’t do anything, and they’re very stubborn.

    I still do most of the house chores and errands at home. It’s so bad that I don’t like going home.

    Jane, 20

    I just realised it, but I have a lot of trauma to unpack from growing up as the first daughter. 

    I had to be the “good and proper” child, which meant bearing a lot for the sake of my siblings. I still try to behave in a certain way so I’m not leaving a “bad example” for my siblings, but I’m consciously trying to be free from those demands and discover what  I want.

    Claire, 20

    Growing up as a first daughter and first child was a lot.  I was blamed for everything and anything, even if I wasn’t there when it happened. 

    There was immense pressure to be a good leader and set a good example for my siblings. I feel like I wasn’t allowed to make mistakes. 

    Even till this day, there’s a never-ending urge to be there for my siblings emotionally and financially. I never think of myself. Also, I can’t live alone. I grew up with five siblings and got so used to the chaos that came with it.

    Thankfully, I don’t have many responsibilities yet since I’m still a student. But I have it drilled into my head that I can’t mess up, and I need to do things right regardless of the discomfort.

    Martha, 23

    As the first daughter, I had to grow up too fast. There’s a considerable age gap between my sister and me, so it’s not like I was in charge of her that early. I was in charge of my parents. 

    Their marriage was an abusive one, and I had to play the role of an intermediary. I was constantly picking sides, begging for my mummy, and occasionally getting thrown around. If I wasn’t the first child, I wouldn’t have had to bear the brunt of such dysfunction.

    Also, I was responsible for everything in that house. My mum, my sister, and even my father came to me for every little thing they needed. However, nothing I did was ever enough, and it seemed like I had to know what they wanted before they even said it. 

    Now that I’m older, it’s affecting my relationships because I put everyone before myself. I’d rather experience some discomfort than let a friend or acquaintance, or even a stranger, feel it.

    Nevertheless, it’s helped me build some leadership skills — I’m proactive, fair in judgment, and easy to talk to.  me proactive, fit for leadership positions, fair, and easy to talk to. I’m the queen of empathy. 

    I’m 23 years old now, and I’m still responsible for so much.  Nothing is ever good enough. I always have to prove myself. Sometimes, I feel like a 42-year-old father of three, and it’s wild because I’m just 23.

    Doyin, 31

    Growing up as the first daughter was demanding for me because my parents expected more from me than my age allowed me to be. It has really affected me now that I’m older because whenever I remember that I’m the firstborn, I remember all the responsibilities I have and how my siblings are looking up to me — it makes me want to work harder.

    Maureen, 25

    Honestly, I’ve decided the stress of being the first daughter is never going to change. The trauma is a whole lot. Out of all my siblings, I’m the only one working, and whenever I ask my brother to get a job, he’ll ask me to tell him what he needs one for.  Honestly, I’m thankful I negotiated my salary very well. I’d have been borrowing money or doing something illegal just to survive.

    Adaorah, 24

    My dad and I had this really sweet relationship when I was a child. We’d go out together and listen to highlife music every Sunday evening, and he’d take me to the site where he worked whenever he could. It was interesting. 

    I think the weight of being a first child hit me when I became a teenager, and my parents thought it was time to let our househelps go. I suddenly became responsible for five children.  It was chaotic at first, but I got used to it. 

    Being a first child made me independent; I can do anything myself. But there are the disadvantages too. Some people say I don’t know how to love because I’m always trying to be strong. They want a vulnerable girl, but you can’t be that way if you’ve always had to be strong for your siblings.

    My siblings love me a lot, and I work as hard as I can to get them nice things, but since I can’t afford most things I want to get them, I drift away.

    It isn’t the best feeling.


    Still on the topic of first daughters: Watch this first episode of Zikoko for Her, in which Chigozie Obi talks about the pressures and struggles of being a first daughter.


  • An Ode to the Funniest Nigerian Women on the Internet

    We think women are the most hilarious people on earth.

    And we have the material to prove it:

    Do you really think our lives would be the same if our women weren’t benevolent queens, blessing us all with the obvious hilarity that flows through their veins?

    Just imagine.

    Imagine a world where you can’t shout “yes” whenever Jola asks, “Are you into gbegborun?” 

    A world where we don’t know that “the act of being an adult is called grownupicity.” 

    A world where we don’t know where the bounce is. Is it back from its long trek around Nigeria, or did it go missing? 

    A world with no validation for the Happy Noisemakers that we all are. Don’t lie, deep down you know you’re a happy noisemaker.

    Jola’s book club

    Just imagine Jola Ayeye decided the creative industry wasn’t for her, and she stuck to her Politics and Philosophy degree from the University of Durham.

    Oh dear, what if Jola became a Nigerian politician?

    First of all, everybody will collect because she’ll keep spitting facts in their faces, but they won’t know what’s happening because they think she’s joking around.

    Don’t leave without getting your ticket to HERtitude 2023!

    A baby girl for life, Jola would bring changes to this country with a vanilla ice cream in one hand and a glass of red wine in the other.

    A world where Switope isn’t highlighting the unintentional humour that spirituality and religion are laced with is not one I want to live in. A world where she can’t answer all our wild AF questions on her podcast or show us how to live our best lives on her radio show? A world where we don’t get to watch her skits and marvel at her creativity?

    It’s giving you shall not laugh, you shall not smile. Because what really is life if we can’t go from watching someone say the weirdest things like,  “There’s a demon in hell that I saw with dreadlocks, but it was a snake dancing on its head”  to watching Switope reenact it?

    Catching trips, making the bag, and being an international slay mama.

    Beverly Adaeze has given us relatable Nigerian aunty content and commentary on all the wild things she’s seen in this life back to back. And they’re a lot.

    But what if she never got on the internet to remind us that Nigerian aunties are actually peak comedy, and we never got to hype ourselves as “International Slay Mamas”? Because yes, if you live in Nigeria and can somehow get a visa and buy tickets to leave the country for a quick trip to the Maldives, you’re a baddie, a slay mama who’s gone international. Anybody that wants to argue with you can face a brick wall. 

    What if, instead of giving us this type of content, Beverly was a hairstylist and travel vlogger. A weird mix, but let it be known that Nigerian women can do anything but accept suffering. And if Beverly decided to toe this path, best believe she’ll be the best at it. Because all you have to do is ask Buhari, there’s nothing better than catching flights in the name of work. 

    And then there’s Maraji.

    Gloria Oloruntobi has been making skits and videos since the days of Musical.ly. She made a video mimicking Reekado Banks’ sugar baby and became our sugar baby, and honestly, the mere thought of not having her and her talent has us stressed and distressed because what would we have done?

    Where would we be?

    From Nigerian fathers acting like they have body doubles anytime your friends come around, to the different ways your bestie starts moving when they japa, Maraji stays doing the absolute most in every video she drops. 

    Thankfully, we don’t have to live in a world without these women. From TikTok, to Instagram, Twitter and the other parts of the internet, we get to experience these multifaceted women living in the moment and sharing their funny with us.

    Jola Ayeye is a scriptwriter, one half of the “I Said What I Said” podcast and a founding member of the Feminist Coalition, the bad bitch movement of all bad bitch movements.

    Up Femco

    Ope Keshinro is a radio host, event host and content creator, continuously showing up and showing out.

    Beverly Adaeze is a content creator and hairstylist passionate about helping stylists grow their businesses and improve their skills. An international slay mama encouraging women to travel and explore the world around them.

    Gloria Oloruntobi is a comedian creating content with her production team that consists of one person, her.

    Divine Onobo is a student and content creator who firmly believes “life is never that hard” and moves to show that in her content.

    Gabriella Omozele is a content creator and actor. A funny woman to the core, Gabriella came into the scene and made Ms Flora 222, one of her numerous characters, a household name.

    Olatunde Onaopemipo is a budding actor and influencer dedicated to creating content unique to her.

    Chidera Onoh is a medical student creating content about her life and experiences.

    These women are the highlight of our celebration this women’s month, showing up and carrying the weight of the internet’s funny on their back.

  • 9 Ridiculous Things Nigerian Women Shouldn’t Bring into 2023

    I love Nigerian women and I want the best for them. That’s why I’ve come to beg them to not carry some of these behaviours into 2023. It’s a new year; it’s time to do better. Please, don’t do any of these things from today henceforth. 

    Not knowing what to eat

    This year, I need you people to please make life easier for people who care about you. How? By knowing what the hell you want to eat when you’re asked. No more “I don’t know”. Mention a meal, snack, fruit, human being, anything apart from “I don’t know”. 

    Terrible flirting skills

    Staring at someone for five minutes, or liking two of their pictures on social media, won’t be accepted as flirting in 2023. Put. In. The. Work. 

    Eating pasta 

    I spent New Year’s Eve in church specifically praying that pasta releases the chokehold it has on Nigerian women. I want more for you and your palate. It’s enough. Time to move forward in life.

    Being shy to say you have money 

    Nigerian women are rich. They’re the real ballers in this life, but they always like to deny it. My good sis, we know the weave you have on your head can pay somebody’s house rent. You can’t hide your wealth, so just own it with your full chest.

    Being the planners and organisers 

    When women were created, they weren’t given the job description of “planner/organiser”. Let other people also plan and organise dates, weddings, parties, vacations, things needed in the house etc., while you relax and drink wine for a change. 

    Saying you don’t want food

    …then eating the offerer’s own. You don’t always know you want what you’re being offered when they offer it, and that’s why you say no. But you should know by now that you’ll always end up wanting it, so just say yes instead of pinching from their food, FGS. 

    Planning a girls’ trip and not going  

    Don’t worry, I’ve already thought ahead and written a detailed article on how to plan a girls’ trip and actually go for it. This year, you and the girls will make it to the  Maldives.

    Wearing high heels for the sake of beauty 

    My queens, I beg you to choose comfort this 2023. Instead of carrying slippers up and down while staggering in uncomfortable heels, just wear the slippers from home. Your feet are crying, please. 

    Frontals with the lace showing 

    “What lace?” The one that’s showing right there, sis. I can see it all the way from here, and it’s not blending with your skin. Please, don’t bring it into 2023. It’s not by force to do frontal. Closure wigs and braids are also there. 

    Saying you’re emotionally fine when you’re not 

    If you’re angry, say you’re angry and stop cooking your anger in your chest. You’re only giving yourself a headache. 

    ALSO READ: 9 Ridiculous Things Nigerian Men Shouldn’t Bring into 2023

  • Dear Nigerian Women,  Let’s Talk About Your Flirting Skills

    Before Nigeria even existed, a prophecy foretold that the women of this nation wouldn’t know how to flirt. Unfortunately, it came to pass, and Nigerian women started doing some ridiculous things they call flirting. We need to have a discussion so Nigerian women can answer for their crimes. 

    Staring is not it 

    If you like, stare at them for three business days, it won’t make them know you like them. If anything, you come off as a weird person, and they’d want nothing to do with you. Try striking up a conversation. You won’t die. Don’t be looking at them like you’re trying to see into their future. 

    No, they can’t read your mind 

    You can’t expect them to know you find them attractive. Humans aren’t born with the ability to read minds. If you can’t open your mouth and them they look beautiful, rest.

    Calling them “big head” isn’t enough

    When flirting with someone, calling them names is juvenile. You’re not a child, you’re an adult who can articulate your feelings. Yet, you’ll be wondering why they friendzone you. Babe, you’re coming with the energy of a friend, why won’t they treat you as such? 

    RELATED: The Passive-Aggressive Ways Nigerian Women Show They’re Annoyed

    “Sir” doesn’t work either 

    For the women who flirt with men by calling them “sir”, why? How deep are your daddy issues? You don’t even call the person who pays your salary “sir”, so why this? 

    “Let your girlfriend not come and beat me o” 

    Aunty, ask if they have a girlfriend first. If you’re scared of someone coming to you as a woman, declare your interest and wait for what they have to say. 

    RELATED: Nigerian Women Should Stop Apologising for These 9 Ridiculous Things

    Constantly saying “fine boy like you” 

    If he’s a fine boy, he’s a fine boy. Stop trying to sneak in compliments. “Fine boy like you, how can you say…” Even secondary school children are more direct than this. Pay the compliment if you want to. 

    Liking multiple pictures 

    Everyone likes pictures. Just because you’re liking multiple pictures doesn’t mean anything. Try sending them a DM instead. That’s how things work. 

    RELATED: How to Identify a Woman That’s Just Come Out of a Relationship

  • Who Are the Forces Against Women’s Involvement in Politics?

    It is 2022 and Nigerian women are still struggling to get a stable place in politics. And no, politicians (mostly male) using female traders and rural women to advance their careers is not the same as women having a real say in the matter. 

    There have been conferences, jabs, talks, and more talks thrown in the way of Nigerian women calling on them to rub shoulders with the men in the political space. But everyone seems to forget that it takes more than talking and that real work has to be done. 

    On November 9, 2022, The deputy chief whip of the House of Representatives (aka Honourable Member of the Feminist Battalion), Nkeiruka Onyejeocha, reminded us about the rejected affirmative action bill. 

    The bill simply asked that the Nigerian government makes it compulsory for 35 percent of women to be involved in all governance processes. Easy stuff but it got thrown away. 

    It is a breath of fresh air that people like Onyejeocha, who said that women’s participation should always be a priority, are in government. However, this was not enough to save the bill.

    Let’s look at what the bill means for Nigerian women. 

    How does the bill help Nigerian women? 

    The bill, which was championed by Onyejeocha, was meant to increase women’s participation in politics and general government processes, offering them higher chances of getting into government.

    Women should care about the implementation of affirmative action for two simple reasons:

    The political numbers for women are sad to look at

    Out of all the candidates campaigning in the 2023 elections, only 8.36 percent of them are women. After the 2019 legislative elections, it was also observed that only 8 women out of 109 members were elected to the House of Senate, and 13 women out of 360 members made it to the House of Representatives.  

    In the two houses, fall way below the global 26.1 percent cut-off mark for global recognition of women in parliament. These numbers don’t lie. 

    NASS has a history of rejecting bills for women

    The 35 percent affirmative action bill isn’t the only one that has been rejected.

    When senator, Biodun Olujimi, presented the Gender and Equal Opportunities bill in December 2021,  male lawmakers began to pick holes in the bill. It was eventually stepped down.

    That was the third time Ms. Olujimi brought the bill to the Senate for consideration.

    She first introduced the bill in March 2016. The bill clearly sought to give women the following:

    • Equal opportunities in employment.
    • Equal rights to inheritance for both genders.
    • Equal rights for women in marriage and divorce
    • Equal access to education, property/land ownership, and inheritance.

    The bill was rejected by male lawmakers. They argued that the Nigerian Constitution was clear on the rights of citizens, including women.  Olujimi reworked the bill and represented it to the Senate. This time, it scaled second reading and was referred to the Senate committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters. However, no public hearing was held.

    In November 2019, the bill was reintroduced and during the second reading last December, two senators – Aliyu Wamakko and Yusuf Yusuf – argued that the word “equality” was against the socio-cultural practice of Islam.

    Women around the world are killing it politically

    Kenya and Rwanda are good examples of African countries where gender equality is practiced, especially in politics and governance.

    In Kenya, the number of women in parliament sums up to 21.8 percent. Seven female governors were also sworn into power in August 2022.

    Rwanda Chamber of Deputies became the first elected national parliament where women were the majority in 2008. The percentage of women in parliament stood at 61.25% in 2021. This is way above the current global average of 26.4%. 

    Rwanda has been at the top of the International Organization of Parliaments (IPU)’s monthly ranking of

    women in the national parliament for years.

    Dear Nigeria, remove shame and beat Rwanda. If there was ever a time to care about female participation in politics, there is no better time than now. 

  • Nigerian Women Should Stop Apologising for These 9 Ridiculous Things

    Nigerian women apologise for various ridiculous reasons, and we’re tired of it. These nine things are particularly more ridiculous than most, so don’t apologise for them. Everyone will be fine. 

    Taking up space 

    No matter what capacity you’ve chosen to take up space in, do it with your full chest. 

    Giving instructions 

    You’re someone’s oga. Why are you apologising for telling people to do their job? Do your bosses apologise when they tell you to work? No? Exactly. 

    Not having makeup on 

    You were not born with highlight on your nose and blush on your cheeks. There’s no reason why you should be apologising for walking around with the face you were born with. If people have a problem with it, they should remove their eyes. 

    RELATED: Pros and Cons to Consider Before You Get Eyelash Extensions

    Resting because of cramps

    Your period will come whenever and however it wants, without regard for your plans. It inconveniences your the most, so why apologise because you need to rest because of the pain? You weren’t created to withstand pain. Rest and don’t feel bad about it. 

    Having unlaid edges 

    If edges needed to be laid 24/7, we’d have been born that way. Why should you apologise for the hair that grows out of your head? 

    Not wanting to start a family 

    It’s alright to live a life alone. If that’s what makes you happy, why should you apologise for it? It’s not like the people hounding you to get married and have children will pay for any of it or deal with the stress for you. They should get out.

    RELATED: 7 Questions Nigerian Women Absolutely LOVE to Be Asked

    Asking for better 

    Be it in relationships or work, if you deserve better, don’t feel bad for asking for it. You know your worth, so you shouldn’t apologise for asking that other people see it too. 

    Choosing yourself 

    Your happiness is more important than whatever people expect of you. If they don’t like the life you’re living, they should leave you alone. You do not owe people a life that causes you discomfort and unhappiness. 

    Not knowing how to cook 

    Just because you’re a woman doesn’t mean you were born with a spatula. Everyone should rest. 

    RELATED: The Passive-Aggressive Ways Nigerian Women Show They’re Annoyed

  • How to Identify a Woman Who Has Just Come Out of a Relationship 

    Generally, people react differently to breakups. But I’ve noticed that a woman who’s just come out of a relationship does at least five of these. 

    She starts going to the gym 

    I can’t even lie, me sef I’ve done this one. There’s a way the heartbreak will hit you, you’ll enter gym. A Woman who’s just collected breakfast might register at a gym to be ten times hotter than before, so that their ex will regret and be jealous. Either that, or she’s looking for somewhere to pour all her anger and pain. 

    She changes something about her appearance 

    She’ll want a different look to remind herself that she’s a new woman in a new phase and old things have passed away. So she’ll die her hair vomit-green or another wild colour. She’ll even wear more risque outfits and become more adventurous with her fashion sense. 

    She’s posting fire thirst traps 

    Someone who used to post pictures once in three months will suddenly start posting back-to-back fire pictures on her social media accounts with captions like “it’s unfortunate you couldn’t keep me” or “no other like me”. 

    She wears less and goes out more 

    Every weekend she’s “outsideeee” with her friends, having the time of her life. Her Snapchat is filled with videos of her going out for brunch or dancing and taking shots at the club. 

    She starts listening to inspirational podcasts 

    She’ll finally open the podcast app that she’s been postponing for two years. Then she’ll start listening to the inspirational ones that tell her how she doesn’t need to be in a relationship to be happy (which is true, but it seems she didn’t know it before). She’ll go ahead and post snippets of her favourite healing podcasts on her Instagram story so that people know she’s now a new woman who is single and happy. 

    ALSO READ: How to Get a Nigerian Woman to Eat

    She gets into a new hobby 

    If it’s not yoga, she’ll join a dance class. She may even start journalling, get into pottery, or become a plant mom just to pour out all the love she has to give, since men don’t deserve it. 

    ALSO READ: 9 Reasons A Nigerian Woman Will Breakup With You

    She pours all her energy into her career 

    She no longer has time for love because that only brings stress and heartbreak. Now her only focus is on becoming rich and powerful. Lovers will break your heart, but your career won’t. 

    She becomes religious 

    Since her relationship on earth didn’t work out, she’ll start working on the Heavenly one. I’ve been there. A few years ago, an ex broke up with me and I became an usher in church. Fun times. 

    She starts tweeting a lot 

    Her Twitter timeline will be filled with tweets about self-love and self-care. She’ll tweet about how nothing is better than being single, rich and happy.  

    ALSO READ: 20 Things That’ll Take All Your Money as a Nigerian Woman

  • How to Know Your Babe Is About to Get Married, but Not to You

    You know your babe has been making arrangements to go to her village for the festive season, but here are some signs to know that she’ll be coming back with a husband. 

    She’s Igbo

    We’re sorry to break it to you, but your Igbo girlfriend telling you she’s going “home” for Christmas might as well be your invitation to her wedding. 

    She’s engaging more with wedding content online

    You’ve noticed that she’s liking and retweeting more threads about marriage on Twitter, she can’t go a day without reposting cute wedding videos on her IG and WhatsApp, and you still haven’t figured it out? She’s obviously jotting down taking tips for when she’s ready, which is going to be two months from now.

    She’s spending more time with you 

    With all the traffic and stress in Nigeria, she insists on spending most of her time with you. Ah! My brother, she’s trying to get the most of the little time you have left before she weds her real husband-to-be.

    She’s not spending time with you 

    Whenever you suggest you spend a weekend together now, she always says she’s busy. Yes, she’s definitely busy trying to forget you and move on with her life.

    She doesn’t get upset easily 

    Nigerian women don’t like peace. So when you start going two days without any fight, there’s something wrong. Our advice? Start mentally moving on because your relationship is nearing its end.

    She gets upset easily

    Any small thing you do, she picks offence. You’re now having a minimum of at least three fights a day? Can’t you see that she’s fed up with all your shit and already has plans to marry someone else?

    You’ve been dating for more than two years

    Two years is enough time to know if you will spend the rest of your life with a Nigerian woman. And if you’ve not started planning to see her people, what’s the point? She’s made up her mind to find someone that’s serious.

    All her close friends are married

    She’s getting invites to weddings every other week, and you haven’t thought to ask her how she feels about getting married? Your breakfast is going to be served buffet-style.

    READ NEXT: 6 Nigerian Women Share The Best Thing About Being Married 

  • The Passive-Aggressive Ways Nigerian Women Show They’re Annoyed

    A Nigerian woman would rather refuse to eat pasta than tell you she’s annoyed at something you’ve done. But if she shows any of these passive-aggressive signs, then you need to start thinking of how to appease her.

    She’ll air your messages 

    She’ll see your messages come in and choose to swipe them away because you’re saying nonsense . If she’s very upset, she’ll open the message, close it back and leave you on “read”, so you’ll know she’s ignoring you. If she archives your messages, that’s even worse. You may have to involve the gods to get her to forgive you. 

    Give you one-word replies 

    Ask her how work was, and she’ll say, “Good.” — This is someone who usually gives you the full gist of the day about how Amaka ate her oga’s lunch by mistake. If she now puts full-stop in the message? You’re in soup.

    Post her finest pictures 

    She’s not talking to you but wants you to talk to her. That’s when she’ll begin to post her finest pictures on all social media platforms to make you thirsty and slide in her DMs. That way, she can properly ignore you. 

    ALSO READ: 20 Things That’ll Take All Your Money as a Nigerian Woman

    She’ll tell you she isn’t hungry 

    You ask her, “What do you want to eat?” She says, “Nothing, I’m not hungry.” Ah you’ve entered serious wahala o. The only time a woman says no to food is when it has spoilt or she suspects poison. I don’t know how you want to get out of this one. 

    She does nothing 

    You know you’ve done something wrong. She knows you’ve done something wrong. Yet she’s acting like nothing happened. Just carry your load and run because she’s consulting with the WhatsApp group on the best way to deal with you. 

    She puts a full stop after every word

    All of a sudden, she remembers grammar and punctuation. Any small thing, “I don’t know.” “Okay.” “Tired.” 

    She turns her body away from you 

    Whether in bed, in a car, on a couch etc. The moment she turns her body 90 degrees away from you, she’s showing you she’s visibly upset and wants you to tell her sorry. 

    ALSO READ: 7 Things Nigerian Women Are Angry About

    Throws shade at you on social media

    You’ll start seeing tweets like “Nobody is ever too busy for you. If they cared, they’d find the time.” Better carry your phone and call her. That tweet is for you. 

    She’ll hiss as if something is stuck in their teeth

    You’ll hear her kissing her teeth every five minutes — and she may add a disgusted look at you for extra effect. That’s how you know you fucked up. 

    ALSO READ: Every Nigerian Mother Makes These 10 Annoying Passive Aggressive Statements

  • What the Numbers Say About Nigerian Women and the 2023 Elections

    Earlier this year, a report by the Gender Strategy Advancement International (GSAI) noted that the participation of Nigerian women in politics falls below global standards. The national average is 6.7% which is low compared to the 23.4% African average and 22.5% global average.

    With just about four months left till the general elections in 2023, we look at some of the numbers that define the role that women can play in the elections and what they mean for their representation in Nigerian politics.

    1 — the number of women running for president in 2023

    She may not be as popular as her male counterparts, but Princess Chichi Ojei of the Allied Peoples Movement (APM) also wants to take over from Buhari next year. She’s the only woman out of the 18 candidates on the ballot for the 2023 presidential election. Twale for you jare.

    What the Numbers Say About Nigerian Women and the 2023 Elections

    25 — women running for governorship positions

    The 25 female candidates contesting in governorship elections across Nigeria fall just short of 6% of the total number of 419 candidates on the ballots. It’s even worse when you consider that a court recently disqualified the only female candidate running with a major party. We see you looking at that 419 with suspicion and we are too.

    What the Numbers Say About Nigerian Women and the 2023 Elections

    ALSO READ: How Politicians Use Nigerian Women Without Rewarding Them

    92 — women running for Senate seats

    That’s 92 women out of 1,101 candidates in total — representing a paltry 8%. We still have a long way to go to have gender inclusive politics at the national level.

    What the Numbers Say About Nigerian Women and the 2023 Elections

    286 — women running for seats in the House of Representatives

    Only 286 out of a total of 3,107 candidates running for seats in the House of Representatives are women. This is the kind of gender imbalance that allows the male-dominated House reject bills to give Nigerian women more rights.

    1,046 — the total number of women contesting for political offices in 2023

    Out of the total number of 10,225 candidates running for political offices in 2023, only 1,046 are female — just over 10%. Real ojoro, for a country where more than 100 million people are female. So uncool.

    What the Numbers Say About Nigerian Women and the 2023 Elections

    6,224,866 —  the number of newly registered female voters

    Of the 12.2 million newly-registered voters ahead of the 2023 elections, 6,224,866 are women. They won this category hands down and are ready to demand more at the polls.

    ALSO READ: One of These 18 Candidates Is Nigeria’s Next President

  • 7 Questions Nigerian Women Absolutely LOVE to Be Asked

    When it comes to starting a conversation with a Nigerian woman, there are some questions they’re asked so many times, they just want people to keep asking them. So, ask, but whatever you see afterwards is the repercussion of your actions. 

    When will you get married?

    Because marriage is all a woman thinks about, asking this question will cause her so much joy, her hands might just connect with your face in celebration. 

    Should you be eating that?

    You want to quiz the owner of the body about what she puts in it? She might eat you just to prove a point that she can eat whatever she wants. 

    Whose pussy is this?

    Definitely not yours, but ask anyways. Maybe you need to be humbled. 

    RELATED: 9 Important Questions for Nigerian Women That Men Desperately Need Answers to Ask

    Why are you wearing that?

    There’s nothing a woman loves more than when she puts so much time and energy into her appearance just for a man to ask her this question. It’ll elicit so much emotion from her, she might stone you with her shoe as a show of care. Don’t forget to duck! 

    What would your man think?

    It’s very important for a woman to know that whatever she’s doing is for the approval of the man in her life. So, whenever you see a woman living her life unapologetically, don’t forget to ask her what her man would think of it. She just might kill you. 

    RELATED: Nigerian Women Answer the Most Googled Questions About Relationships

    How much is in your savings? 

    Women adore being pocket-watched, especially while doing retail therapy. It’s the sexiest thing ever. In fact, if you’re asking a woman how much she’s saved, don’t forget to tell her how much you’ve saved too. Just in case she feels like robbing you. 

    Don’t you think you have too many wigs?

    Yes, because women love being told they can’t have more of something they really like. Ask the question, and she just might use whatever hair is left on your head for her next wig. 

    RELATED: 8 Nigerian Women on Things They Wish They Could Ask Their Ex

  • The Real Reasons Why Women Go to the Bathroom in Groups at Events

    Women tend to go to the bathroom in groups, but the main question is why? The girls who get it obviously get it, but if you’re reading this, you probably don’t. Don’t worry, we have your back. Here are the eight reasons why women go to the bathroom in groups. 

    Come up with weird questions to ask their partners 

    Where do people think all the “Will you love me if I turned into Olumo rock?” questions come from? Women gather in bathrooms to figure out new ways to stress the people they’re dating. 

    Radicalise themselves against ironing 

    Starting  a movement happens in places you least expect, and that’s why women follow each other to the bathrooms. They remind themselves that although their clothes are rumpled, they’re beautiful. 

    Plan a girls’ trip that won’t leave the bathroom 

    As women gather together in the bathroom, they remind themselves how much they enjoy spending time with each other, and then, they plan a girls’ trip. Unfortunately, it never leaves the bathroom. It might extend to a group chat, but it ends there. 

    RELATED: How to Plan a Girls’ Trip and Actually Go For it

    Gather receipts to win their next argument

    According to the Zikoko Bureau of Statistics, investigative journalism was invented in the year 1307 after the first set of women gathered together in a bathroom. They gathered receipts, and now, it’s become a thing women have done for generations. In the bathroom, they plot, plan and start putting 2 and 2 together.

    Planning the next “I think it’s just funny how” text 

    After they sit to gather receipts, they redistribute their anger and start drafting all their “I think it’s just funny how” messages. They do it in the bathroom with other women who’ll ginger their typing and remind them of all the offences the person has committed. 

    Sectional women’s meeting 

    Announcing a general women’s meeting will be met with a lot of resistance. That’s why women go to the bathroom in groups, to debrief, share minutes of the meeting and send their struggles to headquarters. 

    RELATED: Getting Ready With Your Girls Is Top Tier And Here’s Why

    Diplomacy

    Countries have the United Nations, and women have the bathroom. It’s like a big physical group chat. In there, all issues are addressed. There’s a secret part of the bathroom that leads to a courtroom where women can solve all their problems freely and fairly. 

    Witchcraft

    Women are summoning principalities and powers in the bathroom. Everyone knows friends who witch together, stay together. 

    RELATED: 20 Things That’ll Take Your Money as a Nigerian Woman

  • How Politicians Use Nigerian Women Without Rewarding Them

    At an event in Abuja on October 10th, 2022, President Buhari made an announcement that would make you mistake him for a feminist.

    How Politicians Use Nigerian Women Without Rewarding Them

    The president directed the Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, and Minister of Women Affairs, Pauline Tallen, to brainstorm on possible constitutional and legal changes that would create a level playing field for Nigerian women in politics and governance. 

    On the surface, Buhari’s call might get Nigerian women excited about inclusion. But history has shown that the president’s action is just another one of those political moves intended to use and dump voters — in this case, Nigerian women. We’ll explain.

    How Politicians Use Nigerian Women Without Rewarding Them

    The president made his remarks when his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), inaugurated its Women Presidential Campaign Committee. This special committee of over 900 high-profile women is separate from the central campaign committee for the party’s presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu.

    Buhari’s directive was a clear ploy to get those women to spread the gospel that his government is pro-women and will remain so if they vote for the party in 2023. But there’s enough paper trail that shows it’s nothing but shameless pandering. 

    A blast from the past

    In March 2022, Nigerian lawmakers in the House of Representatives and Senate voted on five women-centric bills. The bills proposed to:

    1. Create 111 exclusive seats for women in the National Assembly and 108 exclusive seats in the 36 state legislative chambers.

    2. Allow foreign husbands of Nigerian women to become citizens by registration.

    3. Fill 35% of executive committee positions of political parties with women.

    4. Allow a woman to automatically become an indigene of her husband’s state after five years of marriage.

    5. Fill at least 10% of federal and state cabinets with women.

    All the proposals failed in either one or both chambers. 

    How Politicians Use Nigerian Women Without Rewarding Them

    In fact, lawmakers in the House of Representatives gleefully jumped for joy after denying Nigerian women fundamental rights. Buhari’s APC controls both chambers of the National Assembly.

    Nigerian women and the 2023 elections

    4,223 candidates will contest for 469 seats in the National Assembly in the 2023 elections, but only 380 (9%) are women. 

    How Politicians Use Nigerian Women Without Rewarding Them

    It’s the statistic that ensures the dismal representation of women in elective office won’t improve after the elections. And decisions like the ones the National Assembly lawmakers made in March keep women out of the picture in the places that matter. But they’re a very cherished voting bloc that usually receives empty promises when it’s time for elections.

    Who’ll save Nigerian women from exploitation?

    The truth is that Buhari’s charge to his officials is nothing but another case of pandering to Nigerian women. He’s well aware that the National Assembly, controlled by his party, has thrown gender inclusivity in government into the bin. Even Buhari himself promised women would make up at least 35% of his second-term cabinet, only to end up with 16% after his election.

    How Politicians Use Nigerian Women Without Rewarding Them

    Nigerian women are one of the most active groups during elections, which is normal because they make up half of the country. But the reality of their population isn’t represented in the make-up of Nigeria’s elective or appointive offices. It’s important that before women cast their votes in 2023, they’re confident they’re voting for people that truly have their best interests at heart.

    The exploitation of the women voting bloc didn’t start with Buhari, but it’s time for Nigerian women to demand better with their votes. They’re valuable for more than just elections.

    ALSO READ: Does the National Assembly Hate Nigerian Women?

  • “He’s Stubborn Like a Goat” — 8 Women Share What They Hate About Their Partners

    Humans are far from perfect, and the same goes for relationships. But in a time when social media timelines are filled with happy couples, we asked eight Nigerian women what they hate about their partners. 

    “He goes MIA when he’s upset” 

    — Fortune, dating for a year plus

    When I do something that upsets him, he just goes off. The longest he’s gone is two weeks, but honestly, I get coconut head, so being angry was valid. He’s been working on it though, learning how to communicate his feelings better. 

    “He’s stubborn like a goat”

    — Tina, dating for four years 

    He’s great, but he doesn’t listen at all. If you tell him to go right, he’d go left. Just stubborn like a goat, LOL. 

    “He doesn’t know how to watch movies” 

    — Linda, dating for a year plus

    This young man doesn’t pay attention while we’re watching movies. Whether at the cinema or home, he’ll just keep pressing his phone and then come back to ask what happened in the movie.  

    “He doesn’t know how to plan” 

    — Cindy, dating for four years 

    It’s not even about me or the relationship; he’s just bad at planning things. So it takes extra intentionality from him to prepare for things like parties, dates or simple activities. And this translates to nonchalance in some instances. 

    “He goes through my phone” 

    — Lilian, dating for about six years 

    He can’t seem to get his hands off my phone. Whenever we’re together after not seeing for a while, he takes his time to go through my phone. On some days, I confront him, and he agrees to going through my phone, other times, he denies it. And it’s just upsetting because I don’t even know the password to his phone. 

    “He’s not as expressive” 

    — Lola, dating for eight months

    He’s not as expressive as I’d like him to be. For instance, when I’m giving him gists, I’d appreciate if he acted more interested, interjected with questions and just shared in the excitement. But alas. And his inability to express himself also happens when he’s upset, as it usually takes a lot of nudging for him to tell me how he’s feeling. I know that most times, he’s trying not to hurt my feelings, but I’d rather he just confronted me rather than bottling up everything. 

    “He makes me feel like an olodo”

    — Rita, dating for three years

    Some days he gets carried away when talking about his work because he’s into tech. And he forgets I don’t understand most of these things. Like I try, but some things are just so complex, and it makes me feel like an olodo. 

    “He tries to dodge his faults” 

    — Louisa, dating for about four years 

    I can’t say if it’s pride, but he has a hard time apologising. So even when he knows he’s wrong, he’d rather stay away than just say just apologise. And whenever I ask, he brings up excuses about being busy, but I know the real reason is that he’s trying to wait out my anger.

    This interview has been edited for structure and clarity.


    READ NEXT: 6 Secrets You Should Definitely Keep From Your Partner 

  • All the Reasons Why Nigerian Women Lie

    First off, forget the title. Nigerian women don’t lie. But since Nigerian men, the real liars, argue online every other day that women are more guilty than they are, we’ve compiled seven reasons why a Nigerian woman MAY lie.

    To test you

    Nigerian women are the prize, so of course, they need to make sure you’re worth it. And what’s a better way to know a man’s true intentions than by lying to him?

    To protect you

    They don’t call it the “harsh” truth for nothing. The truth hurts like hell. And everyone knows a woman would go the extra mile to protect the ones she loves. 

    Laziness

    People who are too lazy to eat. You expect them to be recounting accurate details of their life? You sef think about it.

    To protect themselves

    Nigerian men are wicked, but women wickeda dan them. First, you tell the truth. Then you wake up at 6 a.m. to cook. What’s next? Buying him expensive gifts? Eww.

    For cruise sake 

    And you all say women are not funny? Living in Nigeria is hard enough, so you can’t be serious, telling the truth all the time joor

    Negative influence

    Bad communication corrupts good manners. And most women have many male friends, so when you deep it, it’s their lies rubbing off on the women. 

    So peace can reign

    Imagine all the fights that’d happen if women actually told the truth. If she told you she would rather chew glass than endure another gruelling round of sex with you, or she’s only with you for your money, what would you do? 

    Abeg, we can’t have another war in this country. 

    ALSO READ: Nigerian Women and Their Super Intuition

  • How to Get a Nigerian Woman to Eat

    If you ever happen to have a Nigerian woman in your life who refuses to eat or can’t decide what to eat — which is almost every time — here are six tried and trusted ways to convince her. 

    Bring the food directly in front of her 

    You’re using the food to trap her in her seat or bed. By the time the only way she can move is to eat what’s in front of her, you won’t have to tell her twice. 

    Eat beside her 

    She don’t want her own, but knowing it belongs to you will make her want to eat. She’ll keep picking at your plate until she’s finished everything in it. 

    RELATED: 6 Reasons Why Nigerian Women Don’t Iron Their Clothes 

    Pay her to eat 

    One thing women love? Money.  I can’t believe we’ve gotten to a point where we have to pay women to take care of themselves, but here we are. 

    Cook the food for her 

    If she refuses to eat, remind her that you spent hours in the kitchen cooking for her. Don’t be above using guilt to get her to take care of herself better. So enter kitchen and start cooking. 

    RELATED: 7 Reasons Why Women Love Bodysuits

    Seize her coffee or tea

    It’s become transactional. If she doesn’t eat, deny her access to her drinks. The love Nigerian woman have for those drinks will force her to eat, even if it’s a little. 

    Gist her and just give her food 

    There’s something about gist that makes a woman not even realise she’s eating. Just invite her over because you want to give her sweet gist, and be dumping the food into her lap. It’ll be gone before you know it. 

    RELATED: 7 Reasons Why Nigerian Women Love Pockets 

  • Nigerian Women, We Know What’s in Your BDSM Kits

    If Nigerian women think we don’t know what’s in their little bags, when they go for their cute genitalia meet and greet sprinkled with violence, they should wake up. Because we know. 

    Ata gungun

    If you didn’t think this was the first thing on the list, you clearly don’t know Nigerian women. Those people are wicked, and there are so many ways they can get creative with ata gungun. Small thing, they’ve blindfolded you and you’re feeling a tingling sensation in your privates. You know how the rest goes. Shebi it’s you that wants to do dangerous things. 

    Omorogun

    What’s a spanking if omorogun is not involved? Better turn your yansh and let this turning stick do the work she brought it for. 

    Or koboko

    This one is not just for spanking, it’s for flogging sense into you. And again, there’s nobody wickeder than a Nigerian woman. Anything your eyes see, take it like that. 

    Nearly All Men In Lagos Are Mad

    Imagine someone ties you down and reads this book to you. No be bondage and discipline be that? And you know who loves this book? Nigerian women. 

    Ankara 

    Ankara is very important for Nigerian women who involve themselves in the act of bedroom wickedness. First of all, don’t expect them to come with those black leather or fishnet outfits. No. They’ll tie wrapper, and that’s it. 

    Also, they don’t need handcuffs. They’ll just use Ankara strips to tie your hands and legs like a goat about to be slaughtered. 

    Koi koi shoe

    Fun fact: Nobody wears heels anymore these days. So if you see a woman adorning these, just know she’s going for dangerous bedroom play.

    Screenshots of their chats with other men

    She won’t read these to you o. She’ll print them out and give you. You’re the one that’ll read them by yourself and start crying. This is your daily reminder to cheat on Nigerian women because they’re already cheating on you, surely. 

    Male tears

    Because what’s a better lubricant?

  • What She Said: I Was Deported From the UK at 28, and I Have No Regrets

    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. This is Zikoko’s What She Said.

    Image credit: Upsplash, @vitaelondon

    This week’s #ZikokoWhatSheSaid subject is a 45-year-old Nigerian woman. She talks about spending the last 22 years in the UK moving from one menial job to another, not wanting her daughter to see her retire as a shop worker and finally going back to university.

    What’s something about life you’re enjoying?

    Working towards going back to school next year. It hasn’t been easy though. I didn’t think I’d actually care to get another degree after my bachelor’s in education in 1999. It took three months for me to even find my university certificate to apply for the programme I’m currently considering.

    So what prompted your decision to go back to school?

    After 14 years of working in retail stores in the UK, I’d like to get a proper white-collar job, possibly in a government office as administrative staff. 

    Retail is a time-consuming and physically tasking job. As I get older, I don’t see myself being able to keep up with loading shelves and working late nights. 

    An office job would come with much higher health insurance and retirement fund than my current job, and I’d get to close at 6 p.m. and stay home with my husband and daughter during public holidays. 

    Now that my daughter is eight and a lot more independent, I can sit down to work on my applications without so many distractions.

    Before your daughter, what made getting a new job difficult?

    I got into the UK illegally in 2001. I couldn’t settle in as an immigrant until 2008 when I married her dad. So at first, retail jobs were a means to getting paid in cash rather than opening up a bank account. It’s not possible to get one without proper papers.

    Omo. So how did you get into the UK?

    Through my older sister. She and her husband decided to take a trip with their three-year-old daughter to Cardiff, in 2001 and took me along. I was 24. After two months of living there, I couldn’t imagine coming back to Nigeria. I lived in Lagos with no job or real plans for the future. So when it was time to return, I told my sister I wanted to stay back. 

    Of course, she advised against it, but I felt I could manage on my own.

    And she was cool with that?

    No. But she couldn’t physically drag me back. 

    Image credit: iStock clipart

    Did you have any plans?

    I’d heard stories of a lot of Nigerians moving to the UK by refusing to leave after coming for a holiday. Of course, no one ever named names, but I knew there was some truth to the gossip. I felt like I could do the same.

    I didn’t think beyond staying back with the family friend we’d stayed with during our two-month holiday.

    So how did you scale through?

    Well, I got a cleaning job that paid cash. They didn’t ask me questions about my work permit. And since my brother-in-law schooled in Cardiff for his master’s, he was able to get me fake working papers through some of his friends.

    You weren’t caught. How?

    I made sure I didn’t walk around unnecessarily. If I didn’t have any houses to clean, I was home. But I knew hiding didn’t change the reality that I could be caught at any time. All it took was one random ID check or a phone call to the police from a colleague who didn’t like me. I made it as far as I did because of God. 

    My sister was also a huge support system. Back then, renewing visas wasn’t as complicated as it is now. So whenever my sister or her husband had a friend going back to Nigeria, I’d give them my passport and they’d pay for it to get stamped. We did that like once a year.

    Wow

    Yeah. We tried to tick all the boxes as much as we could under the radar. Plus, Cardiff is a small town, so people rarely got into your business. 

    I can’t imagine what it felt like to constantly be afraid

    I wasn’t thinking about that. I made the decision to stay and understood the consequences. There was no going back.

    After almost two years of living with my friend, I had to find my own place. She’d gotten pregnant and wanted her boyfriend to move in. I never liked the guy. Imagine coming home to an entitled white man who didn’t seem to have any plans for his life. There was no way I’d be comfortable putting up with him in those tiny UK flats.

    Were you prepared to move out?

    Yes and no. I honestly didn’t have a plan on how to get a permanent residence visa in the UK, but I was saving up to explore my options with school. The sudden transition from having a home to potentially being homeless was going to slow down the process.

    So what happened next?

    I got another job. This time, one of my colleagues from the cleaning company linked me with a man who needed someone to manage a home for homeless old people around the neighbourhood. He needed someone to make sure things didn’t get out of hand whenever he was out of town.

    The pay wasn’t great. But at least, I got a room to myself and didn’t have to pay for rent anymore. 

    He didn’t do a background check on you?

    He was an old man. I don’t think he cared. I just had to reassure him I had two years of experience in cleaning. The work extended to much more than cleaning though — I had to manage the daily activities of the guests — but what other options did I have?

    What gave you peace of mind, considering your illegal status?

    Mostly church. It was my happy place; my faith kept me together. I also had someone I started dating in 2004. We met in church when I first moved to the UK and things gradually grew between us. He was a Jamaican man born in Britain.

    He knew about my situation and supported me the best he could, but there were days I just wanted to go back home. 

    When did things start coming together for you?

    2008. But before then, things completely fell apart.

    What happened?

    I decided to get a new job in 2005. I’d spent a year working at the house, but I didn’t feel fulfilled spending my entire day stuck inside. I started to look out for store jobs that paid in cash. I didn’t want to continue with a cleaning job.

    How’d that go?

    The job I got was at a food store owned by an older Nigerian woman. She was a citizen, and quite friendly, so I opened up about my issues with documentation to her. It took me four months to get to that point of trust, but it was the worst mistake I made in the UK. 

    A few weeks after our conversation, immigration officers showed up at the store. Luckily, I was walking down to the store with my boyfriend that morning, so he followed me to their office.

    Do you think your boss snitched?

    Maybe. I never got a chance to confront her. Anyone working at the store could’ve overheard our conversation, or even a customer, who knows? But they came straight toward me, and I knew the last four years were going down the drain.

    Omo

    They took me to their office and things moved fast from there. 

    Since my boyfriend was a British citizen, he was able to intervene.

    How?

    The paid visa I’d gotten through my sister had expired a few weeks before I was caught. So my boyfriend told the officers he was the reason I hadn’t gone back to my country yet. He explained he wanted to travel back to Nigeria with me to get married, hence the delay. He also got a good immigration lawyer to plead for my passport to not be stamped since we’d be getting married soon.

    Did you still have to leave the country?

    Yes. I had a week to pack up and leave. But a year later, my boyfriend came to Nigeria for our wedding. We got married and moved to the UK immediately after our marriage certificates were ready.

    Before then, I won’t deny I’d lost hope. I wasn’t happy to be back in Lagos sharing a room with my niece and not having anything tangible to do every day. But I kept in touch with my partner through phone calls, and sometimes, Facebook.

    A part of me felt ashamed.

    Why shame?

    At 28, and after four years of living abroad, I didn’t have anything good to show for it. Compared to my older sister, my life was pretty unsuccessful. She was 31, married with two kids at that point, and to my parents, those were achievements. Praying was the only thing that kept me together during that one year in Lagos.

    Thinking about it now, would you have done things differently?

    No. I’m happy I took the risk in my early 20s. It wasn’t the wisest decision, but I’m here today. The struggle taught me I can survive anything. That’s why I’m not bothered about going back to school at 45.

    The only thing I’d change is coming back to the UK in 2008 after we got married, and sticking to the same menial jobs because it was the only thing I knew how to do. I don’t want to retire as a store attendant.

    I hope you’re able to change careers

    Thank you. I also want my daughter to be proud of me. I see how excited she gets when my husband talks about his job as a psychiatrist. I want her to look at me with the same pride when I talk about my day too.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

  • Nigerian Women Need to Leave Pasta Alone and Try Out These 8 Other Meals

    Ask a Lagos woman what she wants to eat and her first answer is “I don’t know” Her next answer is, “… pasta.” I need us to take a break for a bit and try out other meals. Beginning with meals from our beloved Nigeria, I’ve listed eight foods from different tribes across the country below. Try them and your life will never be the same. 

    Ekpang Nkukwo

    Ekpang Nkukwo is cocoyam porridge, and it’s one of the traditional meals of the Akwa Ibom and Cross River State people. It’s made with freshly grated cocoyams wrapped in tender cocoyam or ugu leaves. It’s a meal that can be very stressful and time-consuming to make yourself. So take advantage of your next lunch/dinner and order ekpang, instead of ordering pasta for the third night in a row.

    Gbanunu soup

    Gbanunu soup is a traditional soup from Ondo state. There are no words to describe how delicious this soup is. As I’m thinking about it, I’m looking for where I can order a plate today. Eat gbanunu with pounded yam or pupuru (cassava flour) which tastes just as good as any other swallow out there. 

    Ji mmiri oku 

    You’re ordering pasta when there’s hot, sweet yam pepper soup? Ji Mmiri Oku is a traditional meal of the Igbo people, and it tastes amazing — Yam pepper soup that’ll take you to a different realm entirely. Eat it on a rainy, cold day and experience it hit you differently. 

    An interesting fact: in Igbo land, this is usually the first dish given to a woman immediately after childbirth. It’s mostly prepared by her mother, who comes to take care of her for the first few months after childbirth (Omugwo).

    RELATED: We Ranked Nigerian Pepper Soups From Worst to Best

    Abanga 

    Abanga is unripe plantain pottage. A traditional dish of the people of Brass and Nembe in Bayelsa state. Eat it with palm oil and pepper soup with an assortment of seafood inside, if you want maximum enjoyment.

    Miyan taushe soup

    Food from northern Nigeria is not as appreciated as it should be, and we need to change that because they taste great. Miyan Taushe (pumpkin soup) is one I wish I could eat as often as possible. There’s just something about the flavours in the soup that makes it taste as great as it does. It may have something to do with the combination of pumpkin and groundnut. The soup can be eaten with tuwo (rice fufu) or any other type of swallow. 

    Ukang ukom 

    Another plantain porridge meal, but Efik edition. If you ever go to a Calabar wedding, you’d find this meal being served there. It’s how Lagos people see Amala; a ceremony isn’t complete without Ukang Ukom on the menu. This shows you how special this food is and why more people need to eat it. I encourage (read as: order) you to enter a Calabar restaurant today and order this. Stop looking at the creamy pasta on that restaurant’s menu that will most likely only come with only two tiny pieces of chicken. 

    ALSO READ: These Are the Easiest Nigerian Soups to Make, According to Ifeoluwa 

    Afia efere soup

    My first experience with afia efere (white soup) was when I visited a friend’s house and found her eating it. It’s a soup popular with the Efik people. Since that day, I haven’t looked back. Eat afia efere today and neither will you.

    Ofe Onugbu 

    This is a very popular Igbo soup made from bitter leaf and cocoyam paste. It’s so interesting how something so delicious comes from something so bitter. I recommend this soup to anyone and everyone. To enjoy it well, eat it with very hot eba. 


    Now that Pasta has been dealt with, let’s look at 7 Meals You Can Eat on Sunday Instead of Rice

  • What She Said: Scoliosis Won’t Stop Me From Retiring at 35

    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. This is Zikoko’s What She Said.

    This week’s #ZikokoWhatSheSaid subject is Itohan, a 20-year-old Nigerian woman. She talks about why surviving a scoliosis surgery was big for her, getting surgery in India, gaining weight after and growing into a thrill seeker who plans to retire at 35.


    Scoliosis is an abnormal curvature of the spine. The cause isn’t known, but symptoms typically occur from childhood and range from a hump in the lower back to uneven shoulders/hips.


    What’s something about your life that makes you happy?

    I guess my happy story is accomplishing shit. I’m a big brain, and to be honest, that’s bad bitch doings.

    Okay, smarty pants. What’s one big thing you’ve done at 20 that blows your mind?

    I’d say surviving my scoliosis surgery. That was big for me.

    In what way?

    The things I got to achieve after. I mean, it fucked up my weight and mental. But it is what it is; it happened. 

    I didn’t know I had scoliosis, right? I had a funny walk when I was 13, and my mum thought I was trying to do guy. But that same year, I saw a bunch of pamphlets about different medical things at home. It had everything on scoliosis, lung and heart diseases. I loved to read as a child, so I read all of them. 

    And?

    When I was done with the scoliosis pamphlet, I gave it to my mum and told her the symptoms were exactly what was happening to me. She read it and called my aunt who’s a nurse in the UK. She said I should go for an x-ray. I was right. 

    How did you feel about the diagnosis at 13?

    I felt relieved. Growing up, people made so many comments about my body. They still do, but back then, the comments made me feel like everything was my fault. So even though it was kind of sad finding out, I also felt happy. 

    I also wouldn’t have figured things out without reading the pamphlets. That’s why when people say they don’t self-diagnose, I’m like hmm… that’s what saved my life.

    So how did things progress after confirming it was scoliosis?

    Getting surgery was the first option, but I didn’t want one. The idea just made me so uncomfortable, and my mum said I didn’t have to do it if there were other options to explore. So that’s what began the many many hospital visits. 

    Were there drastic changes in other parts of your life?

    I was out of school more than I was in it. There were hospital visits three times a week, with a lot of tests and scans. But I was in SS 3, so for the most part, I didn’t need to be in school. The exhausting part for my mum and I was showing up at the hospital.

    But why so many hospital visits if you weren’t getting surgery though?

    I needed to get a brace customised for me at Igbobi Hospital. The doctors said there was nothing they could do except try to stop the spine from bending anymore. As in, my spine will be bent o, but they’d try to prevent it from getting worse.

    Omo 

    The doctors also told me my mum was irresponsible for not knowing I had scoliosis. When it’s not like scoliosis is something they teach everyone everywhere. 

    I’m really sorry about that. Did the brace help with your back, at least?

    No. It was so uncomfortable. I cried the first day I wore it. My mum had to hold me when we got home. I didn’t want to wear the god-forsaken thing. It was made of plastic, looked so weird and made my clothes bulky. And they said I’d have to wear it for at least 22 hours a day. As in, I’d sleep in it and only take it off to bathe. 

    I didn’t put it on again after the first day. I was ready to have the surgery and kept going for consultations until then..

    When did that happen?

    A year later. I’d turned 14 by then. Making the decision meant another round of tests. The main question was where the surgery could be done? My mum didn’t want it to halt my life. She wanted somewhere that would guarantee I’d get healed quickly and move on. Nigeria wasn’t an option for us.

    So how did things go in India?

    Can you believe the doctors in Igbobi refused to release my x-ray? They asked me to stay in Nigeria so they could monitor the progression of my sickness for the doctors to learn.

    I’m screaming

    LOL. My mother said, “you want to use my only child for practicals”. We stole my x-ray. We told one of the doctors we needed a photocopy of the documents. They told us to talk to the student doctors instead for any questions we had. I guess they were busy that day. 

    Luckily, the student didn’t stress about getting the documents for us to make photocopies. Turned out the main doctor in charge of my case had it in the boot of his car; is he not mad? When the student brought it back, my mum took it, entered our car and never went back to the hospital.

    Love it!

    A lot of James Bond stuff happened o. Like I paid for it, it was my property, but I had to steal it.

    But why did you choose India?

    Hospitals in the US said I’d need to stay for a year post-surgery. The UK said six months, Germany was three months, but India gave me two weeks to get back into a normal routine. Clearly, you can see where we went.

    Weren’t the extra days needed for recovery?

    They also wanted to use me for practicals. Staying was less about the recovery and more about monitoring my movement and abilities. It’s not common to have scoliosis surgery. Only 2% – 3% of children get it, so people wanted to use me as a test subject.

    So what happened after the Igbobi James bond saga?

    LOL. We started doing research on Indian hospitals for scoliosis surgery. We found one with the help of my mum’s old classmates. She also had a child who’d had surgery in India and recommended a place.

    How did it feel knowing things were about to get better?

    Experiencing India for the first time was the best part of the process. Their food slaps. But when they attempted to make Nigerian food in the hospital? The ghetto. I guess they were trying to make me comfortable as a child. And they seemed to like Nigerians as well. 

    I had doctors who’d come in after looking at my file saying “You Nigerian? I love Abuja, Lagos. Yes, yes. Great people.” The energy just didn’t reach the food. Imagine putting one whole okra in my stew. No grating or boiling, just raw okra inside stew to eat rice.

    LOL. Okra and rice is normal in Côte d’Ivoire, sis.

    Fair enough. The free drinks were compensation. Once you enter a shop, “orange juice? mango juice?” everywhere. 

    Free? Please explain this to my Lagosian eyes.

    LOL. It was their culture. Whenever you went into a store they’d hand you a pet-sized bottle of juice. Maybe it had to do with being a foreigner. I drank juice tire sha. And the hospital stuffed me with milk at least four times a day because I needed the calcium.

    It sounds like you had a pretty good time considering you were there for risky surgery

    Being sad wasn’t going to change anything. The best thing to do was eat the free food and enjoy the city. I was cleared to leave after two weeks, but we stayed an extra two or three days because my mum’s passport was seized at the hospital.

    Sorry?!

    Yeah, Nigeria was refusing to let our money clear. My cousins in the UK and US sent money as well, but it didn’t reflect. The hospital could see we’d tried to pay, so they kept my mum’s passport while they waited to receive the funds.

    That’s crazy stuff. How were you doing post-surgery though?

    I gained a lot of weight. Of course, the food had something to do with it. But because I had just done surgery on my spine, I wasn’t active. For six months, I couldn’t play rugby like I used to in school or move around too much.

    What did you do with the six months of inactivity?

    JAMB lessons. The year I went for the surgery cut into my time for JAMB and WAEC. Not getting into school with my friends really got to me. But my mum wanted me to be useful to myself and forced me to focus on writing the exams. Eventually, things got better.

    How?

    First, I was taller. The surgery straightened the bones of my back to an extent. 

    Nice. And the second part?

    I eventually got into uni when I was 15. But there was a strike in federal universities right before I was meant to resume, so I had to stay home. I got a job as a cashier and an assistant at a pharmacy close to my house. I didn’t want to be stuck at home doing nothing all over again. And being good at the job made me feel validated and important. 

    That’s really sweet

    Yeah. Uni was also a pretty good experience for me. I got a full scholarship for my whole degree and that boosted the way I saw myself. I felt smart, and I hadn’t felt that way in a long time. 

    No one tells you how difficult it is to be held back because you’re sick. I gained so much weight from all the food in India and the rest period too. It really fucked up my psyche. The medications added to how much my body changed, so I know it’s out of my control.

    Hm. What parts of life are you looking forward to in your 20s?

    Retiring at 35. I’ve been working since I was 14. After the pharmacy job, I wrote non-fictional stories about the people I met. I got a job as a writer when I was 18, and I’ve worked my way up to being a junior editor since then.  

    So after all that work, I can’t retire like other people at 60. The corporate world shouldn’t have that much of my life.

    LOL. I feel like everyone says this, but it’ll eventually get really boring having that much free time at 35

    LOL. Going through surgery makes you realise just how much life has to offer. And I want to live a full life. I want to dance, sing, teach, travel and live as many lives as possible. It doesn’t have to be a long life for me; it just has to be full.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why  

  • Give Women One of These Eight Things and They’ll Love You Forever

    “What do women really want?”  is a question people have asked for ages. We’ve done the research, and here’s what Nigerian women have to say: 

    Silence 

    Believe it or not, women just want peace of mind. After work, after listening to our partners lie to us and our parents tell us what to do, we actually just want some peace and quiet. 

    Multiple sources of free money

    We don’t just want free money, we want free money from multiple sources. From our mouths to God’s ears. 

    Related: Gen Z Women Will Never Spend Their Money on These 7 Overrated Things

    A fat bank account 

    Is this too much to ask for? The people with fat bank accounts, do they have two heads? Everyone who’s supposed to be involved in making this happen needs to fix up.

    No men trouble 

    From fathers and brothers to partners and random men on the street, we really just want ease, guys. 

    To be naked 

    We love being naked. Any chance we get to take our clothes off for comfort, we take it. Whether it’s taking off our wigs or bras, it has the same effect.

    Related: 8 Things Women Do When They’re Home Alone

    A vacation we didn’t pay for 

    We want to wake up to a note that says, “Baby, here’s a ticket to Dubai, and some money to shop while you’re at it.” We know it’s not difficult to achieve. 

    No periods 

    Without pregnancy. Even if we have periods, why must it come with symptoms like cramps, acne, bloating and diarrhea? If there was a world without all of this, we’d take it. 

    Free clothes

    A wardrobe full of clothes we didn’t pay for would totally bang, especially in this economy. The way we’d strut? Out of this world.

    Now that you know what women really want, here’s an article on some women’s wrongs we support.

  • This Is Why Women Can’t Decide What to Eat

    Men constantly complain about how women are never able to decide on what they want to eat. But have they ever asked us why? No, they haven’t. That’s why I’m here, to solve the mystery of why women can’t decide on what to eat. 

    Fear of world damnation 

    The very first time a woman (Eve) decided what she wanted to eat, it caused God to punish the entire human race. . You want us to go through that again? Abeg o 

    We’re being considerate of your money

    If we eat N16,500 stir-fry Chinese pasta now, you’ll drag us on Twitter. We don’t know what exactly you can afford, and you won’t tell us your budget. So, of course, we’re going to struggle with deciding what to eat. 

    Fear of food poisoning 

    There’s a chance that we may eat the wrong thing, and our stomachs will suffer for it. We have to carefully think about what may or may not give us a running stomach. If you men don’t care about your health, that’s your business. 

    ALSO READ: 11 Ways to Know Your Food Has Been Poisoned

    The question puts us under unnecessary pressure 

    The question, “What do you want to eat?” comes with a lot of pressure.Who in their right mind immediately has an answer to that? Then when you try to make it easier by giving us options, all the suggestions are awful. This is why we always end up eating pasta. It’s the safest thing we can say under the pressure of trying to choose. 

    Why don’t you know what I want to eat? 

    As my friend or significant other, or even someone I’m on a first date with, why don’t you know what I want to eat? If you’re someone I’m close to in any way, you should know me well enough to decide what I want. You should be able to read my mind and choose one of the options in my head. I said what I said. 

    Too many options to choose from

    We get very overwhelmed when we have too many options to choose from, and this also includes having too many food options. Sometimes, we wish we could have everything on the menu. Because how are we supposed to choose between lamb chops, sushi, stir-fry pasta, giant prawns and rice.? Asking us to pick just one is pure wickedness. 

    Your food may taste better

    We’ll choose what to eat, then later realise that your food tastes better. Then we’re thinking maybe we should have ordered yours instead. Sometimes, it’s not that we can’t decide, it’s that we’re waiting for you to decide so that we can eat your food, then see if it’s what we want to eat, or maybe we want the initial food we were going to go with. 

    What if you ask us to pay? 

    Stories on Twitter NG will show you that this happens more often than you think. Nigerian men will surprise you out of the blue when that cheque is brought. That’s when you’ll find out that you’re going Dutch, and he’s only going to pay for his meat pie and water. This is why we can’t decide what to eat. In our heads, we’re having thoughts like “The steak is looking good, but this man may ask me to pay, so what do I order instead?” If you think about it, men are the cause of this.  Just like everything else. 

    We don’t know what we want 

    Simple and short, we just don’t know what we want.. We don’t even know if we’re hungry at that moment. Or if it’s drinks or maybe just snacks we want instead of food. We don’t have an answer. Leave us alone. 

    Another article on Nigerian women and food: 6 Nigerian Women Talk About Their Unhealthy Relationship With Food