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relationships | Page 5 of 14 | Zikoko! relationships | Page 5 of 14 | Zikoko!
  • My Best Friend and I Plan to Marry Each Other if We’re Still Single at 30

    My Best Friend and I Plan to Marry Each Other if We’re Still Single at 30

    Marriage pacts only exist in Hollywood movies. Or so I thought until I came across this tweet.

    So I reached out to Clara, who explained that even though people think she and her best friend, Timi, are holding out for each other, the idea behind the pact is much different. But why make the pact, and what does it really mean to them?

    This is Clara’s story, as told to Boluwatife

    Image: Chris F via Pexels

    I met Timi in 2015, when we were in SS 2 of the same secondary school. But we didn’t really consider each other as friends.

    We started talking when our school set up extra lessons to pump our class with as much knowledge as possible for the coming Cambridge IGCSE exams. This happened over a two-month period between August and September.

    He used to sit behind me during prep period, and at first, we only talked about the lessons. In fact, he’s the reason I know mathematics today. He sucked at English, which I was great at, but was better at maths. It was a help-me-I-help-you situation. 

    Our relationship didn’t progress past classmates till we went home for a two-week break after the Cambridge extra lessons. We got each other’s numbers from the school’s group chat, and would randomly chat. Timi had this friend I liked, so I was trying to confirm with him whether his friend liked me too.

    We resumed SS 3 in October and bonded over him trying to help me get together with his friend — classic Hollywood rubbish — and still assisting each other to prepare for exams. I helped him with essays and biology, and he helped me with stuff like matrix and coding. We also read together in the library. The exams came in November, and it was stressful. Not everyone wrote the Cambridge exams, so it became a shared experience we could talk and complain to each other about.

    I later quit trying to date his friend because I started liking someone else. And that’s when it became apparent that Timi and I were friends beyond me trying to date his friend. We’d even stopped talking about the guy at that time. We’d started talking about how different our lives would be in a year, when we’d leave for university in other countries. He was to leave for Canada, and I, the UK. We soon left school for Christmas break and kept in touch.

    On Christmas Day 2015, we officially agreed to be friends. My mum’s boyfriend decided to take her, my sister and I to a Chinese restaurant that day. It was strange because we typically spent Christmas at home; I’m usually lukewarm to the season.


    RELATED: I Feel Guilty for Wanting to Celebrate Christmas


    I texted Timi about it; something like, “You’re a new person in my life, so maybe that’s why I’m doing something new for Christmas.” He asked where we went because his family also went out. I mentioned the place, and it turned out he was also there. What are the odds that we were at the same place at the same time? We met at the reception and spoke for a while. Then he said it was the first time he’d see someone outside school and actually be happy to meet them. I said, “At this point, we’re actually friends”. It was the first time we mentioned being friends.

    Our relationship became even better after that. We spent more time together, and on December 31, he went, “Now that we’re friends, I hope to have you in my life every last day of the year”.

    The moment I started thinking of Timi as my best friend was when he did something for me that no one else had ever done. There was this book I was reading in the library, “Her Mother’s Hope” by Francine Rivers. It had about a thousand pages, and I couldn’t finish it in one go because I only had a three-hour library time. It was also popular among library goers; people used to rush it. This guy actually hid the book somewhere only I’d find it in the library. He did that until I finished reading it. It was so thoughtful that he considered my enjoyment. 

    For him, he started thinking of me as his best friend when I showed him my appendectomy scar in school. I just found that out when he mentioned it during an interview we had with my friend Jojo in February 2023 — for a friendship-inspired Valentine’s blog. It was the first time someone did a story about our friendship.

    Leaving secondary school was an emotional period because we thought we’d never see each other again. He left for Canada soon after, but I delayed my UK plan and went to a university in Nigeria instead. We kept in touch with calls and texts, but our friendship affected some of our other relationships because we were young and didn’t understand how our closeness could make other people feel a type of way. 

    One of my exes didn’t understand why I’d drop everything once it was time to jump on a call with Timi. To me, it was “Timi time”. One of his exes also asked him to choose between me and her. He chose me, and that’s how wahala started; she left. I think we were just excited about being each other’s person. I learnt how to be a friend through Timi. I had no real understanding of friendship before him.

    After 2016, when he left for Canada, we didn’t see each other again till 2018. It was a tough year for both of us. Timi was going through mental health issues; finding his feet in a new environment wasn’t easy. My boyfriend at the time had just passed away in a car accident. Our shared grief brought us together again. Timi flew to Nigeria because he didn’t want me to bury my dead alone. I still remember hugging him for the longest time, and looking at him, happy I could touch him again. 

    By 2021, I was in my last semester at university and decided I wanted to be a hoe. The thing is, I’m not good at relationships. Neither is Timi. But it’s not because we’re holding out for each other, as people assume. I have some very unorthodox “doctrines”. For example, I believe you should be able to confirm from a potential partner’s ex whether the person they’re a good partner or not. I know I’m a good partner, but I don’t know what it is. We just don’t tend to date people for a long time.


    ALSO READ: I Couldn’t Keep Up With My Overambitious Boyfriend, So I Left


    When I decided to be a hoe, I had a series of short flings with about seven people within a span of six months. I talked to Timi about how I was about to leave yet another fling, and he said he’d just left someone too and that he didn’t know if something was wrong with him because the girl was nice. I joked about us possibly losing our future spouses due to our unseriousness. He said he wasn’t worried because if, in the end, we didn’t marry, we’d just marry each other. It was just a joke at the time, but we kept reaffirming it and even told friends. What people don’t get is that, it’s not a thing of surrender. It’s our way of telling ourselves we’d never truly be alone because we’ll always have each other. 

    I know many people, even many of our friends, will never believe we’re just friends. We don’t mention the pact to potential partners because we’ve learned from how we handled our friendship in past relationships, and I try not to present him as a threat. It’s not like we’re hiding the pact — obviously, it’s viral now — but we downtone it in respect of the other people in our lives. 

    My mum thinks I’m wasting my time and should just marry someone who understands my on-and-off nature. She thinks my relationships don’t last because I’m unconsciously saving myself for him and that when we’re done being children, we’d marry. But we’re not just settling for each other. We’d only marry if it’s in the cards and the stars align.

    My friendship with Timi is one of the strongest relationships I have right now. We have calls that last till midnight, where we’d talk about everything and anything. 

    Have I ever thought about what it’d be like if we were actually together? Yes, but I always give myself a reality check. I’m in the UK now — he’s still in Canada — and I’m not a long-distance relationship girl. I don’t see the need to ask if he’s thought about the possibility of a relationship because it’ll unnecessarily put us both in an uncomfortable position and might ruin the best thing that’s ever happened to me. 

    Why ruin this good thing all because of “Does he love me? Will it work?” questions? I don’t know if he’s ever entertained such thoughts, but I know I don’t need to prod him into any romantic situation. If it’ll happen, it’ll happen. We’re both 23 and single now, so we have seven years till we’re 30, to do magic and find someone.


    LIKED THIS? READ THIS NEXT: I Was Married Three Years Before My Husband Knew I Had Kids

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  • Love Life: We’ll Never Forget When We Bought Our First Sallah Ram

    Love Life: We’ll Never Forget When We Bought Our First Sallah Ram

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

    How did you meet?

    Zayyan: We’ve always known each other. We’re family friends and from the same town in Kebbi State. Although we’ve both lived in Lagos most of our lives, our parents were all neighbours in Gwandu. So in Lagos, we and some other families were all very close-knit.

    Rabi: Yes. He attended the same secular schools in Lagos as my brothers and some of my cousins. And we visited each other’s houses a lot as kids. But when he went to Dubai for university in 2011, and I went to the UK the next year, we stopped communicating as much. We didn’t lose contact, but we just never called or texted each other. He only commented on my few IG posts once in a while.

    So how did you reunite?

    Rabi: By 2018, we were both back in Nigeria for one reason or the other. But my family had relocated to Abuja while his was still in Lagos. 

    With our return to the country and renewed interaction with mutual family friends, I started hearing general news about him and his family. Then early in 2019, his sister came to Abuja and stopped by my family house for a few days. On one of those days, Z called her, and we all spoke for several minutes. I was able to catch up with him and all he was doing with his life. It was during this long, drawn-out chat that he jokingly said I’ve always been his secret crush, and he’d come to visit us when he has business in Abuja.

    Zayyan: I didn’t realise I said that until she told me later on. But I wasn’t able to go to Abuja until around September 2019. I dropped by her house, greeted her father and saw her briefly. I spent my weeks in Abuja more with her elder brother and some other of our childhood friends.

    But I admired her from afar and got to know she wasn’t seeing anyone. However, I didn’t ask her about it before leaving later in the month.

    Rabi: The crush thing surprised me because, when we were young, I never ever imagined he’d like me or we would date, talk less of marry.

    What changed?

    Rabi: In November, one of us was getting married and formed a WhatsApp group for all of us childhood friends. We’d all gotten very close again, especially with most of us returning to Nigeria after years overseas. The group was created so we could support and contribute to our mutual friend’s wedding. 

    This guy was our age mate, getting married so early, and to a Taraba girl. We were so amazed and happy for him. We all came through for him, and during this period, we’d all communicate and hang out a lot. There was also a lot of interaction with everyone’s parents to make sure everything was in order. 

    Somehow, me and Z got close. We always happened to be in charge of the same tasks, and my father was also more likely to decide on what he’d do regarding the wedding with his father than the other parents, even though we were states apart.

    Zayyan: It’s because they think alike and have always gotten along great.

    Rabi: Yes. So during that wedding period, Baba would ask me to ask you something about your father, or pass a message across if, for some reason, they couldn’t reach each other directly. That’s how we got to really talking. 

    Then the wedding day came, and of course, it was beautiful. About 20 of us booked an entire floor of a hotel in Birnin. It was an amazing time. And it was there we decided to see each other.

    RELATED: Love Life: We’re Soulmates Who’ve Been Together Since JSS 1

    Wait. Hold up. How did that happen?

    Zayyan: We had a connection during the week leading up to the wedding. It felt like we were dating already, the way we treated each other. We’d always pair up on bridal outings and check up on each other. At one point, we were talking every hour of every day. 

    So after the couple got married and took off, I didn’t want our own connection to end. I realised I’d go back to Lagos, and she’ woul’d return to her life in the capital. We’d have nothing to keep us in touch, so we’d drift apart. I didn’t want that to happen. I wanted her in my life for good. 

    And it’s good I spoke up because she was going for her master’s in January and didn’t tell me.

    Rabi: Baba didn’t want me talking about it to anyone. And it didn’t come up between us. 

    But when Z discovered this, he decided to apply for the May intake. I was surprised when he called to tell me he’d gotten an admission to my school. It’s not that easy to get in on that particular intake, especially when you don’t plan ahead. 

    You got to love a man who’d go to school just to be with you

    Rabi: True. Maybe that’s why I love him.

    Zayyan: A master’s degree was always part of the plan for me, so why not do it at the same time and place as the woman I wanted to make my wife?

    God, abeg o. Am I a pencil?

    Zayyan: It turned out to be terrible timing because COVID happened in February/March, and although I got the admission, I had to try again for the September and the next January intake before UK allowed me to travel to their precious land.

    Rabi: Yes, our enemies were really pressed. By then, I was done with my one-year program, but he convinced me to stick around for his own. It was an expensive decision. We had to figure out housing, surviving on student jobs and allowance from home. But it all worked out in the end.

    Zayyan: I proposed to her at my graduation in 2022, which started a family war.

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

    Ah. Why and how?

    Zayyan: Well, her parents didn’t know she was staying back in Buckingham with me. That’s one. 

    Then when I proposed, I did it in front of my father and some of my siblings. They were all happy to see her, but they didn’t know we’d been together all that while. My father didn’t react well to having to find out when I was asking her to marry me. 

    But the real war started when photos of us got to her parents the next day.

    Rabi: My mother rang up my phone and started ranting about how my father was furious with me and disappointed. I was quite shocked. I couldn’t even get a word in.

    Zayyan: At that point, we both still thought they were angry because we’d been living together in England.

    It wasn’t just that?

    Zayyan: It wasn’t.

    Rabi: So we got to find out that me and Z share a great great grandfather who was an Emir. And apparently, our fathers regard each other as brothers.

    Zayyan: It was ridiculous to me. We aren’t even cousins. In the past, didn’t first cousins marry each other?

    Ah. So how did y’all move past that?

    Rabi: We had to return to Nigeria first, in February 2022. But our fathers insisted we couldn’t marry. They said it was taboo and Allah wouldn’t bless our marriage, so why would they? It was scary because Z and I had already gone through so much together. The thought of us just ending things seemed like a huge heartbreak I wasn’t sure I had the strength for.

    Zayyan: It was scary. Most people would say they just won’t take it and either marry anyway or do everything they can to force their parents’ hands. But the truth is, it’s extremely hard to go against your parents’ wishes, especially with something as important as marriage. So I had to pray about it.

    Then sometime in April, when I went to Kebbi for a cousin’s turbaning ceremony at the Emir’s palace, I spoke to some princes about it. They all agreed that our fathers were being unreasonable. They agreed to persuade the Emir to summon them. 

    Rabi: We don’t know what happened next, but by the end of May, when I was considering returning to the UK to be with my sister in London, my father asked to see me and said he’d told Z we could marry. I was so shocked I actually thought he was just pulling my legs.

    Zayyan: I’d had a meeting with our fathers a night before, where they’d given me their blessing.

    Thank God for the Emir?

    Rabi: Subhanallah. 

    Zayyan: The whole thing suddenly made us eager to get married. When I proposed in January, I didn’t even think we’d be married within the year. I just wanted to show my commitment to her. But after our fathers finally gave their blessings, we wanted to be married the next day, if possible.

    Rabi: But preparations delayed his eagerness by three more months.

    So how was the wedding?

    Zayyan: It was great. We brought together the same gang from the wedding that brought us together in 2019, give or take a few people. In fact, we used the same WhatsApp group. It survived at least two weddings since that first one. 

    Rabi: If you see our fathers smiling from ear to ear because the Emir attended briefly, you wouldn’t believe they spent five months opposing the whole thing.

    Zayyan: We ended up doing two nikahs. One in Birnin and the other in her father’s sitting room in Maitama because he wanted his Imam’s special prayers. Then we did two receptions as well. Our parents paid for everything, so they could do as they liked. We just went with whatever.

    And how has married life been since?

    Rabi: It’s been nine months already. That’s amazing.

    Zayyan: What can I say? It’s been good. Nothing much has changed. We just do a lot more things together and share a last name.

    Rabi: Last week, we bought our very first ram together as a couple, and it made me so happy inside.

    Zayyan: Yes, we won’t forget that experience in a while. Bibi made us go to Wuse Market so we could get the whole ram-buying experience. Something we could’ve ordered from the comfort of our home. But it wasn’t all bad — even though they cheated us.

    Rabi: Kai. We paid extra for the real market experience.

    Zayyan: This is our first real Eid as a couple because, apart from fasting together, we’ve never gone all out like this before. It’s the best.

    On a scale of 1-10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Zayyan: I’d say 8. It’s been great so far. The foundation is strong.

    Rabi: 10. It’s been perfect, and we’re expecting a bundle of joy soon too. Mashallah.

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

    RECOMMENDED: Love Life: I Only Proposed After I Met Her Mum

  • Here’s How AI Can Fix Your Love Life

    Here’s How AI Can Fix Your Love Life

    Text chatGPT instead of entering a talking stage

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

    Become more romantic

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

    Shoot more shots without needing more rizz

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

    Settle every fight before they happen

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

    In fact, your whole relationship can be on autopilot

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

    More time on your hands

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

    Gift ideas won’t require much thought

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

    You can safely vent at chatGPT

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


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


  • Why Nigerian Men Avoid Blind Dates

    Why Nigerian Men Avoid Blind Dates

    Nigerian men have audacity. That “I’ve to see it through, my boy” type of audacity. But at the sudden mention of blind dates, they lose sight of the endgame.

    They may argue that it’s not a popular concept in Nigeria and say they’re not desperate for love, but we know actual reasons why they avoid it.

    They like making their own decisions

    If you like, know Nigerian men best, know what satisfies them and what turns them on and off, they’ll twist it and say you don’t think they’re decisive. To them, that’s putting their eggs in someone else’s basket in their book. Best to leave them to their ultimate search for love.

    They’re on all the dating apps

    Blind dates aren’t Nigerian men’s cup of tea. Everything is easier now, they can just hop on RCCG’s ConnectNow and swipe till they find their spec.

    Likely to meet an ex

    Men that have slept with the whole Nigeria. Especially Abuja and Lagos men. They won’t go on blind dates because the chances that it’s a babe they’ve ghosted is high. 

    Everywhere is hard

    Where’s the money? In these agbado times?  The cost of living is too high to risk it. They’re blind to blind dates.

    Yo, attention.

    Send your submissions here.

    Fear of rejection

    Nigerian men think of themselves as odogwu and king of boys, but they can’t handle rejection. Ego gets bruised and they start asking if they’re not good-looking enough and start showing banks accounts. These same men on blind dates?

    Avoid becoming Twitter gist

    Nothing sends cold shivers down a man’s spine more than scenes where his date goes on Twitter to sew threads about the experience. The fear of dragging is the beginning of wisdom.

    Forming hard guy

    Blind dates are for hopeless romantics. Small heartbreak, Nigerian men can’t take. The way they say “is it love we’ll eat?”, “money over everything,” you’ll realise 24 hours isn’t enough time for them to think about money. But the truth is, they’re just running from heartbreak.

    READ: Can Nigerian Men Just Slow Down on These Things?

  • How to Nab a Cheating Boyfriend

    How to Nab a Cheating Boyfriend

    The Zikoko Bureau of Statistics is here again. After gathering evidence from over 3000 relationships and 450 single pringles who’ve made a name off giving relationship advice, we present the results of our study on how to know if your boyfriend is cheating. It’s sure to stand the test of time. 

    When he changes barbers frequently

    Cheating boyfriend
    Source: Zikoko memes

    If he can cheat on them, what makes you think you’ll be different?

    If he has no password on his phone

    Cheating boyfriend
    Source: Zikoko memes

    We won’t say if he has a password because duh. But what if when he doesn’t have a password? That is an even bigger red flag. That must mean he has a burner phone. We don’t make the rules.

    If he’s always smiling

    Cheating boyfriend
    Source: Zikoko memes

    I’m sorry, but what’s funny in this life? It means he must be hiding something. 

    When he suddenly becomes more active on social media

    Cheating boyfriend
    Source: Zikoko memes

    Especially when he starts posting more pictures on Instagram. Young man, who are you trying to impress?

    If he comes from a particular tribe

    Cheating boyfriend
    Source: Zikoko memes

    We won’t name names, but the facts back up this hypothesis.

    When he starts cooking for you

    Source: Zikoko memes

    Covering up your atrocities with kind acts? We know your type.

    When he starts listening to Fela

    It means he’s considering polygamy and has probably already started testing the waters.

  • I Couldn’t Keep Up With My Overambitious Boyfriend, So I Left

    I Couldn’t Keep Up With My Overambitious Boyfriend, So I Left

    This is Dorcas’* story, as told to Boluwatife

    Image: Godisable Jacob via Pexels

    I caused my first and only real heartbreak at 21, but even though it felt like tearing my heart out, I’d do it again if I had to.

    I met Joseph* in 2014, our first year at the university. We were still settling into school life, and he was this active, outspoken guy who seemed to be everywhere at once. I, on the other hand, was what you’d describe as a wallflower. When the time came for us to choose a class governor, he was the obvious choice. That was how we got close. A lecturer had given us an assignment due at the end of the day, and I was nowhere near finished, so I met Joseph and begged him to delay submitting everyone’s work by an hour. He did, and that’s how we became friends.

    He soon started telling me he liked me, and I liked how it seemed he only had eyes for me. We started dating about a month after the assignment incident and were together through all five years in school. It wasn’t all smooth, though.

    Joseph was a loud and very ambitious person, a walking representation of an “I must get everything I want” mantra. He always wanted to be better than everyone, the poster boy of success. I’m the direct opposite of that. 

    As the daughter of a preacher, I grew up with a contentment mentality. My siblings and I were taught to enjoy the simple things — food, a roof over our heads and just enough money to meet our basic needs and maybe help those around us. Even though I started rebelling against religion around the time I entered university, I still have the same mindset. Economists tell us that man’s needs are unlimited; we’ll always want the next big thing. That sounds like a wasted life to me, where you can’t enjoy what you have because something else looks better, and you just need to have it. For as long as I can remember, I’ve just wanted to be. Not to want something so much, it affects my life. 

    This personality clash was the major cause of the fights Joseph and I had.

    When he ventured into student union politics in our second year, he struggled to understand why I thought he needed to focus on his studies instead. He also didn’t understand why I was angry that he decided to spend all his savings on a Nokia Lumia when he still had a perfectly working phone because, in his words, “Everyone is using Nokia Lumia now”. 

    He also expected me to get that his sudden friendship and partying with shady guys on campus was because he needed to boost his street credibility ahead of running for student union president. Through all this, it didn’t occur to me to leave him. He was all I knew, and maybe this was due to his “must-have-everything” nature, but he constantly showered me with love and attention. There was no reason for me to want more.


    RELATED: My Husband Woke Up One Day and Decided to Join Politics


    The extent of how far he’d go for success only became fully apparent to me after we left school in 2019. He didn’t go for service immediately because he had to sort out some issues with the school’s senate, so I worked my NYSC posting to the same state we were in so he wouldn’t feel left out, and I’d be closer to him. 

    But even with that, he started getting frustrated about his mates being ahead of him, so he told me he’d decided to make money via internet fraud. I was shocked. This was someone whose parents were quite comfortable and who lacked nothing. His rationale was, Nigeria didn’t reward honest work, and that his parent’s money was theirs, not his. He gave two of his cousins as examples. They’d been working for about four years at the time, but still couldn’t afford a car. As is typical of him, he gave what he thought were convincing reasons why he had to “make a name” for himself. He said it was so he could also provide for me. He assured me he’d only do it for a few years until he made enough money to leave the country.

    That’s when I mentally checked out of the relationship. If he could go this far to make money he didn’t really need, what happens if he someday became broke? I knew I had to leave, but I didn’t know how. Then about four months later, in late 2019, he landed a tech job. I was relieved, thinking it’d be the end of internet fraud. But remember what the economists say? He was used to having more and didn’t want to be limited to a salary, so he still did fraud on the side. That was what finally gave me the courage to end the relationship. I cried for weeks after, but I know it was the best decision I’ve ever made. 

    He’s a high-flying tech bro now — I see his exploits every now and then on LinkedIn — but I know he’ll always be looking for the next big thing, legal or not. I can’t live like that. If I’d stayed, we’d probably be a “power couple”, but I wouldn’t be at peace. I may never gather enough money from my 9-5 to go on a luxury vacation or japa, but I’m fulfilled with what I have; a career, friends and good health. I’m at peace.


    *Names have been changed to protect their identity.


    NEXT READ: I’m the Odd One in My Friend Group, and It’s Lonely

  • Love Life: I Only Proposed After I Met Her Mum

    Love Life: I Only Proposed After I Met Her Mum

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

    How did you two meet?

    Bamidele: It was something like a blind date in 2018. 

    A female friend at the office had been telling me about her for some months. But I didn’t want to get someone’s number and start getting to know them over the phone. And I’d been too busy with work and personal projects to follow her to hang out with them. 

    Finally, she asked me out for drinks even though she was in a committed relationship. I knew she wanted me to meet the person she’d been trying to hook me up with, so I was like, “Let me just finally meet this person.” I went along with it, and that’s how we met.

    Joyce: It was completely blind for me. I didn’t know this friend of ours wanted to introduce me to anyone. I went to this lounge innocently and found myself on a blind date. It was the first time I’d ever been in that kind of situation. The friend left us, and we just sat there, talking a bit, trying to be cool.

    Sounds like it was awkward

    Joyce: Kind of. We weren’t really giving each other a chance. I don’t think we thought we’d ever see each other again.

    Bamidele: That’s not true. I thought you were chill and wouldn’t have minded seeing you again.

    Joyce: But you didn’t even ask for my number or socials.

    Bamidele:  I was absentminded. I guess a part of me knew I could get that from our friend, which I did much later.

    So what happened after the first date?

    Joyce: We didn’t see each other until our friend invited me for a get-together on her boyfriend’s street like two months later, and he was there. 

    About an hour after I arrived, we somehow drifted to each other and said hi. He told me he got my number from our friend and asked if he could call me later. I said he was free to. I remember thinking, “Why is this one forming?”

    Bamidele: I wasn’t forming o. I was just extremely busy because my job at the time was killing me with work. I probably didn’t have any social activity between our blind date and that second meeting. My life was pretty much work and sleep that year.

    Joyce: Anyway, he didn’t call until the following week. 

    He just called one Saturday night while I was watching Netflix. I almost didn’t pick up, but thank God for Truecaller. When I saw his name, I was surprised and really curious. We talked for like 30 seconds, then he said he’d chat me up on WhatsApp. Like an hour later, I got the ping, and that’s how we chatted on and off for the rest of the night. We talked about his work, my family, his trips out of Lagos and the movie I was watching.

    Bamidele: It was a nice, light conversation. I like the way she answered and asked questions.

    Joyce: But then, that was it for another month.

    Bamidele: I had a huge project at work for the rest of the month, so I couldn’t really reach out.

    Hmm. When did you now realise you liked each other?

    Bamidele: The next month, I called and apologised for ghosting, and she made a joke out of it. I was like, “Why na?” I asked her if she wanted to hang out soon. We ended up going out for ice cream the next day, and I realised she could make a joke or witty statement out of anything. I thought that was really cool. 

    When we hung out again a week later, I found myself expecting the next joke and almost predicting the kind of statement she’d make every time I said something. Also, I noticed she had such a beautiful smile. I couldn’t not smile when she smiled.

    Joyce: Meanwhile, I only make jokes like that when I’m nervous. My jokes help me cover my social anxiety, but I’m glad you find that beautiful. 

    I can’t tell when or how I started liking him. I just did. The first thing I admired about him was how serious he is about work. He’s so focused, and that’s why he’s now making plenty money for us. Also, he’s cute in that bookish way that’s so adorable. Lastly, he’s really smart. He helped me read for and pass one of my ICAN exams in 2019, and all my other exams since then.

    That’s very important

    Bamidele: That only happened after we started dating sha. Would I study for an exam with you if I don’t like you? No. 

    After we’d hung out about three times, I wanted to make it official. I asked her out during a beach hangout with my friends.

    Joyce: It was really romantic but private; nobody knew he was asking me out. He took me out towards the water, and I was so happy when he said the words. Maybe it was the lagoon breeze blowing my head. I just accepted without even thinking twice.

    When did like turn to love?

    Joyce: I actually don’t know.

    Bamidele: You never seem to know. 

    Joyce: Maybe because I’m always thinking of love as that over-the-top thing they describe in romance novels. Ours is very normal.

    Bamidele: Wow. Ok o. Me too, I don’t know. 

    I just know that towards the end of 2019, I was ready to get married, so I started thinking deeply about our relationship and where it was going. Should I propose or not? 

    I was about to ask you to just move in with me when I met your mother.

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

    Huh?

    Joyce: My father is no longer in the picture, so it’s just my mum and I. One day in January 2020, she insisted on meeting this guy I’d been claiming to date for over a year. I just told him, “My mum wants to meet you o. Will you come to my house?” Of course, he’d been to my house many times before, but only when my mother wasn’t around. I don’t even know why.

    Bamidele: I eventually went with her to meet her mum, and as soon as I met her, I knew I wanted to marry Joyce. 

    No, my mother-in-law is a beautiful and kind woman. The way she treated me like I was already her son? She’d prepared a whole feast for us — amala and abula with ogufe and panla fish. She also bakes, so she made this moist chocolate cake with real chocolate in five slim layers. Then there were the juicy bananas she grew herself in her backyard. 

    I can’t even describe how full I was by the time I left the house that day. And we talked and talked about everything from work, business and the state of the country, to football and celebrity gist. She’s so easygoing, I can’t believe she’s a Yoruba mother. 

    By the time, I left the house, I was sure Joyce was the one for me, LOL. 

    Joyce: Thank you, Mummy.

    How did the proposal and wedding go? 

    Bamidele: I took her back to the same beach for the proposal, but this time, it was just the two of us. Nothing too dramatic — I got on one knee and had a nice ring that cost me my whole salary for a month.

    Joyce: Sweet.

    Bamidele: The proposal was in February 2020, and before we could say, “Jack” or start thinking of family introductions, COVID started. Next thing we knew, lockdown.

    We did the introductions right after the restrictions were lifted, in May/June, and took it slow from then on.

    Joyce: My mum handled the wedding planning. She chose the aso-ebi and everything; she was in her element. I was kind of happy it couldn’t be as huge as she would’ve wanted because of COVID. I’ve always secretly wanted a quiet, close-knit ceremony. We had less than 20 people at the church and like 50/60 people at the traditional and reception — mostly close family members and our bestest friends. God did it.

    Amen. What was your first major fight about?

    Joyce: We actually don’t fight.

    Bamidele: We’ve never fought. 

    Joyce: It’s so strange. We always look at each other when people say things like “Everyone fights, even people who are deeply in love”. But that’s never been us.

    You mean, you’ve never disagreed?

    Bamidele: Not really. Not in the real sense. We might want different things a lot, but we always come to some sort of agreement, and that has never led to a fight or quarrel.

    Joyce: I just hope if it eventually happens, it won’t end up being an explosive one. 

    Bamidele: But I don’t think so. We’re not the kind of people to have explosive fights if at all. I’ve never had an explosive fight with anyone, why would I now have one with my wife?

    Fair enough. How has this relationship been different from past ones?

    Bamidele: Now that I think about it, the lack of fights. 

    Also, how involved my mother-in-law is. She’s very present, offering advice and helping us manage our finances. It may sound weird, but it’s so convenient. She takes the burden of taking care of our son off us completely. My own mother is jealous, but she lives all the way in Ilorin. I don’t want to uproot her from the life she’s established there.

    Joyce: For me, it’s the fact that we’re married. I’ve never been married before. That’s definitely different. This is for life now.

    What’s the best thing about being married to each other?

    Joyce: Being able to leverage each other’s strengths. 

    For example, our combined earning power has helped us carry out many projects I doubt I’d have been able to see through on my own. We’ve just made a down payment for a property in Ibeju Lekki, and we’re about to buy land in Osapa London. I’ve always wanted to own property, but I honestly don’t think I could’ve done it alone.

    Also, we get to use each other’s networks to get ahead at work and scale our businesses. As I mentioned earlier, his advanced knowledge has helped me pass many certification exams I would’ve been cracking my head to pass on my own. Combining our knowledge makes us twice as smart. He’s more or less my career mentor.

    Bamidele: Everything she said plus the constant companionship. 

    I also want to add that her mother has been a great addition to my life. She makes things so easy between us without being a burden in any way. She’s loving, supportive and great with our son.

    How would you rate your love life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Joyce: I think he loves my mum too much, so I’ll say 6 or 7.

    Bamidele: Wow. I’m sorry o. For me, 8. But I think it can only get better.

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

    RECOMMENDED: Love Life: We Married “Small Small” Over the Course of a Decade

  • What She Said: I Never Knew My Father, but He Gave Me the Best Life

    What She Said: I Never Knew My Father, but He Gave Me the Best Life

    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.

    Photo by Wealth The Creator

    When was the first moment you realised your father wasn’t there?

    Gosh. That’s a tough one. 

    I grew into the realisation that I had a father but he was gone. At first, I didn’t understand what “gone” meant, but over time, I found out he’d died way before I can remember. I’m not sure there’s one specific moment when I was told. It’s just something I knew as I started becoming aware of what was going on around me as a child. But I didn’t feel like I was missing much because my mum was very present, and so were her sister and my grandparents. It was a strong family unit.

    Did you ever have to ask what happened to him?

    Yes, at different times. 

    The first time was in primary six — I remember because I was just about to graduate from primary school. I was nine or ten. My mum was showing me old pictures when we got to a selection of his pictures. I was in pretty much all of his pictures. He’d carry me in his arms whether it was at a wedding, in his studio, or on the road somewhere. I was always in his arms. 

    Usually, my mum would quickly hide or dodge anything that was remotely about him so I wouldn’t see. And I’d pretend not to notice. This time, I saw her hesitate, but she didn’t hide the pictures, so it was the perfect opportunity to ask, “What happened to him?” I still remember my small voice saying those words as we sat together in her bedroom, trying hard to be brave for whatever response I got.

    And what did she say?

    She said, “He loved God so much, he had to go be with him. But it was an accident”. She didn’t say anything else, and I was too scared to push. 

    But sometime in secondary school, I asked my grandma about the accident, and she said she didn’t want me thinking about that. She told me a bit about him, how much he loved me and was always happiest when he was with me. I know the stories were supposed to make me feel better, but I hated them. I hated that I had no memory of this man. 

    I’d look at his picture and couldn’t even imagine his voice, what he felt or behaved like. But there I was in his arms, smiling up at him and him smiling back at little me. I don’t remember that interaction. All I have is third-party information. It made me so angry.

    RECOMMENDED: What She Said: Intuition Is Key in My Alternative Spiritual Work 

    Did your relationship with your mum help?

    My mum has always been there for me, but she’s even more affected by his death than I am. She knew him for years, and they’d only been married for about a year when he died. Sometimes, I think I have to put aside figuring out my own little grief to be a source of comfort to her. She never remarried, and she barely ever dates, so it’s just me and her against the world. We support each other.

    As a child, she did her best and sought help from her own family to take care of me, so where she struggled emotionally, they were there to make sure I was okay. I appreciate that she was that forward-thinking. She also used to ask me how I was doing all the time, almost too much. 

    Her care made me feel secure during my early years. So I’d say yes, my relationship with her helped.

    How did other people’s relationships with their fathers make you feel?

    Interestingly, most of my friends had terrible relationships with their fathers. One of them has a father who married another wife and treated her and her mum badly, another one’s mum never married her father so she’d only see him like once a year when he visited from the States, and one’s father has several wives and baby mamas. 

    So I guess I’m in perfect company. And I’ve been friends with these guys since secondary school.

    Is it something you ever discuss, how you all have absent fathers one way or the other?

    We almost never do. We focus on aspects of our lives that exist: our strong mothers, other healthy relationships we’ve managed to build, money, and so on. 

    So did you ever find out how he died?

    My mother told me after I graduated from college years ago. He was killed in a money-related fight, but the killer was never found despite years of investigation. I cried for days when she finally told me; it was like he’d just died. He looked like such a beautiful and gentle man in his photos. I couldn’t imagine him dying so violently.

    I can’t say how, sorry.

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

    I understand

    And he left everything to me. He was a music producer and businessman, and he was pretty successful. He was smart enough to draw up a will years before he died, and he signed everything over to me. I live a very comfortable life today because of him. It’s so bittersweet because I never knew him, yet here I am, benefiting from him.

    Would you say you’re still affected by his death today?

    I can’t escape it. 

    He was popular. So when I go out, once people learn who I am, they feel the need to talk about him. They share how they knew him, what he was like, how amazing he was. But I never knew him, so it’s like, “How nice. Here’s another stranger who knows more about my father than I ever will”. People even feel the need to ask me what it’s like to have a father like him.

    Sigh. How do you get past that?

    I’ve become a lot more private in the last couple of years. I stay away from the Nigerian and Ghanaian social scene and focus on my work as an investor. My life is just me, my mum and my few friends now. 

    It’s hard not to think about my father at all since I help my mum manage his legacy, but I try not to. I also don’t look at his pictures anymore because I’m in 90% of them. They remind me of how much he wanted to be in my life but never got a chance to, and also, how much of his last years I spent in his company yet I don’t even remember. 

    It seems small, but every time I think about it, I can’t seem to process it without breaking down. My therapist says it’s a barrier in my psyche.

    I’m so sorry. Did you have a father figure growing up?

    Oh, my granddaddy was my father. He was everything, God rest his soul. He was such a steadying presence in my life. I’d say he’s the reason why I never had to miss my dad. He attended open days on my mum’s behalf a lot. He was so warm and would play with me when I was a child. All my friends loved him. 

    My grandmother too was something of a father figure to me because she was so firm — the disciplinarian of the house. These are my mum’s parents, by the way. My dad’s parents came and went too. I don’t think I missed much in the way of parenting.

    Would you say your feelings about your father affected your romantic relationships?

    In a way. I’m afraid to be vulnerable. My therapist links it to the fact that I can’t process my relationship with my father in a healthy way. 

    I’m way too guarded, so many of my relationships fizzle out after a while. I’m currently in one, and it’s already getting to the part where we have little to talk about. It’s been about eight months, but I can’t seem to open my heart beyond sex, romantic gestures and mundane conversations. Then again, is there supposed to be something more beyond that? Maybe I’m not the only problem.

    When did you realise you had to get therapy?

    While in college at SOAS

    I was so far away from my family and drowning in depression. I had no interest in studying the art history I’d got in for; no interest in anything at all, TBH. I had no idea what I was passionate about. It’ll break my mum’s heart, but I was drunk, high and in bed for most of my three years there. 

    Once I’d graduated and had to return to Accra, a friend of mine suggested a therapist. When I first met one sometime in 2014, I wasn’t really thinking about my dad. But he ended up coming up at the first session, as part of what makes me sad or angry.

    What’s one thing that gives you joy despite it all?

    How lucky I am to have a father who cares, even from the grave. 

    My mum always said he loved me so much while he was alive, she’s sure he’s watching over me as my guardian angel now; giving God a tough time every time I have the slightest inconvenience. 

    And she may be right because I’m living a good life.

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

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

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

    Recently, American actress Gabrielle Union and her husband became the subject of multiple internet think pieces after she revealed they take a 50/50 approach to their finances as a married couple.

    Considering Nigeria’s mainly patriarchial society that still pushes the male-head-of-household mantra, I reached out to married Nigerian women to confirm whether there are Nigerian homes that employ the 50/50 approach to finances, too. It turns out, there are.

    “At least, nobody can call me a burden” — Tola*, 33

    I got married immediately after graduating from the university in 2015. I didn’t have a job, but he made enough money for both of us. He never complained about it, and I didn’t think getting a job was necessary. When we had twins in 2017, he began to murmur about expenses. One day, I asked him for money for a friend’s asoebi, and he said, “Do you want to kill me with demands?” I reported him to an older friend who told me to get something to do if I didn’t want my husband to develop hypertension.

    When my children turned six months, I told my husband I wanted to find a job. He agreed, and luckily, I found a job quickly and got my sister to live with us and help out with the kids. Now, I give him half of my salary immediately it enters and still buy things in the house. My family usually says, “Isn’t your husband supposed to be taking care of you?” I don’t care. At least nobody can call me a burden.

    “It just works” — Precious*, 29

    My husband and I have a joint account, (separate from our personal accounts), where we send half of our salaries at the end of every month. It’s money from this account we use to sort out household expenses. We’ve done that for two years now, and it works for us. When money in the joint account isn’t sufficient for a particular expense, my husband makes up the difference.

    “It’s my way of showing support” — Lolade*, 27

    My husband and I have always gone 50/50, even before marriage. We’d go 50/50 for major dates and did the same for our wedding. Now, he handles household expenses like rent, fuel and major home repairs, while I handle groceries, data and Netflix bills, and little needs. When we have kids, we’ll also figure out a way to split. I earn more than he does, so it’s my way of showing support.

    “It’s quite tough” — Mimi*, 36

    My husband is really conservative. If not for the state of the nation, he wouldn’t even allow me to work at all. He got me a clothes retail shop some years ago on the condition that I’d use my income to support the home. It started out well, but recently, I’ve had to take up almost 70% of the household expenses, including the children’s school fees. He’s usually owed salaries at his workplace, so most times, we have to borrow from my business. This money hardly gets refunded. It’s quite tough because I have zero savings, and I can’t even complain because it’d seem like I’m being disrespectful.


    RELATED: “My Take-Home Salary Doesn’t Take Me Home” – 7 Nigerian Blue-Collar Workers on Their Incomes


    “We only go 50/50 on rent” — Nana*, 28

    When we decided to move to Lekki to be closer to work in 2021, we agreed that we’d have to split the ₦3m rent because neither of us could afford it alone. That’s the only thing we split 50/50. For other household expenses, we just attend to them as they come. He can buy foodstuff at the supermarket on his way home today, and I can remember we need engine oil when I step out tomorrow and just buy it.

    “It’s not a rigid arrangement” — Chinny*, 30

    My husband and I each earn below ₦100k per month, and we know it’s impossible to have an average standard of living if we rely on only one person’s salary. So, we pool half of our resources together to settle the bills and school fees of our two kids. It’s not a rigid arrangement. Some months, I may take up 70% of the expenses, and other times it’s 40%. We just do whatever we can to survive.

    “It sometimes feels unfair” — Glory*, 31

    My husband and I decided to go 50/50 when I got a job that paid more than his in 2021, but it sometimes feels unfair. I only agreed to go 50/50 when money started being an issue in the house. He felt I had money but was comfortable with him being broke, so I agreed to the arrangement to let peace reign. His idea of 50/50 doesn’t apply to household chores. I still do everything in the home. I’ve brought this up a number of times, but he takes it to mean I want to start ordering him around because I have money. If I can support him with the finances, why can’t he support me with chores?

    *Names have been changed for the sake of anonymity.



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

  • Iyanya and Yvonne Nelson: All You Need to Know About The Exes Playing Catchup

    Iyanya and Yvonne Nelson: All You Need to Know About The Exes Playing Catchup

    It’s always something with relationship people, whether they are together or long departed. This time around, the drama is between ex-celebrity lovers, Iyanya and Yvonne Nelson.

    Iyanya and Yvonne Nelson: All You Need to Know About The Exes Playing Catchup

    They’re both driving our Twitter timelines crazy, with scandal-inclined excerpts from Yvonne’s memoir I’m Not Yvonne Nelson dropping every other minute. We don’t subscribe to the drama, but here’s why we think they might both be in on it.

    It’s giving publicity stunt

    Iyanya and Yvonne Nelson: All You Need to Know About The Exes Playing Catchup

    Both Iyanya and his ex, Yvonne Nelson, have new projects (an EP and a book) out at the moment and don’t African celebrities do anything for clout?

    Yes, they once dated

    Iyanya and Yvonne Nelson: All You Need to Know About The Exes Playing Catchup

    If you didn’t know, Iyanya and Yvonne were a thing. The singer even gave the Ghanaian diva a shout-out in his 2013 hit song, Your Waist, and tattooed her initials on his waist. God, abeg. The union sadly came to an end in 2015, and in her memoir, Nelson claims Iyanya was nothing but a lying cheater.

    Iyanya and My Love Life

    There’s an entire chapter in Yvonne Nelson’s memoir dedicated to Iyanya, and who is drumming it in our ears?

    Nelson is naming names

    Iyanya and Yvonne Nelson: All You Need to Know About The Exes Playing Catchup

    The drama keeps getting messier because how did Tonto Dikeh come into the picture? Yvonne Nelson claims the Nollywood actress was in fact the one cheating with Iyanya. An excerpt from the memoir reads:

    “When I was convinced about the authenticity of the information I received, I was heartbroken. I took to Twitter to rant and vent. Tonto Dikeh responded on Twitter, saying people change and so did feelings, so l should move on.”

    Source: selthebomb

    “There’s no proof sha” — Iyanya

    This is the hill Iyanya is willing to die on. The singer asked Yvonne Nelson to name the source in his camp who hinted about his “thing” with Tonto Dikeh.

    Tonto Dikeh is typing… or not

    She hasn’t said jack. This either means she’s not part of whatever Iyanya and Yvonne have going on, or she doesn’t consider it worth her time right now. 

    The tracks in Iyanya’s new EP

    Apparently, track 1 and 6 from Iyanya’s new EP are titled Love and Trust and Breakfast. If you ask us, too much going on here to be a mere coincidence.

    The exes are working twice as hard

    Amid the entire chaos, guess who’s jumping on every sub tweet to reroute the discourse to his new music project? Yvonne, on the hand, seems to have started a book tour.

    They’re both winning, and we love it for them.

    Please take the survey here.

  • QUIZ: Have You Found The One?

    QUIZ: Have You Found The One?

    You might think you know the answer, but do you really know?


  • Love Life: We Married “Small Small” Over the Course of a Decade

    Love Life: We Married “Small Small” Over the Course of a Decade

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

    How did you two meet?

    Uduak: I met him through my brother-in-law. He told me an old friend of his was looking for someone to marry, and he thought we’d get along well. This was sometime in 2009. He asked me if he could share my number, and I said yes.

    JJ: I got her number and called her that night. We agreed to meet later in the week during my off day. I used to work with a family to take care of their house, make sure everything was running and working well 24/7 and run some major errands for them. 

    We met after church service on a Sunday afternoon. I went to her church to pick her up, and we went to eat in an eatery in Calabar South. I bought us some snacks and two bottles of Fanta — every time our lastborn hears this story, he says that’s why he loves Fanta so much. 

    My first impression of her in her choir uniform — and the way she spoke as we talked in the eatery — was good.

    Uduak: We didn’t stay there for long. Once we ate the snacks and talked for some minutes, he told me of his intentions to start seeing me, with the bottom line being for us to get married. I was a little concerned because I’d just finished from the polytechnic a month before that and was still struggling to find work. But he said he didn’t mind, so my mind became at rest. 

    He eventually helped me get a job as his boss’s neighbour’s stay-at-home nanny.

    When did you realise you liked each other?

    JJ: As soon as I heard her voice that first night on the phone, I knew I liked her. She has a sweet, gentle voice that calms me every time she talks, even till today. Meeting her for the first time only made me sure about it.

    Uduak: I think I liked him when we first met, but it took some time for me to be sure. After seeing each other once a week then twice and thrice a week, I began to long to see him. That’s how I knew something was happening between us.

    JJ: After she got the job with my neighbours — I used to stay in my boss’s BQ — they started complimenting her, saying she was a good girl, and they noticed the difference in how their baby behaved since she started taking care of her. This made me know she would be a good wife and take care of our children well. I started liking her even more. 

    READ ALSO: Love Life: I’m Not Gay, but I Love Her

    When did like turn to love?

    JJ: When we started spending more time together. After about two or three months, she started coming to visit more often, and she would bring food, or manage my small bachelor’s gas top to cook something fresh for me in the BQ. I loved the time and care she put into these meals, often spending her own money to make them rich. 

    She would sleep over at my place on her off days. When they clashed with my own off days, we had time to talk and get to know each other even more. By the end of that year — five months after we started seeing each other — I was ready to propose, so I went to talk to my elder brother about her.

    Uduak: It was the way he always looked out for me, helped me run errands or take care of my younger ones who used to come around sometimes when he was free. He’d even make time to accompany me to places I didn’t want to go alone. He was always there for me. And then, he helped me get my first job with that nice family. That showed real love and care, so I had no choice but to fall in love. 

    He also helped my family out in any little way he could, sending me and my siblings ₦2k here and there. He tried his best from early on in our relationship. I also did the best I could to make sure he was happy and comfortable.

    Great

    JJ: One thing I loved that she did was decorate my room in those early months. She brought some nicely framed pictures to put on my walls, some artificial flowers and those solid air fresheners in boxes. She also made new bedsheets and curtains for me. 

    Uduak: I trained as a tailor while I was in poly, so it was the least I could do. I wanted to make his place look as best as it could.

    JJ: For my first birthday while we were together, she got one of my pictures and framed it for me as a gift. It was the best gift I’d ever received at that point. I actually cried a little when I saw it.

    What was your first major fight about?

    Uduak: After I got pregnant, my aunty who was my primary guardian in Calabar, asked me to move in with him. He wasn’t happy about it because he didn’t think the BQ was okay for us to live together. He was also concerned about what his boss would think. 

    But my aunty told other family members about the pregnancy, and they didn’t trust him. They thought he was trying to avoid taking responsibility, and I was being a fool. My aunty told me, “You think I no know say you dey sleep for that same BQ when you dey off, instead of coming back to this house? So why the place suddenly no okay for you now wey you don carry belle?” 

    I did as they said and pack into his house in February 2010.

    Oya, tell us by clicking this link

    How did that go?

    JJ: I’d already decided to marry her, but I was still putting money together to leave my oga’s house and start a small printing business. I was doing it small small, printing cards and other corporate items for the company where my boss worked. But I had to share most of the profit with him, and I didn’t have time to push the business while working with him at home. 

    I had other side work I was doing while saving towards the business and marriage expenses, but I wasn’t making enough to take care of a family yet. While I was planning towards it, the baby came some months too early. I wish she and her family had been more patient with me. Living together in my oga’s BQ wasn’t the plan at all.

    Uduak: The night I moved in, he didn’t come home. I didn’t see him till my next off day, which was two weeks later. I could tell he was still angry. Things were rough between us during the first month of my stay, and I was scared. But after a while, it became better, and we started talking properly. 

    When did he finally propose?

    Uduak: He didn’t really propose. About four months after I moved in, he and his people went to see my parents in the village. They agreed to let him marry me but gave him a list of things he needed to do first.

    JJ: Everything in that list cost about ₦500k that year, which is like ₦1.5m in today’s money. I didn’t have that kind of money. So I had to work for over a year to raise it. I would buy the different things small small and send them to her village — one goat here, two two cartons of stout, just like that. 

    During that time, the baby came, and we had to move to our own place. We also had to leave our jobs, so things were tight. I started pushing the printing business small small and doing some buying and selling. My brothers and one of my uncles also chipped in. 

    But before we could finally go to the village and do the traditional wedding, she was pregnant again. We did the ceremony anyway because I didn’t feel good carrying on with her in my home, already starting a family without marrying her properly. I wanted her and her family to know I valued her. She’s a good woman.

    Uduak: When we finally went to my village, I could tell he was happy. His face was glowing. He felt proud that he could buy me my traditional attire with the thick beads, headgear and makeup. And I was also happy that he made all that effort for me. 

    It reminded me of Jacob in the Bible, and how he went above and beyond for Rachael.

    JJ: The traditional ceremony drained my pocket.

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

    It was for a good cause. How has this relationship been different from past ones?

    JJ: This was my first relationship where I said, “I’m ready to be serious and settle down,” before I even went into it. So the way I approached everything was different. 

    In my past relationships, it was just “This is my girlfriend. Let’s have fun and go crazy. Who cares?” But with her, it’s, “This is my wife. She will be the mother of my children.” Her welfare and happiness have always been my priority, so instead of thinking fun, fun, fun, I’m always thinking, “Are you okay? Am I making you happy?” 

    It was like that from the first day.

    Uduak: That’s true. When I started seeing him, there was this gentleness and respect he accorded me that made me feel loved. 

    I had two boyfriends while I was in the polytechnic, but my relationship with JJ made me feel like they didn’t care about me. They just used me to pass time, and that’s why both of those relationships ended so easily. They were going nowhere. This relationship is the first one where the man knew he wanted something serious out of it and worked to get it. 

    And he has worked really hard for me and our family. I do my best to match his strength and hard work.

    What’s the most unconventional thing about your relationship?

    Uduak: Even though we had the traditional wedding in 2012, do you know we did white wedding only two years ago? I know many people will say why did we bother after so long? I’ve always wanted to be married before God, so I made him promise that we will one day. I wanted us to have a proper church wedding and a reception after, like everyone else. 

    I know it might sound like I’m greedy.

    JJ: She’s not greedy. It’s always been her dream, and I encouraged her to hope for it. I didn’t want to deny her that. It’s money that made it take so long. I want to give her everything that’ll make her happy.

    Uduak: Thank you.

    JJ: After all, we didn’t go to the registry until 2018, so time is only a number.

    You mean, a court wedding? Why did it take you that long?

    JJ: We thought we’d do it together with the white wedding, but we kept postponing. 

    One day, her aunty called me and started shouting, “You mean you people no go court sign paper? That means say you never legally marry? You just dey play with my daughter. Anything happen now, you go bring another wife chase her and her pikin comot.” I was so embarrassed, but what she said made sense. We were being irresponsible. 

    When I went to my brother about it, he was shocked we hadn’t done it yet. So I made some enquiries, and we went to Calabar Municipal with her aunty and my eldest brother as witnesses. 

    Uduak: Our three kids at the time witnessed it, too. Bobo was only one year old then.

    What’s the best thing about being married to each other?

    Uduak: I finally have someone to take care of me. I’ve been alone for too long since I moved to Calabar after secondary school when I was just 16. I had my aunty, who took care of me as best she could, but she wasn’t that caring. And some of my siblings also moved in and out of Calabar, but we haven’t really been together since we all left the village. 

    Being married gives me my own family I can love and nurture how I want.

    JJ: Having your own family can be comforting because you can run it how you see fit and make sure everyone is together. It comes with its struggles, especially when you’re the man of the house and it’s your responsibility to bring money home. But I take the responsibility wholeheartedly, and we’ve built a beautiful family.

    Uduak: Yes, we have four beautiful children now. And it’s not always easy, but they make everything worth it.

    How would you rate your love life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    JJ: 10

    Uduak: 10

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

    RELATED: Love Life: He Taught Me to Be Less Controlling

  • 40+ Anonymous: The Power of Follow Come Bum Bum

    40+ Anonymous: The Power of Follow Come Bum Bum

    From the dates to the lines, sex, ups and downs and everything in between, the 40+ Anonymous monthly series covers the dating life of our 40+ anonymous writer.

    Photo source: Snatched Body

    My bum is the type you see first before you see the owner. What’s unique about it is that it’s accompanied by wide hips and a considerably smaller waist. “Unique?!” I hear you, my reader, laughing. At least it was ten years ago before Dr. 90210 opened up shops on every street corner — original follow come. 

    “Follow come” is Nigerian Pidgin English for accessories that come with a brand-new product. But when used to describe body parts in the 21st century, it means “God-given”, as opposed to surgically enhanced.

    Back to my ten-year-old story, and a beach party I attended with my then-boyfriend. It was there that I realised that not all bums are created equal. I met a lady whose bum and hip-to-waist ratio made me look like a prepubescent boy. She was quite popular on the blogs for fighting and drama. As a regular 9-5er, I was fascinated and somewhat horrified by her. She came with her own boyfriend, who was extremely quiet. I remember thinking this woman would eat him for breakfast and went back to minding my business.

    Fast forward a year, after I had chopped breakfast of the heartbreak variety, I decided to take the heartbreak hot body route as opposed to crying into mounds of amala every night. I ran five miles every morning and another five miles every night. It was during one of those nightly runs that I ran into (let’s call her “Lady B”) Lady B’s boyfriend.

    “I know you,” he said, cocking his head to the side like he was trying to remember where from. I never forget a face. “Or a bum,” my mind silently interjected. However, I remained silent as I watched him try to place me and keep up with my pace as I continued jogging.

    “The beach!” he exclaimed. I nodded. 

    “You were there with your girlfriend,” I replied.

    “She’s no longer in the picture,” he said.

    “Does she know that?” I said, half-laughing but dead serious.

    “She’s moved on as well,” he responded, side-stepping my jab about his fierce girlfriend.

    “What about that young boy you were always following? Has that one scattered too?” he asked.

    “That one has scattered as well,” I replied.

    We both laughed.

    And that’s how we went from two strangers to friends who jogged together every night. I later found out this man detested jogging. He’d go to an intense boot camp early in the evening then come back and still jog with me, just to spend time together.

    But this story isn’t about our love, although that, too, eventually scattered. It’s about “follow come”. 

    As I got to know this guy, I marveled at how great a catch he seemed to be: smart, intelligent, patient, successful (C-Suite at a multinational) and laid back. I couldn’t reconcile him with the woman he dated before me — a girl who fought in clubs and ended up on gossip blogs.

    I’d often ask, “What did you guys have in common?”

    He’d shrug his shoulders and change the subject.

    But it bothered me because there was one obvious similarity between Lady B and me: a big bum and small waist. But can someone be so fixated on a physical trait that they disregard everything else?

    I couldn’t let this thought go because I was afraid of what it said about the depth of our relationship. Was he looking for love or just a nice body? Now, don’t get me wrong, you can have love and a nice body, but the latter shouldn’t be the priority.

    Our relationship progressed, and one year in, he invited me over to meet his mum. The usual anxiety kicked in — would she like me, what should I bring, and so on. The day came, and we went to meet his mother.

    When I arrived, his mum — who was 80 years old at the time — was in the kitchen cooking up a storm. The kitchen had a hole in the wall connecting it to the living room. She waved me away when I asked if she needed help and engaged in conversation as she moved about the kitchen.

    A petite woman, no taller than 5’3″, I could just about see her head through the opening in the wall. She laughed, joked and teased us as well as the maid who was helping her. I couldn’t help but think, “No wonder this man is so great; his Mama is amazing.”

    About 30 minutes later, Mama emerged from the kitchen and announced that she would freshen up and give us some privacy. As she turned away, there was no mistaking it — the original “follow come” bum and small waist.

    READ NEXT: What She Said: I Married the Man My Pastor Chose, and It Failed

  • You Really Want Couple Goals? Get Ready for These 7 Things

    You Really Want Couple Goals? Get Ready for These 7 Things

    Say farewell to the streets

    You can’t have a soft relationship if you still have one leg in the streets. Hang your boots and say “Bye bye” to the streets because you’re boo’d up now.

    You have to talk to them every day

    Forget what people say online about not talking to their partners every day. If you’re reaching for relationship goals, you have to be sending life updates to your partner every hour. It’s not couple goals if you act like you can live without them.

    Learn their love languages

    Relationships are hardwork, and everyone wants to be loved differently. So you need to learn your partner’s love languages so your gestures aren’t entering one ear and leaving through the other.

    Put your relationship online

    How can we tag your relationship “couple goals” if we don’t even know about its existence? Put your relationship online so you can choke everyone with cuteness. As Kizz Daniel wisely said “Trouble their timelines, chop all their megabytes”.

    Take cute photos in matching outfits

    It’s not enough to put the relationship online. You must also wear matching outfits and take pictures in them so they can know that your relationship has its own uniform.

    Drop relationship nuggets for other people

    Have you really completed the couple goals story arc if you don’t start dishing out unsolicited advice to single people?

    Be ready to share almost everything

    You’re not ready for couple goals if you’re uncomfortable with the idea of sharing. You’ll share your space, your time, and you’ll msot definitely share your money with them. That’s why it makes sense to use Brassmoney to manage your finances in a relationship. 

    With Brassmoney, you and your partner can easily set up a joint (shared) account that you both have control over. What’s even better is that you can save, budget and track your finances easily. All you have to do is download the app from the App Store or Play Store and create an account to get started. You can also visit their website for more information.

    Even the single folks aren’t left out

    Even if you’re yet to get boo’d up, there’s still so much you can do with the Brassmoney app. You can save, track your finances, make budgets, and even buy airtime and data to hate on people in relationships on the internet. All you have to do is download the app from the App Store or Play Store and create an account to get started. When they ask who referred you, tell them it was Zikoko.

  • Love Life: I’m Not Gay, but I Love Her

    Love Life: I’m Not Gay, but I Love Her

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

    How did you meet?

    Nonye: During NYSC in 2021. We served at the same PPA in Kogi State and happened to both be coming from Enugu.

    Jojo: We were teachers in the same secondary school. I taught maths, science and business studies; she taught English and CRS. And our rooms were beside each other at the corpers lodge. But eventually, we talked our roommates into switching so we could stay together. 

    The first day we met, she was reporting to the school two weeks late because she’d asked the state coordinator for permission to go back to Enugu after returning from the orientation camp. I later found out she’d lost her mother just before NYSC started.

    Nonye: Yes. But I tried to suppress the grief for a while. 

    We didn’t get to meet in camp, but she was the only corper who didn’t have a class when I reported to the school. She offered to help me carry my things to the lodge, which wasn’t close by, especially since we had to go on foot. We didn’t say a word to each other the entire way — the sun was too hot for that — but as soon as we got into my room, Jojo started asking me a thousand questions about myself. 

    Jojo: I’m like that. I love to get to know people. 

    We became friends from that first day because she was so nice and open, answering all my questions and asking back too. We related to each other’s stories because we lived in the same Enugu town. By the time I left her to settle in while I went to teach my next class for that day, I felt good knowing I had someone I could hang out with. 

    NYSC was such a beautiful time because we did everything together. We even split bills and expenses. We were like sisters separated at birth.

    Did you start liking each other during NYSC?

    Jojo: As friends, yes. We had a strong connection, but we weren’t thinking in a romantic direction at that time. I didn’t even know I was gay then.

    Nonye: Nothing happened romantically until after she came out to me on New Year’s Day in 2022. When she told me she was gay, I said, “I know.” I feel like I knew she was gay before she did. Don’t ask me how. I just know when she told me, I wasn’t surprised at all. I was happy for her for finally finding herself.

    Jojo: When I came to terms with my sexuality, she was the first person on my mind I wanted to date, but I was too scared of ruining our friendship. We were back in Enugu but still as close as ever. We’re both working a 9 to 5, but we help each other with our side gigs too. I’m a freelance photographer, and she runs a thrift and crochet store online. 

    Before I could find the nerve to ask her to date me, I got with a girl I met on Twitter who also lived in Enugu, and we dated for some months. Nonye was super supportive, so they became friends too. 

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

    When did friendship turn to love?

    Jojo: My dad passed away in March 2022, and the grief was much. So we bonded over her understanding of what it feels like to lose a parent. She was there for me throughout the preparation, burial and mourning period. My girlfriend couldn’t be there because I hadn’t come out to my family. 

    I kept to myself a lot during those three or so months it took me to recover from the loss, but Nonye was always there for me, sleeping over, sharing what helped her heal when her mother died. I liked her then more than ever. When my ex broke things up with me in June 2022, because I wasn’t showing enough commitment to her, I started thinking about asking Nonye to be my girlfriend once again.

    Nonye: I still loved Jojo as a friend but didn’t think beyond that until the day she shakily asked me out when we’d gone to the cinema to watch Thor: Love and Thunder. I told her I wasn’t gay, and she said she knew. 

    Later that night, I couldn’t stop thinking about her asking me out. We spoke the next morning, and she didn’t bring it up again. I was upset about that, but I also didn’t bring it up until some days later when I said I really liked her too. I didn’t know what I was doing or what to expect, so I was scared about what I said. But I knew it was true. 

    She had this wide, bright, beautiful smile on her face when I looked at her again. I know it sounds cheesy, but I’d never seen her smile like that before. I’d always loved Jojo, but that’s when I realised I really liked her too. Without needing to ask each other again, we just started dating from then on. 

    One of the things that’s happened in the last several months is that we spend and plan our money as a unit, even our side gigs have unified.

    What was your first major fight about?

    Nonye: We have this on-and-off argument — not necessarily fight — because I always insist I’m not gay when it comes up in private. But it’s true. I’m not. She’s the only girl I’ve ever been attracted to. Generally, I still find boys attractive. If god forbid, we break up, I’d most likely be with a guy. 

    Jojo: It feels like it should make me happy, but it makes me sad, and I don’t know why. I know I have no reason to think this because she’s the most devoted and loyal partner to me, but I keep getting this uncertainty that I’m just a phase to her.

    Nonye: You’re not. I want us to last forever, but if we don’t, it won’t be because I see you as a phase. You know that’s not true.

    Jojo: I do. But I still think if you’re dating your gender, you’re gay sha. 

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

    Actually, she could be. How has this relationship been different from past ones?

    Jojo: It’s my first truly mature relationship. Before Nonye, I’d had mostly unserious relationships (school flings) with guys. 

    My first girlfriend was great, but being with Nonye now, I realise we were quite childish. Our five-and-a-half-month relationship consisted of going out to get shawarma together every weekend, making out and arguing over the most basic things. It was like we were doing it for fun; nothing more. 

    With Nonye, we still do shawarma and make out, but we also talk a lot about important things like work, spending, personal development and even our relationships with other people. We advise each other a lot and look out for each other.

    Nonye: I’ve only dated two people in this life. One was in high school and another in university — we broke up sometime during NYSC. But Jojo is the only one who’s met almost everyone in my family. Although, it’s only my immediate elder sister who knows we’re intimate. That has changed the stakes a lot. 

    This relationship is pretty mature; we take the commitment seriously.

    What’s the most unconventional thing about your relationship?

    Jojo: I don’t want to say us being gay so as not to alert the LGBT police, but I don’t know any other gay couples, so I think it still counts. I think it’s also unconventional to be a gay person dating a straight person.

    Nonye: That shows just how strong our love is.

    Jojo: Right.

    How has the relationship changed you?

    Jojo: Dating Nonye has helped me let my guard down. I feel like I can trust her completely with my heart and things like life decisions. She’s a truly wise, intuitive person, so that has rubbed off on me a bit. These days, I find myself thinking the way she thinks, which is by checking if the vibe is right before jumping into things. 

    This can be as little as if I should go somewhere, talk to someone or not, eat at this restaurant or another. And the vibe check has never failed me. My relationship with my mother has also improved greatly since. She’s taught me to appreciate what I have before I lose it.

    Nonye: I’d actually say the same about my relationship with my dad, although it’s just occurring to me. 

    Besides that, I’ve become a lot more enterprising since we got together, since we became friends actually. I don’t see how our businesses would grow the way they do without your sense. I’m more attuned to making profit now. Soft life loading. 

    Oh also, this is the first relationship in which I’m so comfortable with being open and vulnerable. We’re always oversharing with each other.

    How would you rate your love life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Nonye: 8. We’re still fresh. Our first anniversary is next month, and I’m so excited, but it still feels like we’re in the honeymoon stage.

    Jojo: 8. I guess what she’s saying is we should revisit this rating after we celebrate a year.

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

    RECOMMENDED: Love Life: He Taught Me to Be Less Controlling

  • What To Do When Your Favorite Online Ship Sinks

    What To Do When Your Favorite Online Ship Sinks

    Love is great, and we can’t help but go “awww” at the cute things people in love do. So we understand being invested in relationships you know only because of the internet, especially the ones on Big Brother. For context, Yvonne and Juicy Jay from Big Brother Titans broke up yesterday. Like all good things, they’ve come to an end, and you have to move on from a relationship that’s not even yours. Don’t worry sha, we’ve got you.

    Reminisce on the good times

    You were rooting for them for a reason. Try not to think about the fact that their relationship is done, and instead focus on all the premium relationship banter they gave on the timeline and all the cute pictures they shared on the timeline.

    Mourn the relationship in private 

    Please, try not to cry more than the bereaved. Don’t go wailing on the timeline or asking questions that have nothing to do with you. You can cry, but only on the inside.

    If you’re going to pick sides, do it with sense

    They’ve broken up, but you don’t have the heart to let both of them go and, that’s okay. You’re allowed to pick sides, just do it without throwing dirt on the other person’s name and dragging them like you had a stake in the first place.

    RECOMMENDED: 7 Must-Haves if You Want To Ship The Big Brother Housemates This Season

    Remember, you don’t actually know them

    Yes, it felt like you knew every detail of their love life, but you need to remember that you don’t actually know them. You can’t afford to invest too much time and energy in their break up.

    Resist the urge to be a monitoring spirit

    As tempting as it is, don’t stalk their pages to see if they’ve moved on or if are subbing each other, or if they’ve gotten back together. You should always mind the business that pays you.

    Block both parties

    Remember that you don’t know them in real life, so you can always just block or mute them if it all gets too much for you.

     Face your front

    After all is said and done, remember that it isn’t your life. You have your own relationships, finances, and KPIs to focus on, so face front.

  • The 8 Stages of Breaking Up With Your Work Bestie

    The 8 Stages of Breaking Up With Your Work Bestie

    After salaries and a desire to NOT live under the bridge, work besties are the major reason many of us remain slaves to capitalism. There’s something about finding someone to gossip about your boss with that makes it all worth it. 

    But even work bestie-ships sink, so here’s how to know yours is about to hit the rocks.

    They stop sending you gist

    This is the biggest warning signal. Gist can’t finish at the office, so the only reason they’re not talking about it with you, or locking eyes when someone at the office does something dumb, is because they no longer value being your work bestie, or worse, they think you’ll snitch.

    They start calling in sick without telling you

    Taking a sick day — AKA leaving you to suffer through work all by yourself — without warning you? That bestie-ship is shaking.

    Or they go on leave

    How dare they take a break from capitalism when you’re still slaving away? What happened to going on leave together? It only means one thing: They don’t rate you anymore.

    They suddenly know what they want to eat

    Everyone knows work bestie-ships are like relationships. You both have to weigh the pros and cons of buying Iya Basira’s rice for lunch, even though you both know you’ll end up buying ewa agoyin in the end. Once they start making lunch decisions easily, just know there’s someone else.

    They actually start working

    If your work bestie starts letting a little thing like a performance review get in the way of hanging out with you at work, sorry to say, but you’re losing your friend to capitalism.

    They start getting close to another coworker

    That’s the betrayal of the highest order if you ask me. They’re rolling with basic bitches now?

    You learn about their resignation when everyone else does

    At this stage, you should already know to call them ex-work bestie because a real work bestie knows to send the resignation letter to you for edits even before sending it to HR.

    Or they become your boss

    Yeah, just forget it. Your friendship is over. How do you gossip about your boss when the person you’re sharing amebo notes with is the said boss? Also, how did they work out a promotion without your knowledge? Just look for another work bestie. Y’all have had a good run.


    NEXT READ: These 10 Things Should Be Added to the Coworker Code

  • Love Life: He Taught Me to Be Less Controlling

    Love Life: He Taught Me to Be Less Controlling

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Onose: Arguing online. 

    One of my Facebook friends had posted about supporting a certain presidential candidate — I won’t mention names — sometime in 2015. Misan commented in support under the post, and I just went at him, criticising him for supporting such a person. 

    I didn’t know him at the time. He was just a mutual through the person who originally posted.

    Misan: I was upset that someone who didn’t know me could have such strong opinions of me because of who I chose to support, so we had a long back and forth in the comments for the whole day. 

    My friend who made the original post had to enter my inbox to tell me to stop cluttering his notifications with my “wife”. I found his statement funny, so I asked if he knew Onose personally, saying, “Why is her blood so hot?” He said they were old friends from his former workplace, but he only had good things to say about her: she was a hard worker; smart and efficient. 

    I admired that so I slid into her inbox to say hi to my opp.

    Onose: I wasn’t very active on Facebook, even though I spent a whole day fighting with him on the platform. So I didn’t see his message for another week. He sent something like “Hi. Sorry for making you so angry over our leaders. My apologies, ma.” When I realised it was the guy I’d given a large piece of my mind, I laughed and replied with “Apology NOT accepted.” 

    But like that, we continued chatting on and off for the next two to three years.

    Wawu. When did you realise you liked each other?

    Onose: We got so close as chat friends over time that we started involving each other in mundane things happening in our lives.

    But things got more serious when we followed each other on Instagram in 2017. I used to sing, so anytime I participated in a challenge or contest that required voting, even giveaways, I’d tag him to vote for me. He always voted and would even get his guys to vote too.

    He was always there with encouraging words when I was going through rough patches or feeling discouraged. Of course, I had other friends in real life who were just as supportive, but there was something particularly caring about his approach. Interestingly, we’d never met in person at that point. 

    Misan: My company had posted me to Kano in 2013, so I was there for much of those three years while she was in Lagos. When I finally moved to Ibadan at the beginning of 2018, I really wanted to see her. I took a chance and asked if she wanted to meet sometime. She was hesitant, so it took another month or two before we met up at a lounge on the island. 

    I remember my bus ride down from Ibadan, I was thinking, “What the hell am I doing? And why do I feel so nervous doing it?” 

    God, abeg

    Onose: He was cute in his pictures, but I kept thinking, “What if he’s catfishing sha?” So before I even agreed to meet, I reached out to our old mutual friend. I asked him about Misan: if he’s how he looks in his photos, stuff like that. Nothing he said gave me cause for alarm, and Misan had been a good well-behaved online friend so far. But for some reason, I had my guard up. 

    I was pleasantly surprised when we met. He was even better looking than his pictures, and our conversations were smooth. We even revisited stuff we’d already discussed over the years, just to talk about it in person. 

    Did you bring back the Facebook fight too?

    Onose: That was already way behind us. He teases me about it now that we’re married, but it never came up while we were dating.

    Later that night, we went out and hung out with my friends at the club. By the time I returned home, I knew I liked him a lot.

    Misan: I returned to Ibadan the next day. On the bus ride back, I decided I’d ask her to be my girlfriend and see what she’d say. I don’t even know why. I just knew I really like everything about her; from the way she talked to the way she walked.

    That didn’t happen for another two weeks though. I was scared. For one, she’d spoken out against long-distance relationships more than once. But I finally asked her over a phone call one evening, and she surprised me by saying yes.

    Onose: I liked him and didn’t mind giving us a chance.

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

    When did you know you’d fallen in love?

    Misan: I can’t really pin it down. We got used to each other more and more over time. Before we knew it, our relationship had lasted longer than my previous relationships. 

    During the heat of COVID in 2020, I lost my job and moved to Lagos to freelance as a real estate agent for a while. I made considerably less money for about seven months, especially when I took out the perks my old company offered besides my salary, which meant I had even more expenses. 

    The way she came through for me, paying for some of my bills and randomly sending me small ₦10k here and there blew my mind. We’d been dating for two years by then, but it took a special kind of kindness for her to be that giving. I actually expected her to break up with me, or slowly ghost me being a newly broke man and all. But she did the opposite.

    I already loved her, but that experience made me appreciate her more.

    Onose: For me, it was our first anniversary in 2019. He came in from Ibadan for us to have a weekend getaway at Radisson. I remember just looking at him the next morning after we checked in, and thinking, “I love this guy. I really love this guy.” My mind was like “It’s over for you with this guy.” Do you get?

    Can’t relate. And as a hater, I want to know what your first major fight was about

    Onose: We actually fought some weeks after we first started dating. It was a phone fight. 

    Misan: Oh. Not that day.

    Onose: That morning, I was checking in on him as usual, asking what his plans were for the day. He told me he’d leave the office to run some errands around his guy’s wedding happening that weekend. He was going to be the best man. When he described the logistics of his errands, it didn’t make sense to me to go through so much stress for someone else’s wedding, especially since it’d heavily affect his work for the day. 

    Misan: I wanted to. Me and the guy go way back.

    Onose: I discouraged him, reminding him that he’d probably be too tired to do much work that day. His company at the time was very target-based. 

    He told me he’d heard, but the way he said it, I knew he’d still go ahead, so I called him multiple times during the day to remind him not to do too much.

    Why now?

    Misan: She’s even putting it nicely. She kept calling, vehemently telling me not to go to so and so place, if I really plan on taking a danfo or making sure I hadn’t left before meeting my morning targets. It was my first time experiencing her controlling side — the side that’d make her passionately argue with a stranger online for hours. 

    At one point, I temporarily blocked her because I was tired. I had to talk to her firmly about it that evening. She had good intentions, but I told her to just let me make my own decisions in the end. 

    It’s still a work in progress, but she’s a lot more tolerant now.

    Onose: Thank you. But why did you block me?

    Misan: Omo, my team lead was beginning to give me side eye because of all the calls.

    HIGHLY RECOMMENDED: Love Life: We Married a Year After He Almost Married My Twin

    OMG. But how has this relationship been different from past ones?

    Misan: I’d never dated anyone I met online before her.

    Onose: I’d never been in a long-distance relationship before Misan because I’d heard too many bad stories. I’d dated someone I met online, although we met in person through my cousin a long time before that sha.

    2018 to 2023 seems like a long time. Why did it take you guys that long to marry?

    Misan: The long distance was a huge factor. We lived in different cities, but we could visit each other often because Lagos isn’t that far from Ibadan. So there was no urgency to make a concrete plan to be closer. That in turn slowed our relationship down. 

    Onose: We were too comfortable. 

    COVID and his moving to Lagos changed the stakes a lot, and in some ways, our relationship really kicked off from then, even though we already loved each other. Does that make sense?

    I think so. So how did a proposal happen?

    Misan: I asked her to marry me as soon as I got a job in November 2020. 

    It was a really good job with triple my previous pay. And I wouldn’t have gotten it without her. She pushed me to take all sorts of professional courses, not only to increase my employment opportunities but also to defend the widening gap in my CV. 

    I wouldn’t have gotten the job and my current career trajectory without those courses. She’s a true gem. I knew I needed her in my life for the long haul, but I also needed to be in a good place with a stable job to take that step.

    Onose: He literally proposed the evening of his first day. It shocked me when he casually came to my house and presented the ring. I wasn’t expecting it at all.

    Before you ask, the engagement lasted two years because my mother passed away about six months later. I went into depression; I was in grief for almost a year. I couldn’t imagine having a wedding without my mother. We’d dreamt of my wedding day for too long, and I beat myself up for taking my sweet time with it.

    I couldn’t even think of a wedding till almost a year after, in 2022. And Misan was patient through all that. I’m so grateful I didn’t have to go through that alone.

    I’m so so sorry. 

    What’s the best thing about being married?

    Misan: The promise of a lifetime together. Our relationship feels more solid. Also, finally moving in together after so long.

    Onose: Having someone to assist me in everything. We get to be there for each other for real, like literally always be there for each other. It can be overwhelming sometimes, but I love it. 

    Five months in, and I’ve learnt to be less controlling. Misan has helped me see I can’t control everything; people want to be able to think for themselves despite your advice and how much you think you know.

    Misan: And she’s taught me to be less laidback about my life. I know how far I’ve come career-wise and in my personal projects thanks to her OCD. 

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

    Onose: 8. 

    Misan: 12 (I take her remaining 2 and add to my 10). I couldn’t have asked for a better, more supportive significant other.

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

    READ NEXT: Love Life Special: Mina’s Side of the Story

  • I’m the Odd One in My Friend Group, and It’s Lonely

    I’m the Odd One in My Friend Group, and It’s Lonely

    This is Charis*’ story, as told to Boluwatife

    Image source: nappy via pexels

    I’m an extrovert who doesn’t know how to keep friends. I know what you’re thinking: How’s that even possible? I don’t know either. All I know is I can walk into a room and vibe with everyone there, but it never goes past that. I’m terrible at keeping that “vibe” long enough to form an actual friendship.

    I’ve always been like this. My social nature means I stand out among my mates, and people tend to flock to me, even during my secondary school days. But then, when they come around, I engage them for a while, lose interest and move to the next thing or person that catches my eye. 

    In university, I just had acquaintances. We called each other friends but never talked about the important things. I couldn’t just call them in the middle of the night when I couldn’t sleep, tell them how I was crushing on one guy, or share my worries about my mum’s health. And it wasn’t really their fault. I just didn’t know how to put my energy into being close to people like that. 

    So when I got into my friend group in 2019, I couldn’t believe my luck. I met Rachael* during NYSC orientation at the Iseyin camp. She’d noticed I always got food in mammy market, walked up to me one day and went, “Are you related to Dangote?” I was still trying to understand the question when she laughed and explained why she said so. We became pretty close, and even when I started to withdraw, she’d come to my bed and talk to me. 

    Just before the end of camp, my mum passed away, finally succumbing to her long-term heart issues, so I had to leave camp early and return home to Lagos. Rachael kept in touch and even came down to Lagos a week before the burial to be with me. That’s when I officially became part of her friend group. She got her three other friends to call to sympathise with me and made sure they also came for the burial. I hit it off with them, and before I knew it, they’d added me to their WhatsApp friend group.

    Our friendship has lasted almost four years now because they put a lot into ensuring we all communicate on WhatsApp and even go on the odd girls’ trip. But I feel like the odd one out. Rachael and our other friends have known each other since university. I can just open our WhatsApp chat now and find 30+ messages of them sharing inside jokes or talking about someone I’ve never heard of. 

    They even like the same things. Anytime we plan a hangout, it’s almost always at someplace I don’t like because, by the time the others vote, I’m the only one with a different opinion. Let’s not even talk about how I’m a literal odd number. Before I joined, they were four in the group; I became number five. I sometimes feel like the third (or fifth) wheel, watching the others all perfectly paired up. They have this connection even outside our group activities, while the group is the primary thing I have in common with the four of them. It’s hard for me to just pick up the phone to call one of them and talk for hours. 

    Don’t get me wrong, they’re nice people, but I sometimes feel like I’m outside the group looking in. A perfect example is how, during Moyin*’s — one of our friends — wedding in 2021, Rachael would casually mention on the bridesmaids group chat that she’d discussed with Dara* when she slept over at her place the previous night, and they thought we needed to reconsider one thing or the other about our outfits. Like, aren’t we all in the same group for that purpose? What are these separate conversations about?

    Even their parents know each other. It’s not strange to hear that Moyin’s mum called Rachael on her birthday, or that Dara’s mum sent fish to Moyin. But just three months ago, I had to travel to Abuja for work. Moyin’s mum lives in Abuja, so the day before I travelled, I asked Moyin to tell her mum I’d like to stay over at their place. I was told the house was full and that their dad didn’t like impromptu visits. I understood, but I wondered, what if it was Dara who needed a place to stay? Wouldn’t they have found a way to help? I felt hurt, but I know Moyin would’ve helped if it was her house I needed to stay in.

    I’ve never told them how I feel because I don’t want to cause unnecessary drama. I know I can do a long group call just to rant, but I think I have to come to terms with the fact that they’ll always be closer to each other than me. They have common experiences I may never be able to relate to, but I guess that’s okay. 

    This is the closest I’ve ever gotten to real female friendships. I don’t have a best friend, but at least, I have people who look out for me, and that’s better than nothing.


    *Names have been changed for the sake of anonymity.


    NEXT READ: I’m the Side Chick That Got the Man

  • These 15 “Good” Lies Will Surely Get You Money From Your Stingy Boyfriend

    These 15 “Good” Lies Will Surely Get You Money From Your Stingy Boyfriend

    It’s not like we’re trying to lead you astray, but if you’ve already decided to lie, you might as well tell a really good one. Just promise to share the money when you get it because these formats will definitely work every time.

    Tell him it’s a loan

    The first step is to make it seem like you intend to pay back, even though you and I both know that’s not in the plan.

    And that you’d pay back with interest

    Just don’t clarify what type of interest you mean. If he ever brings it up when it’s time to pay back, you can say the interest you offered was a hug or a pat on the head. Interest is interest.

    Say there’s something wrong with your credit alerts

    And you just want to know what it feels like for money to hit your account. You can throw in small sweet words and head rubs for pizzazz.

    Tell him the last person who gave you money got blessed

    If he doesn’t feel encouraged to try it out, he lacks faith in you, and why are you dating such an opp?

    Say your [distant] family member swallowed a razor

    Crazier things have happened. At least we were here when he heard that snake swallowed millions. Just tell him someone swallowed a razor, and now everyone needs to contribute to foot the medical bills.

    Tell him you crave money in your account

    This will probably only work if you’re pregnant sha. We’ll recommend getting pregnant first so this format works better for you.

    Claim to be broke

    This might even be an obvious lie, because Nigerian babes are rich. But you could try.

    Blame Nigerian banks

    Nigerian banks already have a reputation of doing everything else except their work, so this won’t be too far off. Just say something in the lines of, your bank locked your account, and boo will do the needful.

    Tell him you want to buy him a gift

    He’d be too impressed at the fact that you’re actually thinking of him to ask why you aren’t using your own money. 

    Tell him you want to buy yourself a gift

    And if he says no, it just means he doesn’t think you’re worthy of good things. Is that who you should be dating, sis?

    Say you want to start a business 

    TBH, using all the money to look good is good business, so this isn’t even a lie.

    Tell him you’ve found a sugar daddy 

    If he likes you, he’ll know he needs to step up so they don’t snatch you away from him. If he doesn’t like you, though…

    Say you’re owing Palmpay

    He wouldn’t want you to be disgraced, so he’ll cough up the money.

    Tell him you need money for school or anything specific 

    You already call him “daddy”, so he might as well start acting like your father.

    Just call him and start crying 

    At this point, you can be as creative as possible. Form sadness and tell him you don’t think he’d still love you if you were a worm. He’d probably try to appease you, and that’s when you ask for the money.


    NEXT READ: Dating on a ₦350k Creative Freelancer Income

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  • What Is This Marriage and Baby Fever?

    What Is This Marriage and Baby Fever?

    I’m in my early 20s, but I still see myself as a child. I used to think all early 20s folks see themselves this way, but I’m beginning to realise there aren’t too many of us on that boat. 

    I graduated from the university in 2019, and with each passing month, my old primary, secondary school and university classmates are taking the huge step of getting married and/or having kids. 

    marriage

    What’s even crazier is it’s the folks who swore that love is a scam that are the first to go.

    You could be on the street, and John Bosco who promised to become a Catholic priest would drive by in his Sienna with his two kids. Love really has a way of changing your plans.

    marriage

    I can’t even imagine having a kid right now. So of course, I’m concerned by the level of work social media puts into making babies look like angels

    I’m a child myself. Having my own child right now is a recipe for disaster. I’d get angry over the stupidest things.

    marriage

    Kids are really expensive too. I’m sorry, but if I’m going to spend that much money on something, I should be getting some kind of ROI.

    marriage

    I really admire those who are starting families anyway. It takes a lot to believe in a cause so completely to devote your entire life to it. 

    marriage

    I’m not ready for that kind of responsibility yet. Imagine being responsible for people who aren’t me. I’m barely responsible for myself. Marriage is so scary and final. I know divorce exists, but I don’t think anyone goes into marriage with the intention of divorcing later. What’s especially scary is the fact that people change and there’s nothing you can do about it. Even I know that I wasn’t the same person I was a few years ago. 

    The patience that marriage requires doesn’t sound like something I have yet. I’ll have to be completely accountable to another person. I can’t just decide to go on a trip or make a big purchase. It’s bondage, but I’d be deeply in love with the person I’m in bondage with.

    marriage

    I hope I get married someday — definitely not today — but till then, I’ll write articles and make sure every hot babe knows about HERtitude. You too can get your tickets here.

  • Love Life Special: Mina’s Side of the Story

    Love Life Special: Mina’s Side of the Story

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

    Please, take it from the top. How did you meet Daniel?

    We met at work in 2018. We used to work in different departments of a bank’s head office. I was in marketing, he was in IT, and if you’re familiar with how banks work, you know these two departments liaise often. 

    I met him when I had an issue to resolve for a client. I went to his department, and the task was assigned to him. It took us two months to sort out the issue, and that’s how we started talking every other day. I was drawn to his reserved personality from the beginning. When we finally resolved the problem, he sent me a bottle of wine to celebrate, and I thought it was really nice of him.

    If you don’t know what we’re talking about, read this first: Love Life: We Married a Year After He Almost Married My Twin

    Nice. How did things progress?

    I admired that he didn’t try to flirt or act inappropriately when we worked together, which guys did a lot. They may not necessarily harass you, but they always want to get familiar too quickly once they know you’re a girl they’ll be working closely with for some time. I liked that he was respectful and understood boundaries. 

    Some weeks after the whole thing, my mum was marking her 50th birthday with a big party, and my siblings and I were encouraged to invite all our friends. When I was scrolling through my contact list, I saw his name and remembered how cordial he was, so I invited him on a whim.

    When did you start dating?

    It was a gradual process, TBH. At the party, he was really cool. He came right on time while others came late, and he stayed till the end. He was respectful to my family and was the only friend who brought my mum a gift — a china plate set. My parents still use it in their house today. It was so lovely. 

    After that, we started talking. I’d just come out of a one-year relationship, so I wasn’t really in a hurry. But things became official in March 2019, when we went on our first proper date.

    Had he met Somi by this time?

    Yes, they met briefly at my mum’s birthday. But they didn’t really meet till my birthday hangout in July. We all went to the beach with a couple of our friends. They got along well. Daniel is naturally a kind, caring person. His parents raised him well, and I don’t say that lightly. He’s one of the most respectful people I know. 

    After our beach hangout, we started having double dates once in a while; us, Somi and her boyfriend. The hangouts happened naturally when we found someplace cool to hang and we wanted to share the moment with other people without making it too complicated by inviting our friends.

    Got it. How did your relationship with Daniel go in general? 

    It went well. Special days like my birthday, Valentine, Christmas, were even more special with him because he’s an intentional and thoughtful person. Sometimes, he’d do grand gestures like when he sent gift and food baskets with trumpeters to my office on our first Valentine’s together in 2020. Other times, he’d just send meaningful gifts. Our first Christmas together in 2019, he got me knee and wrist supports because I started going to the gym some weeks earlier. 

    Did you know he’d propose when he did?

    Yes and no. Things were going well for about two years before he popped the question, so it was definitely at the back of my mind that we might get married. But we didn’t really discuss it beforehand.

    Our lives had become intertwined such that we were always either together or chatting randomly over the phone. I switched banks a year into our relationship, but we were both still in the banking sector and worked on the island, so it was easy to navigate our relationship with work. And he got along well with everyone in my family. I found it so easy to introduce him to everyone.

    Why then didn’t it work out in the end?

    See, Daniel is a good guy to have as a boyfriend in general. But was he a good guy for me in particular? I don’t think so. We didn’t really have much in common. I love to go out and be outside. It’s pretty important to me to attend events, both social and work-related, to meet people, explore places; I even love just driving around. I visit people a lot and love celebrating with them. 

    Daniel doesn’t mind these things, but he also loves solitude a lot. He loves to read; I can never get past five pages of a book. I’m also an active person, and if you’re a regular gym person, you know the lifestyle is pretty exciting. The gym is a great place to network too. Well, Daniel is a real couch potato. You can’t get him to run for his salvation. 

    These things weren’t really a big deal at first, but as soon as we got engaged, it became more obvious that we couldn’t really gist about things. He always wanted to talk about movies or books or something he found out online to do with tech, science, celebrities. I only ever wanted to talk about the things happening around us, like what happened at work or at that restaurant I went to, or on the road to his house. A lot of times, we had nothing to offer each other when one person is talking about what interests them.

    But why did that become obvious only after the engagement?

    It was always obvious, but it didn’t choke me until the thought of a lifetime together started hanging in the air. We spent even more time together, and I started seeing him come to life more with certain other people. Yes, including Somi. He had a lot in common with her, and they could always engage in conversation on a deeper level than we could. 

    But she wasn’t the reason I broke off the engagement. It was the deeper realisation that our connection was on a surface level. We liked each other a lot, and I wanted someone that caring and loyal in my corner, but did I really love him? I started questioning myself a lot as the d-day got closer.

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

    Want to attend the hottest party for the hottest babe this Saturday, grab your Zikoko HERtitude tickets here before it’s too late

    What was the defining moment for you that made it clear you had to end it?

    I woke up the morning of my bridal shower, and my heart was heavy. I just knew I couldn’t go through with it anymore. I was no longer excited about marrying Daniel. There’s no other way to explain it. And I didn’t want to allow what people might say to make me enter something so permanent. So I went to his house, and I explained this to him. We had a long conversation about it, and his emotional reaction almost made me change my mind, but I had to be strong. Changing my mind out of pity would’ve been the worst thing to do anyway. 

    True. But how did you feel when your sister told you she was now seeing him? 

    I won’t lie, I was upset. I couldn’t believe it when she told me, but my sister and I mean a lot to each other. We’ve been through so much together, and I know her more than anyone in this world. I know she didn’t have a drop of bad will against me when she started getting close to Daniel. She said nothing had happened between them and nothing would if I told her I wouldn’t accept it. And I believed her. 

    Can I ask why?

    Daniel and Somi have so much in common. They’re both too nice for their own good and very bookish. They used to chat about movies for hours on end when I was the one dating him, and it was so cool to watch how excited they’d get. I knew it was hurting Somi to even ask me about it, knowing fully well that their relationship would be unconventional given my recent history with him. I didn’t want to be the one to put her through further misery. 

    Would I have preferred her to connect so deeply with someone besides my ex? Yes, of course. But do I think they had a natural connection that had nothing to do with me? Absolutely. Why would I keep them apart just out of spite?

    Fair enough. What’s it like being in their lives now that they’re married?

    It was weird at first, not just watching them be in love, but also seeing them hold back their affection because they didn’t want me to be uncomfortable. But I didn’t linger on the weirdness. My extended family also gives them a lot of heat, especially Somi. So I’d say they’ve paid for their “sins”. Just kidding. We’re all good. We’ve started to hang out more this year since I got engaged again.

    About that. What was it like recovering from one engagement and getting into another?

    It was rough, but I pulled through. I actually dated someone for about four months before I got together with my fiance. That relationship didn’t last because it was just me trying to find someone as fun-loving to attend all the events I’d missed while I was with Daniel. It wasn’t very deep, so it fizzled out just as easily as it started. 

    I wasn’t really looking when I met my fiance. I was a bit down when Somi started dating Daniel because I suddenly missed him always being there for me. You can say I was in a vulnerable state, so a new relationship was the last thing on my mind. In fact, I threw myself into work. And again, that’s where I found a man.

    Tell us about it, please

    In 2022, I got a new job at a fintech company. About two months in, I had to meet with their brand and marketing agency which was supposed to present some go-to-market strategies for one of our new products. 

    Obinna was the senior rep they sent to demonstrate the strategies in our office. He also became the point person as soon as we approved the agency’s plans, so almost like Daniel, we started communicating a lot and having to accompany each other to external work events. We got along so well it was almost too good to be true. At first, I told myself he’s probably this charming to all women. But when he started reaching out for us to hang out outside of work tasks, I didn’t hate it. Then we started going out together every evening after work and then again on weekends.

    Sounds like the perfect match you were looking for

    You can say that.

    We never even had the “Be my girlfriend” or “What are we?” conversation. We just spent so much time together that asking would’ve been denying the obvious. And it was exciting to have something so clear it didn’t need words. I’m not saying it couldn’t have gone badly o, but sometimes, when you know, you know.

    Is that why you got engaged so quickly though?

    We got engaged just last month, on the one-year anniversary of the day we met. How long is long enough to date before getting engaged, please? But yeah, this time, I’m sure I love him, and we understand each other so well. 

    Right. And does Obinna feel anyhow about your ex being part of the family now?

    Oh. That’s a big question o. We haven’t really had that conversation. He was definitely taken aback when he heard the story, but he’s really cordial with Daniel. 

    Again, Daniel is very good-natured. He’s not the type of person to give anyone cause to suspect or be wary just by seeing him and being around him, except you’re a particularly overbearing person. And Obinna isn’t, so my guess is he hasn’t thought about it that deeply at this time. He hasn’t even brought it up. 

    Maybe I should go and ask him after this interview.

    Fingers crossed for you. How would you rate your love life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Umm. 8. Obinna and I have a good thing going.

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

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  • Nigerian Parents Are Extra and These Responses About the Wildest Things They’ve Done Prove It

    Nigerian Parents Are Extra and These Responses About the Wildest Things They’ve Done Prove It

    Even though parents are extra in general, Nigerian parents take the cake. But just how extra are they? We asked people to tell us the wildest, most embarrassing thing their parents have done to or for them. Here’s what they said.

    “My dad sexted with my boyfriend” — Amanda*, 20

    I’m an only child, and my dad is very strict. I got my first phone at 18 only because I had to leave home for university. Anytime I came home for holidays, my dad would demand I limit my phone usage so we could “spend time as a family”. 

    One Saturday, during one holiday like that, I was exchanging suggestive texts with my boyfriend on WhatsApp when I had to leave my phone to run a brief errand. I still don’t know how my dad got my password, but he saw the chats. And when my boyfriend asked if I wanted to see how hard he was, I kid you not, my dad typed, “Yes, baby”. My boyfriend sent a dick pic, and my dad was horrified. When I got home that day, he beat me so much, I saw heaven and came back.

    “My mum fought me in school over a tampon” — Tina*, 18

    My mum and I weren’t the best of friends growing up. Maybe it was teenage rebellion, but we couldn’t understand or communicate well with each other. In JSS 3, I started menstruating and decided to try tampons since my friends always talked about them. I knew my mum would never allow me to use hers, so I just took some without her consent. She discovered they were missing while I was in school, and she searched my room and found the opened wrappers.

    She was so pissed she called my school and had them punish me. She also arrived 30 minutes later and jumped me. We literally had a dirty fight on the floor in front of all my seniors and my crush! It was so embarrassing.

    She eventually apologised, and we’re besties now that I’m older, but I still call her out for it at least once a week.

    “My dad brought my naked baby pictures to school” — June*, 22

    I was in Primary Six, and it was Children’s Day. Parents were invited, so my dad came armed with my stark naked baby pictures and shared them with all my teachers. No one asked him to bring the pictures o; he just did. My classmates saw them too, and made fun of me for the longest time after that incident.


    Your parents might disapprove, but it shouldn’t stop you from attending Zikoko’s HERtitude — the hottest party for all the hot babes. Get tickets here.


    “My mum visited my boss to warn him” — Henry, 27

    My very first boss was toxic. He had crazy expectations, and the funny thing was it was an unpaid internship. He’d expect me to be at the office at 7 a.m. even though work started at 9. You also couldn’t leave the office until he left. It was difficult, but I was learning a lot, so I endured.

    My mum had other plans. She never said anything suspicious when I complained about work stress, so imagine my shock when she walked into our office at 7 p.m. one day. Closing time was 5 p.m., but as usual, we were still there because of my boss. She requested to see him, and even though they spoke in his office, everyone on the floor heard her seriously warning and cussing him out. Then she told me to follow her home. Of course, I didn’t even try to resume at the office the next day.


    RELATED: What’s It Like Moving Back In With Your Parents as an Adult? — We Asked 5 People


    “My dad shaved my hair in school” — Dami*, 23

    I attended a military secondary school where my soldier father worked. Female students had to be on low-cut hair, and people who grew their hair longer than the required length would have their hair cut by the soldiers.

    When we were writing WAEC in SS 3, I didn’t shave my hair because I wanted to grow it and just tied a really tight scarf every morning so my hair would shrink and appear low-cut. At home, my dad would remind me every other day to go shave my hair and just start growing it after WAEC, but I delayed, hoping he’d forget. 

    That’s how I went to school for my last paper after shrinking my hair as usual. And my dad just singled me out during our assembly, put a comb in my hair to stretch it out and proceeded to shave it in front of the entire school. He never apologised.

    “She told the entire church about my bed-wetting issues” — John, 24

    I had potty training issues and wet the bed at night till I was around 11 years old. My mother tried so many things, including making me pee on hot coals and waking me up at night to pee, but I still somehow peed on the bed.

    When I was ten, my church was organising a deliverance for children, and she attended it with me and my siblings. At a point, the pastor said parents should declare their children’s issues so it would end forever, and this woman really took a microphone and announced my bed-wetting. I wanted the ground to open up and swallow me. All my friends and a couple of my classmates were there, so it spread to school too. The bed-wetting didn’t stop till about a year later, and I attribute the delay to the relentless bullying my mother’s “declaration” caused me in school.

    “My mum slapped me in front of my crush” — Princess, 26

    My mum had this best friend when I was younger. I naturally became close to her best friend’s son because we practically grew up together. I also started crushing on him.

    Unfortunately for me, both mothers started quarrelling when I was 17, and I didn’t know. One day, I was walking with my mother and brothers around a popular T-junction in Port Harcourt, where we wanted to get a cab. My crush saw us and came to me so we could walk together. My mother and brothers were ahead of us. My crush and I were talking, and he soon started asking me out. I started forming hard-to-get, smiling sheepishly as he was toasting me.

    When we got to where my mum was, and she noticed the smile on our faces, the next thing she did was slap the living daylight out of me in the presence of the boy and all the people around that busy junction. 

    Some passersby even had to hold me because I visibly saw stars. It was later I even got to know about the quarrel. That’s how I just received the brunt of other people’s malice o.

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


    NEXT READ: For Your Peace of Mind, Don’t Introduce These People to Your Nigerian Parents

    Don’t leave without getting your ticket to HERtitude 2023!
  • Ridiculous Questions Girlfriends Always Ask

    Ridiculous Questions Girlfriends Always Ask

    The only person more curious than a five-year-old is a woman in love. They are the masters of asking questions with the most obvious answers.  Anyway, we still love them sha. Your girlfriend has probably asked you one of these questions before.

    Would you still love me if I was a worm?

    girlfriend

    What kind of wahala is this now?

    Why are you calling me that?

    Girlfriends

    This always comes after you call her by her government name. “My name is Babe, not Tolu.”

    Why haven’t you apologised to me yet?

    Girlfriends

    This is her method of apologising by the way.

    Oh, you have forgotten me, your girlfriend?

    Girlfriends

    This is after you’ve not replied to her message for a grand total of three minutes.

    Are you cheating on me?

    Sister, even if I was cheating, do you think the way you’d find out is by you randomly asking me?

    Do I look fat in this dress?

    Girlfriends

    Dear Kings, never answer yes to this question. NEVER.

    Do you love me?

    This question always pops out of the blue. You’ll have to spend the next 20 minutes reassuring her that the pimple on her face hasn’t made you stop loving her.

    Get your girlfriend HERtitude tickets here if you want a break from these questions.

    hertitude Girlfriends

  • Follow These 7 Steps to Avoid Billing at Ikoyi Registry

    Follow These 7 Steps to Avoid Billing at Ikoyi Registry

    Maybe it’s the japa wave or love is just surplus in the air, a staggering number of young Nigerians are doing together-forever on a daily basis.

    Ikoyi registry is the preferred for many (especially japa enthusiasts) and the people who work  there use this information to their advantage. This is how you can outsmart their Sodiq Ologbon ways.

    Follow These 7 Steps to Avoid Billing at Ikoyi Registry

    Go with a mobile wardrobe

    You’ll think you’ve picked the best outfit until they say you’re  casual in your drip. Don’t mind them, it’s a plan to make you buy from the cut and sew vendors within the compound.

    Put on your resting bitch face

    It’s a day of joy but if you smile too much, you’re calling for billing and they will answer you. Only the LOYL should see your teeth outside.

    Five is a crowd

    To be honest, you only need one witness each and that’s a total of four people. Going with many people easily places a target for billing on your head.

    Suffocate them with mouth odour

    Follow These 7 Steps to Avoid Billing at Ikoyi Registry

    Staying quiet for long means a buildup of funky breath in your mouth. You and the LOYL will be swiftly dismissed at every stop.

    Linkup with money changers mint ₦50-₦100 bills

    Follow These 7 Steps to Avoid Billing at Ikoyi Registry

    Here’s the thing, no matter what, you will spend money at the Ikoyi registry. But hey, what’s a couple of ₦50-₦100 notes? the most you’ll part with is ₦2500.

    Show up in Ankara

    First impression matters or what’s that thing they say? The workers at Ikoyi registry won’t take you seriously if your wedding day baffs doesn’t compare to their everyday drip.

    Don’t go with food

    It’s never going to be enough and you’ll end up getting guilt tripped to sort others who didn’t get food packs with money. Better to avoid completely.

    Eko’s hottest are linking up on May 27. Grab your HERtitude tickets here.

  • 70+ Sweet Words to Make Any Woman Feel Special

    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

    Don’t leave without getting your ticket to HERtitude 2023!
  • These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    They can act like they don’t care, but trust us when we say these gift ideas for men will answer their many “God when?” questions.

    As you search for the best gift ideas for the different men in your life—siblings, father, co-worker, husband, boyfriend, sons— we want you to pay attention to this list curated with all our love.

    So what will get that man grinning? Let’s go.

    Birthday gift ideas for men

    Sponsor a weekend getaway

    That man deserves to see the world. We’ll let you decide if you’re sending him to Benin Republic or Togo. Also, if you have the money and can afford it, a trip to Santorini or Paris.

    Average spend: ₦500k- ₦2 million.

    A shopping spree

    You’ve seen his drip on occasions so you know his style. Take his ATM card and buy all his essentials.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦500k

    Cook-a-storm

    Show that man you can do better than Hilda Baci. If she cooked 80 recipes, raise him 100 pots of local delicacies. Afterall, the way to a man’s heart is his stomach or something like that.

    Average spend: ₦20-₦100k.

    Book a spa appointment

    Source: TripAdvisor

    He’ll be in that massage bed thanking God for the day he met a thoughtful queen like you. Doesn’t matter if you’re his wife, mum, sister or friend.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦200k.

    Organise a hang-out with his guys

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    Men hardly have time to throw parties but will they attend one with their gees? Just make sure to cater for all their food needs. Buy them liquor too, they like that.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦200k.

    An underwear set

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    Source: Konga

    Forget the trash-talking on Twitter , men actually appreciate boxers and singlet. You can go the extra mile with designer brands.

    Average spend: ₦20-₦50k.

    Footwear

    Source: The Modest Man

    A lot of men obsess over sneakers, shoes and palm slippers. Pay attention to his favourite and get him a or two. Bonus point: Go for designer brands.

    Average spend: ₦10-₦200k.

    Mobile phone

    Source: Stuff

    Chances are, he already has an expensive phone. But men like to stay updated and you can go the extra mile by gifting him the latest version of his device. Be sure to know if he’s an Apple bro or Samsung brethren.

    Average spend: ₦200k-₦1m.

    Cologne

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    Source: Pinterest

    Men love to smell good but they don’t want to go in a room smelling like a thousand other bros. Make it your mission to find his signature scent and ensure that he hardly runs out.

    Average spend: ₦10k-₦300k.

    Game console

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    Source: Konga

    It has to be the latest PlayStation console. But hey, half is better than none, if you can’t afford the latest just make sure you buy one.

    Average spend: ₦200k-₦500k.

    Graduation gift ideas for men

    Whether he just bagged a new degree or completed an online course, you want to motivate your man and let me know that you recognized his efforts.

    A new whip

    More Nigerian parents need to embrace the idea of gifting cars during milestone achievement. Your son just bagged a degree? Spend that money!

    Average spend: ₦2m – ₦50 Million.

    Graduation party

    Let’s be honest, school isn’t easy. If anyone makes it to graduation, they deserve to be thrown a party with their loved ones. Although, we can’t say parties come cheap.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦500k.

    Book a photoshoot session

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    Pictures preserve memories and you can be thoughtful by helping the celebrant immortalize one of their most prized moments. Please dear, book a professional photographer and not ‘photooo’.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦150k.

    Graduation Cake

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    Source: Pinterest

    Personally, we believe there should be a cake for every celebration because why not? The key here is to make sure a special message comes with the cake.

    Average spend: ₦10k-₦50k.

    Gift hamper

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    Source: Konga

    No, you don’t give out hampers during the Christmas season alone. Curate a personalized hamper and include items like: Notepads, pen, playing cards, wallet, multi-tool pen, etc.

    Average spend: ₦20k-₦100k.

    Personalized photobook

    Source: PhotoNaija

    Chances are, he shared memories with you throughout his stay in uni. Go the extra mile and document these memories in a photobook. He might cringe at first, but never you mind, he loves that shit!

    Average spend: N25k-N100K.

    Wedding anniversary gift for men

    You should be celebrating every year spent with the love of your life. It’s nice to say you love him but this list of gift ideas for men will help you prove your words with actions.

    Couple’s massage

    It’s a gift for him but God forbid you leave your LOML in the hands of a masseuse. Go with him, and if things get extra heated, you might even have the room to yourself.

    Average spend: ₦70k-₦200k.

    Weekend getaway

    Source: Visit Greece

    If you have kids, send them to their grannies. A private trip to some of the most romantic destinations in the world. You can do Olumo rock too if that’s what you can afford. It’s the thought that counts.

    Average spend: ₦200k-₦2m.

    Vow renewal

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    An opportunity to tell each other “for richer, for richer” Very yes please! You can keep it private or have family and friends witness the true love story.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦500k.

    Certification

    More skills mean more earning potential and that’s good for everybody. Do your research and pay for a course that will shoot him up his career ladder. Don’t sleep on this gift idea for men.

    Average spend: ₦100k-₦500k.

    Personalized accessories

    These Gift Ideas for Men Are the Best You’ll Ever Find

    You want him to think of you everywhere. Whether he’s at work or stuck in traffic on the 3rd mainland bridge, he’ll always smile when he sees your words or initials on his belt, bracelet or wallet.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦100k.

    Customized Bible or Quran

    Source: iStock

    Remember how you picked the Holy book on your engagement day? You want to remind him that the word of God is still important in your union.

    Average spend: ₦5k-₦50k.

    Set up a man cave

    Source: Essential Home

    Nigerian landlords are wicked and it’s expensive to have the luxury of space. However, if you do, it’s time to put on your interior designing cap; create a safe space just for him. Hear hear, this will cost money.

    Average spend: ₦500k-₦5m.

    Cinema date

    Source: iStock

    If you can rent out the entire cinema, please do. Otherwise, just you and your man are see a romantic movie that will reignite the flames of your love.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦200k.

    Upgrade his wedding ring

    Consider this as an investment for the future. If it’s a silver ring, upgrade it to a diamond. 

    Average spend: ₦1m-₦20m.

    Hot intercourse

    It doesn’t matter if they get it every other day, men love sex. The key here is to try something extra different and special. Maybe grant his BDSM fantasies—just kidding.

    Average spend: ₦0.

    Father’s Day gift ideas

    Mothers get most of the love but we know fathers also want it. This is your opportunity to show daddy how much you appreciate him picking up the bills and leaving his wallet open at all times.

    Money

    It’s the one day where he gets to receive after months of giving and giving. Suffocate his bank account with something hooge.

    Average spend: ₦100k-₦10m.

    Father’s Day cake

    Source: Wilton

    He’ll most likely not eat because he doesn’t like eating sugar. But make sure there’s a cake with a thoughtful message stating how special he is.

    Average spend: ₦10k-₦50k.

    Bottle of wine or whisky

    You want to find an expensive bottle that has aged well. You can accompany this with a cute card telling daddy how much of a good parent he is.

    Average spend: ₦10k-₦100k.

    Customized keyholder

    Source: The Laser Boutique

    Daddy probably has keys for everything. The car, his office, the house and special safes. give him a customized keychain that keeps everything organized.

    Average spend: ₦5k-₦20k.

    Father’s Day hamper

    Source: My Basket

    Curate a special hamper for daddy. You can include items like: Customized journal, cufflinks, provisions, etc.

    Average spend: ₦50-₦150k.

    Fabric

    As they grow older, Nigerian men fall in love with native wears and you’ll be sure to find a dozen or more in their wardrobes. Hit up with your fabric plug at Balogun market and spoil him silly.

    Average spend: ₦20-₦150k.

    Health supplements

    We want to make sure daddy’s health is in good shape at all times. Make sure you check with the family doctor to know what works best for him.

    Average spend: ₦50k-₦200k.

    Retirement gift ideas for men

    A lot of thoughts should go into selecting the best retirement gift idea for men as you’re celebrating an important milestone in his life. Whether as a wife, a child, colleague or friend, you want to give him that big pat on the back for getting to the finish line. Your gift should do the talking.

    Retirement party

    The company will most likely have a moderate send forth event but you want to make sure you go the extra mile. Gather friends, family and loved ones to celebrate years of service.

    Average spend: ₦100k-₦500k.

    Vacation

    Source: Conde Nast Traveler

    Probably the most important on the list, daddy should be getting some well-deserved rest after years of doing the work. We recommend an out-of-country experience, but hey, the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) is budget friendly.

    Average spend: ₦250k-₦2m.

    Retirement birthday cake

    Retirement gift ideas for men

    Source: CakeNBake

    A big 18 inches, multi-flavored, cake that comes with a message that says: “you’ve worked, it’s time to chill/play” or something sweet like that.

    Average spend: ₦20k-₦50k.

    Open a business

    Except daddy is Dangote or Otedola, retirement in this part of the world isn’t really the end. You want to set daddy up with something that pays the bills apart from his monthly pension.

    Average spend: ₦500k-₦10m.

    Gift him a mansion

    Source: Reuters

    African parents mean their last word when they pray for their kids to buy cars and build houses for them. What better time to show daddy that prayers can be answered?

    Average spend: ₦10m-₦100.

  • Love Life: We Married a Year After He Almost Married My Twin

    Love Life: We Married a Year After He Almost Married My Twin

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

    How did you meet each other?

    Daniel: I was dating her twin sister, Mina, for almost two years between 2019 and 2021. I met Somi sometime during that period. She had her own boyfriend at the time. And all four of us were quite friendly. We used to go out together a lot.

    Somi: Yes, we were all good friends. But then, I broke up with my boyfriend towards the end of 2021, while Daniel proposed to Mina about a month after.

    Wait, he was going to marry your twin sister?

    Daniel: I thought I loved her, but the truth is, we were incompatible in a lot of ways. We had very different personalities. She was the kind of person to always be out and about, attending everyone’s party. She was generally loud and jovial. I’m a lot more reserved. But I admired her and loved being her person.

    Somi: We started bonding after I became single and he drew closer to the family as Mina’s fiance. We could both relate to being in her shadow. So when she was on one of her energy bursts, initiating ideas none of us could relate to, Daniel and I would exchange glances and knowing smiles.

    When did you realise you liked each other?

    Daniel: When I realised I was lowkey spending more time with Somi, and I was beginning to feel guilty about it, I knew something was up.

    Somi: We’d have these long deep conversations in the living room — while Mina was somewhere else doing something else — and I started to realise he got me. I’ve always been the quiet sister between Mina and me. But Daniel is even more quiet than me. 

    When she first started dating him after they met at work, I was so sure they’d break up in no time because Mina had a type, and it wasn’t Daniel. I was shocked when he even proposed to her. Then, I started thinking Mina was lucky she got such a good, unproblematic person. 

    When that changed to feelings of jealousy, I started avoiding him. We both still lived with our parents, so anytime I knew she was coming to the house with him, I’d just go out.

    How did things progress from there?

    Somi: They started getting busy with their wedding plans. Mina was her usual energetic self about the whole thing, drawing me in with talks of the bridal train as expected. I had to be involved in preparations for the traditional side of things as well, and the whole thing made me so uncomfortable. 

    I kept thinking they wouldn’t be happy together. But at the same time, I felt like a bad sister to think that. It’s not like I knew for sure that I liked him or he liked me back. I just liked him as a friend and person. And I felt his personality would clash with my sister’s in the long run. But he was love-struck.

    Daniel: I agree I was love-struck. But I now realise it’s different from being in love with someone. I loved the idea of Mina and the idea of being with someone that passionate about everything. But our relationship was missing that connection I always felt with Somi.

    SUPER RELATED: Love Life: We Love Each Other But Can’t Live Together

    I’m curious how you guys crossed the line over to love and a relationship

    Somi: First, Mina suddenly called off the wedding the day of her bridal shower, a few weeks before the wedding. She called me crying, as the rest of the bridal party was preparing for the shower and told me she’d broken it off with Daniel. She confided in me that she no longer felt excited about the prospects of marrying him, and she’d felt that way for a while but didn’t want to admit it. But now, everything in her was saying no. 

    My first thought was, “How’s Daniel taking this news?” I wanted to comfort Mina, but at the same time, I wanted to be sure Daniel was okay. And to be honest, my longing for Daniel was stronger at that moment.

    Daniel: I didn’t take it well at all. I actually cried when Mina broke things off. On one side, I didn’t think I deserved her. On the other, I was already determined to give her my all. In retrospect, I know it was unhealthy to be with someone who unknowingly made me feel less than. 

    After the whole thing settled and I made peace with the fact that I was no longer getting married, I obviously stayed away from their house and business. But then, Somi reached out to me about a week later, asking how I was. She sounded so sincere and comforting when she said she hoped I was fine. And I realised I’d missed her and our frequent bantering.

    I see

    Somi: We started talking over the phone from time to time after that first call. We’d always been close on IG, so we started really responding to each other’s content again and exchanging memes.

    Daniel: She didn’t know how much her messages and memes helped me get through the day. Having her come back into my life after I stopped being anything to her, really made me feel a lot less lonely. 

    One day, I decided to ask her if she wanted to hang out, and we did. We attended my co-worker’s birthday party together. Thankfully, Mina and Somi are completely unidentical, so there was no mistaking them for each other and wondering if I’d gotten back together with Mina. 

    Somi: LOL. After that outing, I knew I really liked him. And I knew I had to have a potentially difficult conversation with Mina. Luckily, she said she was fine with me getting close to him.

    Daniel: I asked her out officially a week after we attended the birthday party in 2021.

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

    You didn’t feel awkward that you would’ve married her twin?

    Daniel: Of course, I did. I knew how it looked.

    Somi: I was ashamed for the first few months, so we hid the relationship from all our mutual friends. But we kept going because we just got along so well. We’re both quiet introverts who love to dwell in our personal spaces without intrusion from the outside world. And somehow, we got to meld personal spaces such that we loved being alone together. What I love most about us is how we get each other’s subtle gestures and facial expressions so well.

    Daniel: Our public sign language. LOL.

    Somi: Yes. It also does wonders for my self-esteem that Mina and I aren’t identical. It makes me that much more confident that I’m not just a perfect replacement. I do believe we share a true connection.

    Daniel: We do.

    So how did you go from hiding your relationship to marriage?

    Daniel: That was hard. I was terribly ashamed to go back to her parents. The same man wanting to marry the twin sister this time around? I felt bad. My mum was my support system during this time. She really helped me jump that hurdle. And of course, Somi too kept trying to convince me that she’d already told them and done some of the dirty work. I don’t know how she gathered the nerve. Meanwhile, I was joking around about us eloping to another country.

    Somi: But he eventually came to meet my parents, and they were completely fine with it as long as Mina didn’t have any issues. Oh, I should mention that by then, Mina was already getting on with her current fiance.

    Nice. But when did you propose? And why does it feel like you were in such a hurry to marry, Daniel?

    Daniel: I really wasn’t. I just don’t believe in wasting time when you’ve found a good thing. I felt good about Mina. But maybe that was just because I got to spend a lot of time with Somi and mistook the warmth I felt in my heart during that period for being happy with Mina.

    Somi: I think when we started properly dating, we just wanted to be fully committed to each other as soon as possible. But actually, we dated for up to a year before the wedding. That’s not bad at all.

    Daniel: I proposed in May 2022, seven months after we started dating. I just asked her to marry me one Saturday night while we were watching TV together and discussing the cars we liked. Her friend helped me choose a ring the next day, and I officially proposed during a lunch date later in the week.

    Somi: It all felt natural, and I especially appreciate that he didn’t plan a fanfare around the proposal. It felt like we were having a heart-to-heart when he asked me and later proposed with a ring. The wedding happened five months later, in October.

    How does Mina feel about you two being married now?

    Somi: She jokes about it all the time — that she’s glad she didn’t force herself to marry Daniel and ruin our chances of true love forever.

    Aww

    Daniel: I’m actually very grateful to God because things like that have ruined so many lives. 

    Somi: All three of us would’ve probably been miserable for the rest of our lives because of that one act. And worse, we wouldn’t even know what was triggering our sadness.

    Right? So how would you rate your love life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Somi: 10

    Daniel: 10

    DIRECTLY RELATED: Love Life Special: Mina’s Side of the Story

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

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  • What She Said: I Married the Man My Pastor Chose, and It Failed

    What She Said: I Married the Man My Pastor Chose, and It Failed

    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.

    Please, tell me everything that led to your pastor arranging your marriage

    It was in 1993. I was a committed worker in a popular church that was a haven for people looking for miracles during the late 80s/early 90s when revivals were extremely popular in Nigeria. 

    At 37, I was doing well for myself. I was a senior manager at a bank, my two younger brothers lived with me, and I comfortably provided for all of us. The only thing was I was unmarried. While I wasn’t particularly unhappy, especially at that stage in my life, people around me took it up as a prayer point. 

    And because I was really active in church for many years, my pastor kept promising I’d marry soon. 

    How did he make this happen?

    It was during one of our special services on June 13, 1993. I’ll never forget it because it was the day after we went out in our numbers to vote for Abiola. My pastor was leading a prayer session, after which he called out to the congregation for all the single people to stand up. After some more prayer, he started picking those who stood up in twos — a man, a woman, a man, a woman, like that — and telling them, “That’s your husband. That’s your wife”. 

    He got to me and paired me with someone, one of those men who didn’t always come to church but often donated large sums. He was a typical Lagos society man from one of the elite Yoruba families. Our pastor prophesied that God had anointed us to be man and wife, and all that remained was for us to wed.

    And just like that, you married the man?

    Yes. 

    The wedding happened in November of that same year. We tried to court while meeting each other’s families and planning the wedding, but we hardly had time to breathe between work and social activities. He was a widower who already had two kids around age ten. But I wasn’t too concerned about taking care of them because I knew I could afford hired help even if he wasn’t willing to. 

    There was a bit of friction between families because I’m Igbo. But my pastor was well-known and loved then. So it was a thing of joy and honour that he’d personally anointed our wedding, and everyone did their best to behave.

    How was the wedding?

    It was a huge society wedding; the talk of town. I look back on it now with both longing and disgust because it was big and beautiful yet we barely knew each other. How were we able to go through with it? Why did anyone allow it to happen? My parents were late at the time, otherwise, I’m sure my mother would’ve never allowed it.

    What happened after the wedding?

    Around a month in, I knew we weren’t compatible because he expected me to be this domestic wife and was passive-aggressive about me quitting my job. But I kept going because I believed it was the will of God for us to be together.

    RELATED: What She Said: I Love Jesus, But I’m a Closet Lesbian

    Why do I feel like you stopped believing this soon after?

    He stopped attending our church in the third month of our marriage, and I found out he was really a Muslim. He only went to a few of my pastor’s services because of his popular ministry which drew a large crowd. It was more of a political move; my ex-husband is an active member of a well-known political party.

    He was completely uninterested in Christianity and often made fun of it, using my eagerness to marry him because my pastor said so as a reason. He told me he’d just wanted someone submissive to stay home and take care of his children.

    What was it like after hearing his true thoughts and intentions?

    For a while, it was just disappointing. 

    During our courtship, he gave me the impression that he was excited to marry me. He’d tell me how beautiful I was, how he admired the way I’d preserved my beauty and also built a respectable career. He’d even compare me to his mum who was a formidable woman in society then. She was a well-known fabric merchant, an enterprising woman who raised her four children alone after her husband died early. Everyone knew her story, and I always felt good that he held me in the same esteem.

    Hearing his true thoughts months into our marriage shattered that impression and even confused me. But what really made me angry was how he started interfering with my work and undermining my career.

    What was the last straw for you in that regard?

    I was up for a huge promotion that would’ve made me jump from general manager to acting senior general manager because the sitting SGM left suddenly. It wasn’t official yet, but I got to know about it and made the mistake of sharing the news with him. 

    This man then spoke to one of the executive directors of the bank, who was one of his drinking partners. The gossip that came back to me was that my husband didn’t think I was ready for the role since I was just getting used to my new role as his wife, and I wasn’t even focusing enough on the children. 

    No!

    Those were the kind of ridiculous statements men could boldly make in those days and actually be taken seriously. That’s how I was bypassed, and the role was given to a guy who’d just become general manager some months before. Less than a year later, they confirmed him as senior general manager. 

    I’d started second-guessing myself because of the sudden change of management’s mind, but because things don’t stay secret within a bank for long, I got to know that the order came from my husband, who wasn’t even involved in the bank professionally. After that, we had our first real fight where he got physical. This was about five months in.

    Physical, how?

    I was ranting, screaming at him around the house because I was livid. He suddenly charged at me and punched me in the stomach. I remember exactly how it happened; his face and eyes were so scary in that moment, and I couldn’t recognise him. 

    Right after, he left the house and didn’t come back till the next week, filled with apologies. The punch hurt so much, I just called in sick that week and laid in bed, crying.

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

    When did you decide to leave him?

    Maybe not immediately after that punch, but before long, I started considering it. I wasn’t comfortable in the house. 

    Although he never hit me again, there were little things that made it clear we weren’t in a partnership and I was just a visitor. Like, we’d be in the TV room having a casual conversation, but once something more sensitive — something about his close friends or financials — came up, he’d just get nasty and tell me off. 

    It was always a sharp statement like, “That’s none of your business” or “What kind of question is that?” And he never thought there was anything wrong with his snide comments. He could just continue on with the casual conversation like nothing ever happened. 

    Did he ask about your own business?

    Not really, but he often interfered. 

    He always tried to convince me to sign over my properties to him. I didn’t understand why I’d want to do that. Also, he had so many properties of his own; why did he want mine too? His logic was he was my husband, and so, they were legally his anyway. And that he’d be better at protecting them than I could.

    Interesting

    One time, he planned a vacation for only himself and his children. When I asked about it, he claimed he’d just gotten used to being a single dad. I was so hurt, I stubbornly didn’t follow them to travel, but maybe I should’ve. I don’t know. I just couldn’t handle the process it seemed we needed to actually be a real couple. I also hadn’t fully forgiven him for meddling in the career I worked so hard to build. 

    So quietly, day after day, I considered leaving. It was only shame about what people would say, how our pastor would feel, that made me hesitate for so long. I wanted to help my pastor save face, to not show the world that he, that God, had failed. Then one day, I realised the pastor himself was a politician.

    A what? How did you discover this?

    I started meeting him at more and more social outings I attended with my ex-husband from time to time. These were exclusive society events only big politicians — the most wealthy, decadent ones — and powerful people in the corporate world attended. 

    And there he would be, looking just as ostentatious as them. The more I met him at these things, the less he sat well with me. The whole thing just seemed like one big joke. And that exposure actually made my faith falter for some time.

    What did you do in the end?

    Exactly two weeks to our first wedding anniversary, I woke up one morning. And instead of getting ready for work, I packed my most important belongings and moved back to my house, where luckily, my brothers were still keeping things up for me. They were shocked to see me because I didn’t warn them ahead, but I told them not to ask me any questions. They never have, till today.

    How did your ex react to this move?

    He never came for me, if that’s what you’re asking. He never called my house or office. It was as if I was never in his life even. Two years later, he sent his lawyers over with divorce papers.

    RELATED: What She Said: I Was Twice Divorced at 28 and Happier Than Ever

    Wow

    I honestly don’t understand why he even went through with the wedding. He really didn’t need me in his life, so why waste my time? I don’t know. He could’ve just asked if I was interested in leaving my career to fully rely on him as a homemaker beforehand. I would’ve said no and saved him the trouble. 

    And he wouldn’t have found it hard to find a willing woman, him being such a well-positioned man.

    Right? Did you ever ask him why?

    Yes, and his response was, “What kind of question is that?” Haha. 

    It’s good that I had that experience in my life. It was an interesting one and adds colour to my mostly career-related life. But I feel so much more satisfied outside the marriage that I’m inclined to think it’s not compulsory for everyone to marry. I don’t feel I’m missing anything. 

    If there’s one thing I miss from the marriage though, it’s his children. Oh, they were lovely. So well-adjusted and grounded. He did a good job raising them on his own, I give him that. I honestly regret not having my own kids. That’s the only thing I’d say I regret, family-wise, not marriage.

    Not to sound rude. But why did you never marry in your 20s or early 30s, like most people do?

    It just happened; you don’t plan for these things. Or perhaps, other people plan, and that’s why it works out for them. It’s possible.

    For me, I was dating a man for five and a half years from when I was about 28, and I was sure he was the one I’d marry. When we were finally ready for a wedding, he jilted and relocated to America a week after family introductions. I just noticed his house phone was no longer going through, and he’d quit at his own bank.

    Ahh. Did you ever see him again?

    No. But he called me from over there a month later, saying he’d won a US visa lottery and didn’t want to have to get me involved and possibly complicate the relocation process. Someone he would’ve married in some months if he hadn’t gotten the visa? Anyway, he asked me to forgive him, and by the next year, I heard he’d married someone else.

    I’m so sorry

    I was heartbroken. I felt betrayed. But I didn’t dwell on it. My work helped me pull through, and I never got into another serious relationship until my ill-fated marriage.

    If you could go back in time, would you still marry your ex-husband the way you did?

    Knowing what I know now, why would I? It was a waste of time. I gained nothing from it if not experience. But luckily, I lost nothing from it too.

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

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  • 7 Reasons Why Money Is Not a Bad Way to Start Relationships

    7 Reasons Why Money Is Not a Bad Way to Start Relationships

    Come on, it’s money

    First of all, it’s money. You can spend it, save it, invest it, use it to travel, use it to eat, or anything. Why will you choose not to take it if it’s offered in a relationship?

    Enjoyment is assured

    There’s no medal for suffering in this life and money is the strongest cure for it. So start your relationship based on money so your softness is assured.

    It’s another source of income

    Everyone needs a side hustle these days, and if your relationship is not filling that income gap, what are you really doing?

    The economy is already bad

    Everything is expensive in this economy and relationships are not an exception. If you’re entering one without money, you shall see shege. 

    It can help you prevent see-finish

    Just imagine not having vex money when something goes wrong in your relationship. Embarrassing right? See finish will set in and there’ll be nothing you can do. But money solves this very easily.

    The relationship is just sweeter with money

    Unless your only love language is words of affirmation, your relationship needs money for it to even be sweet at all. Whether it’s a simple gift or a grand romantic gesture, money is involved. See why money should be your number one priority?

    And it’s not even limited to romantic relationships

    The good part is, it’s not even limited to romance. Even people in the streets need money for their situationships. Friendships and business relationships need money too. And that’s why Carbon wants to start its relationship with you with a ₦‎30k loan. What’s even better is that it’s only the beginning, you’ll get to enjoy awesome digital banking services and unlock higher loan limits along the way.


    Already thinking of how to secure this urgent ₦‎30k and still get an awesome relationship afterwards? Just download the Carbon app and sign up to get started

  • Love Life: We’re Soulmates Who’ve Been Together Since JSS 1

    Love Life: We’re Soulmates Who’ve Been Together Since JSS 1

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

    Did you know you were in real love when you met in JSS 1?

    Juliana: What’s “real love” at ten years old? I just knew I had butterflies in my tummy, and a strange urge to giggle whenever he happened to enter my class.

    Dozie: We were both in JSS 1 but in different classrooms. After I saw her for the first time during our lunch break on day one, I started going to her class anyhow to catch a glimpse of her. I even made friends with one of her male classmates just to have a valid reason to enter JSS 1b. Most times, I wouldn’t even talk to her. We’d just make eye contact with straight faces.

    But what did you notice about her that caused all this confusion?

    Dozie: I can’t really say. She just stood out to me from the 40 or so girls in our set. Maybe because of her pale skin. She’s always had the lightest and clearest skin. When they made her yellow house queen at the end of first term, I just knew I had to try and ask her out before anyone else did.

    Juliana: He didn’t have much to worry about though. The few other guys who were interested in dating that young were going after girls with big butts. I was as flat as paper. LOL. I thought he was really cute. We were the same height then, but now, he towers over me. 

    He finally approached me after months of prolonged eye contact, with the cutest white plushy toy; a lamb. Everyone in class hailed us; he must’ve told them he was going to do it. I thought it was really sweet, so I said yes. 

    What was dating like as pre-teens in junior high?

    Juliana: It was fun but came with a lot of unnecessary drama. The highlight was the surprise gifts and grand gestures on Val’s Day. The lowlight was the constant teasing from our classmates. Every small thing, “Her husband is here. See how she’s blushing?” Or someone would make up something false about him unprovoked, just to see how I’d react.

    Dozie: Secondary school was so overdramatic. Guys would be like, “They tie your head inside Juliana’s pant?” Pardon my language. Besides that, it was a lot of meeting in corners or by the staircase to whisper our love or make plans for the hals or ask each other what we like.

    Juliana: Basically, an everlasting talking stage. 

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

    What did your Nigerian parents think of their innocent children falling in love though?

    Dozie: Ahh. They didn’t think anything because they didn’t know until at least SS 2 for my mum.

    Juliana: My parents didn’t know a thing until after NYSC.

    Dozie: Our school was full boarding, so that made it easy to keep our relationship from our parents. I also had two older brothers who used to help me out with gifts and stuff like that. During the holidays, we only ever hung out with other friends. So she’d say she was going out with her friends, and I’d tell my parents I was going out with mine.

    Neat. And you never broke up throughout secondary school? Don’t such relationships last a term at most?

    Juliana: We broke up o. We broke up at least five times, but we always came back together. He even dated a junior for some months when we were in SS 1.

    Dozie: I think my mind just wanted to be sure I wasn’t missing out on something that particular time. I wanted to be sure I liked Juliana as much as I thought. And I did because the whole time I was with the girl, I was always thinking about what Juliana was doing. I compared them to each other the whole time, which was toxic as fuck.

    But other times, we broke up just because we needed space or a break or because the teasing from our classmates was too much, so we’d just agree to tell everyone we’d broken up. And because as a secondary school student, you’re naturally dramatic, we’d tell ourselves we had to make it look real by not hanging out during the hals.

    Juliana: We really fought and broke up one time in SS 2 though.

    Dozie: Oh yeah. I made a statement she thought meant I was taking her for granted.

    Juliana: We were going for an excursion and had to pick partners because everyone had to move in twos at all times. I quickly moved to him, happy to sacrifice my girlfriends so we could spend the whole day together during the trip. But he just said, “No, I’m with Olatunde*. We don’t have to go everywhere together nau.” He said it with this tone that made me so mad.

    Dozie: I didn’t think about it too deeply. I just thought we were always doing everything together, and I wanted to be with the guys that particular time because we had something planned.

    Juliana: They planned to sneak off during the trip to get weed.

    Dozie: Yes.

    Juliana: We didn’t get back together till the next term. He came to me on the first day of school with a big shopping bag of UK cookies and sweets from his family trip abroad that break. And just like that, he was forgiven. 

    Well, I’ll never sacrifice my friends for a guy sha. Never again!

    RELATED: Love Life: We Love Each Other But Can’t Live Together

    Yes, girl. How did y’all navigate university and come out together still?

    Dozie: Easy. We didn’t attend the same uni, so it was a long-distance relationship from 2015 till around 2019.

    Juliana: It’s giving “I had the chance to explore without feeling tied down”. Are you sensing it too?

    Dozie: I didn’t say that o. I just mean it made it easier to navigate the relationship given our age and how far we’d come together. I think we trusted each other a lot considering, so we didn’t have any issues during this period.

    Juliana: Yeah. Our relationship happened via WhatsApp messages and video calls and on social media. But I never felt alone because we talked every single day, sent each other gifts to mark birthdays and Valentine, and there were the occasional cash transfers from him. 

    We were both present in the relationship, and I guess like he said, we could avoid the strain that usually comes in when you’re in the same space as your partner. My roommates were always jealous of how sensitive he was during our calls.

    And NYSC?

    Dozie: We actually met a lot more during NYSC than in uni because I served somewhere in Akwa Ibom, while she was in Calabar. It used to take over six hours to go from one to the other, but we did that at least ten times during our service year. I’d go to her most times because we were scared for her safety as a girl. At first, we’d explore the towns together. Then later on, we stayed in more, eating and watching online shows on her laptop in her corper’s lodge room.

    Juliana: I always looked forward to his visits. It was refreshing for us to still be so close now that we’d grown up. It was like we’d grown up together.

    Dozie: Now, it remains the “growing old together” part.

    Juliana: He was still his sweet, loving self, only that he was taller and manlier. I really grew attracted to him during his NYSC visits, and it helped that I didn’t have to go through the “finding your person” phase most of our mates were at during that period.

    Dozie: I thought I’d have gotten tired of her, but we really just knew each other too well, and I hated the idea of getting to know a new person to that level all over again. We had so much history together, so there was always a world of things to talk about. 

    That feeling has followed us into the present. We did NYSC in 2019, and that’s almost four years ago. Wow.

    Juliana: Yeah, navigating work and our careers has definitely shifted the focus off our relationship a bit. We’re thinking about finding ourselves and becoming stable adults right now, trying to enjoy ourselves but also make wise financial decisions. As much as you can with less than ₦200k salary sha.

    Even ₦400k salary sef. Looking at how far y’all have come from childhood sweethearts, what do you think worked for you?

    Juliana: I honestly don’t know. Maybe we’re just one of the lucky ones.

    Dozie: I think it’s our intentionality. We make an effort every day. I’ve always made sure to call her every day, no matter how tired or irritated I am.

    Juliana: True. I also made him my safe place very early on. So he’s the one I want to talk to when something is irritating me, and he’s never disappointed me on that emotional level. I guess he became my best friend as soon as he became my one and only boyfriend.

    Dozie: We’re practically family now. My mum knows and loves her, and all our siblings are very close. I’d say we’re soulmates.

    So “become bestfriends”. Noted. What’s the most unconventional thing about your relationship, besides the obvious?

    Dozie: We always hang out together. Like, our social life is so heavily intertwined, I can’t even imagine going to the club or any party without her. I don’t know if that’s unconventional sha.

    Juliana: He also got me smoking weed. I don’t know how many boyfriends get their girlfriends hooked on weed. Other people bring their weed-smoking partners out of the habit, but we did the opposite. That has to be unconventional, right?

    No comment. On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Dozie: We’ve been together since childhood. I’m pretty sure we broke the scale.

    Juliana: We definitely destroyed it. I’d say 1000.

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

    NEXT UP: Love Life: I Was a Puff-Puff Seller, so His Family Believes I Jazzed Him

  • Surefire Ways to Get Your Own “Bridgerton” Relationship in Real Life

    Surefire Ways to Get Your Own “Bridgerton” Relationship in Real Life

    The love stories on Bridgerton might seem unrealistic, but if you follow this guide, your chances of getting a relationship like Kate and Anthony’s move from a 5 to a strong 25%.

    Both of you must swim in money

    Credit: Tenor

    First and most important: you and your partner must come from insane money. You’ll need the time to actually be each other’s  “bane of my existence, and object of my desires.”

    Choose to love the person

    Credit: Zikokomemes

    People are annoying, we know. But the only way to get love like in the story books is by choosing to love them deeply every single day. With that much passion, they’ll have no choice but to love back.

    Big declarations of love

    Credit: Zikokomemes

    Not every time, “Have you eaten”. Sometimes, “I cannot breathe when you are not near. My heart calls your name.” So they know how deep your love is.

    Overcome a challenge together

    Credit: Zikokomemes

    It really doesn’t matter what it is. As long as you both get through a life-or-death issue as a unit, you’re one step closer to being the Charlotte to their George.

    Be bad communicators

    Credit: Zikokomemes

    For some reason, the only way to have a fairytale romance is to be a shit communicator. So the next time you want to talk and iron out an issue with your significant other, shut your mouth and let it stew.

    Unresolved trauma

    Credit: Zikokomemes

    This shouldn’t be hard. Just think of your daily life as a Nigerian. Something’s bound to trigger you, and there you go. Now, you have a reason to avoid your partner and have them fight for your love.

    Be the Wonder Woman to their Superman 

    Credit: Memondo

    You must have a strong desire to save your significant other from themselves. This might require you to yell out the occasional “I will stand with you between the Heavens and the Earth”. But what’s love if you can’t continuously pull your partner from the edge?

    Steamy hot chemistry

    Credit: Pinterest

    What did you think Daphne Bridgerton meant when she said, “I burn for you”? You both have to be able to burn down the room with a single stare. 

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  • Love Life: We Got Married Without Ever Dating

    Love Life: We Got Married Without Ever Dating

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

    How did you meet?

    Tunde: Our mums hooked us up.

    Tumi: They’re childhood best friends, but his mum moved to the US in the 90s. I’d always known about him vaguely.

    Tunde: My mum showed me photos of her once or twice. But we finally met when I came to Nigeria for the first time in October 2018. My brother was getting married, and his babe’s family was in Nigeria. I met Tumi at this wedding.

    Tumi: During the weeks leading up to his arrival, my mum kept telling me how I had to meet him, and we’d be so good together. She even told me that when she and her friend gave birth to us around the same time, they promised each other we’d get married. Of course, I rolled my eyes.

    Tunde: My mum didn’t go that far, but she definitely wanted us to get together. When I finally met Tumi, I was so over the pressure from my mum that I didn’t really try to get to know her.

    Tumi: Three months later, we were married.

    Please, tell us what magic occurred

    Tunde: I ended up staying in Nigeria longer than the one month my family had planned because of some personal issues. We stayed in my father’s family house, and it was this big, comfortable estate, so Tumi’s mum would come over a lot. She practically lived with us during that time.

    Tumi: My dad had recently died, and I was their only child, so my mum really leaned on her old friend for emotional support. That meant I was almost always in their house too when I wasn’t at work or staying over with my friends. He was always out and about, which meant we practically lived together but never actually saw. Meanwhile, our mums were each planting seeds of us being together in our heads.

    Tunde: That’s an accurate way to put it, “planting seeds”. I just realised one day that I wasn’t opposed to the idea anymore. It’d been said to me enough times that it started to seem like my idea. So I started watching Tumi from afar and realised she was actually a good catch. 

    Tumi: Besides the regular pleasantries when we saw, we weren’t really friends, but our mothers’ almost sisterhood was so infectious it gave us a kind of bond, I think. 

    When did you realise you liked or even loved each other?

    Tunde: About a month in, I started really seeing her and realised I could’ve been attracted to her without this pressure from our mums. 

    Watching her in our living room as I passed by, or as we crossed paths in the front yard, her personality always made me smile. She can be hotheaded, but she’s adorable when she’s angry. You can’t cheat or disrespect Tumi. She won’t take it even for a second; she’ll change it for you immediately and in an intelligent way. I really like that about her.

    Tumi: I think around that time, I noticed he was getting less aloof around me. We still only did pleasantries but he was noticeably warmer. I admired how reserved he was though. 

    I’ve always liked a man who isn’t necessarily arrogant but also doesn’t talk too much. Our mothers aside, he was a good spec based on all the things I liked in a man. Well, the superficial things. We didn’t really get to know each other until much later.

    Before or after the sharp wedding?

    Tumi: LOL. Both.

    Tunde: We’re still getting to know each other right now. It’s not something that has to happen at a specific period. But sometime in the second month, November, I decided I wanted to marry her. I wanted it, and I knew it would make my mum happy. 

    HIGHLY RECOMMENDED: Love Life: We Found Love, Then the Nigerian Civil War Started

    Sounds like a huge thing to just decide like that

    Tunde: I know. But I didn’t really want to deep it. I kinda liked this girl and both our parents wanted us to get married, so why not? I was young, but I was doing pretty well as a remote coder for a tech company in Cali. I couldn’t really think why not? It wasn’t like I’d been in any serious relationships ever, and I couldn’t be bothered to date.

    Tumi: I’d had one serious boyfriend before we married. We dated for four years and it ended terribly, so I was sore from that. I hadn’t dated in several months before Tunde came into my life, and I was meeting many frogs at the time. 

    When he jokingly asked me, “What if we just get married?” one day in his mum’s kitchen, I thought he was crazy, but I didn’t hate the idea at the same time.

    But you barely knew him

    Tumi: I know it sounds crazy. But I dated my ex for four years. Still, after our breakup, I felt like I never really knew him.

    Tunde: I can’t really explain it, but it felt like we’d known each other forever because of our mums. She felt so familiar, and as we warmed up to each other, it started to feel like home when I was around her. 

    At some point, when I stepped outside my room after a long virtual work day or got back home from whatever elongated trip I went on with relatives I was getting to know, I’d immediately want her to be around just to feel her presence. Anytime I discovered she wasn’t there with her mum, I’d feel a little sad.

    Tumi: I was completely ignorant of this because he never actually asked about me. He’d just use his eyes to look for me. If he sees me, he’d greet me and ask how I was.

    So what happened in the kitchen that day?

    Tumi: Our mums had gone out. For the first time, I had to stay back at their place without my mum. It was a Saturday, but I had some urgent work to do on my laptop and didn’t want to waste time on transit getting home before doing it. And surprise surprise, he actually came down from his domain to see what the mere mortals were up to. That was the first time we had a proper conversation after almost two months of meeting.

    Tunde: I needed a break from my screen to stretch my legs and eyes, so I came downstairs and froze when I saw her in the living room. No one was home. My siblings had gone back to the US by then. I only stayed back to keep my mum company and enjoy Lagos during the famous Detty December because I worked remotely. Everywhere was quiet and she looked so pretty from behind, focused on work, I knew I had to talk to her.

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

    And?!

    Tumi: It was a little chat. He asked about my work. I answered and took the opportunity to ask about his because I’d been so curious. I mean, this was 2018. Remote work wasn’t really a thing then. I won’t lie; a part of me thought he was doing yahoo.

    Tunde: DFKM.

    Tumi: I told him our mums had gone out together, and we joked about their obsession with each other. I told him I really admired it actually and was jealous I didn’t have something like that. He was quiet for a bit, then he said the thing about us getting married and seeing if they were right about us being a perfect match.

    Tunde: It just came out, but as soon as it did, I wanted it to happen. I wanted to marry her.

    And that happened one month later, how, please?

    Tumi: It was a joke until it wasn’t. I think it was the Americana in him that rubbed off on me. Like, after that talk, I thought for sure he wasn’t serious. But then the next day, he showed me a ring he was considering ordering off Instagram, and would I say yes if he did? We didn’t even have each other’s phone numbers at this point. It was crazy.

    Tunde: I was just sure all of a sudden. I mean, it wasn’t a do-or-die thing. If the marriage didn’t work out, we’d divorce. My thinking was worst-case scenario, we’d last five years, and it would be a fun adventure. I knew enough about her character to know nothing particularly bad would happen. Maybe if our mums weren’t so obsessed with the idea, I wouldn’t have been thinking about a wedding off the bat, but really, why not?

    Tumi: Crazy, crazy, crazy. The fact that I went along with the craze is a testament to how much I was already liking him before that. And like he said, our mums were a huge factor. I wouldn’t have just agreed with a complete stranger. Definitely not.

    How did your mums and Tunde’s dad take the news?

    Tunde: We told everyone some days later, and they were shocked.

    Tumi: My mum was like, “Ahn ahn. Ahn ahn. When did everything happen without me knowing? So you were just allowing me talk. Meanwhile, you’ve gone behind to do jigi jaga”.

    Scrim

    Tunde: My mum actually called me back to make sure her “too much talk” didn’t put undue pressure on me. I was like, “Too late, Mama.” They were all just concerned we were talking marriage right away instead of just revealing we’d decided to date or something. But underneath the disguise, our mums at least, were beyond excited. It was good to see.

    Tumi: My friends were harder to convince. Besides my best friend, the rest were convinced I was making a huge mistake. What if he’s abusive? What if there’s something diabolical going on? It was a lot. My bestie encouraged me to sha follow my heart but use my head. My head had already turned because I was painfully attracted to him by this point and his conviction about the whole thing was contagious.

    Tunde: Nah. My friends were excited to meet the woman who got me to propose in such a short period. They were totally rooting for me because they thought I was head over heels, which I guess I was.

    So tell me about the wedding. Don’t preparations last six months, at least?

    Tumi: We didn’t want any of that. 

    This was kind of an experiment — though one made out of love — so we weren’t trying to go the whole Nigerian festival route. Once we agreed we wanted to do this, we started talking logistics. He lives in the US, and I’d never lived outside Lagos before. Thankfully, I had a British passport from being born there, so it was easy to make the decision for me to move in with him in San Fransisco. 

    My career was the major bane of the whole plan. I had to be sure I wanted to quit and be dependent on him until I found a job here. And there was a huge possibility I never would, knowing the US immigrant climate, especially being a marketer. It was a huge decision to make for an experiment.

    Tunde: I recognised that and urged her to consider it deeply. No pressure.

    Tumi: I now run an online retail store, so that worked out fine. 

    We moved in the middle of January 2019 and had a civil wedding in the beautiful SF city hall. That place is so gorgeous.

    Tunde: My parents and her mum attended with all my friends, but they still did an engagement party without us in Lagos. They sent photos of the chaotic thing.

    And how has the experiment been so far?

    Tumi: Pretty good. We’re good friends and lovers now, and it honestly doesn’t matter that we chose not to overthink things going in.

    Tunde: Pretty much. I don’t think we’re missing anything. We created a foundation of not taking things too seriously, and that’s helped a lot. We’re both responsible adults, so of course, we plan things like bills and spending thoroughly. We have kids now, right? 

    Besides being clear about finances, everything goes.

    How would y’all rate your Love Life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Tumi: 10 is perfect, right? So 9.

    Tunde: Same.

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

    NEXT BEST THING: Love Life: We Love Each Other But Can’t Live Together

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

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

    We all know it takes a village to raise a child, but a loving partner is a great place to start. These seven women share how their partners’ love has helped them navigate motherhood and childcare.

    “My husband is the purest evidence of God’s love for me.” – Kenechukwu, 30, married

    We’ve been together for three years — dated for two, married for one — and he’s everything I didn’t know I needed. I’m currently pregnant, and he makes pregnancy easier. He’s never missed a hospital appointment. This man listens to every random complaint and observation I have about my body changing or the babies. Sometimes, because my hormones are raging, I start a fight, but he somehow finds a way to diffuse the tension. It feels like we’re both carrying the pregnancy. My husband is the purest evidence of God’s love for me.

    “Anything he thinks needs to be done, he’ll do it.” – Ola, 41, married

    My husband and I have been together for ten years, and it’s safe to say he’s the best thing that’s ever happened to me. He helps with house chores, is always present, and cares for our children without me asking or prompting him. He bathes them, prepares their meals, helps them with their homework; anything he thinks needs to be done, he’ll do it.

    “He wants to be as involved as possible in the welfare of my son” – Esther, 31, dating

    My partner and I have been together for seven months. He constantly tries to make my day less stressful. If I have to go anywhere with my son, it doesn’t matter the reason, he’ll drop everything else and make himself available to take us. He runs errands for my job and offers to watch my son when I need a break. As long as it’ll take the stress off me, he’ll do it. He wants to be as involved as possible in the welfare of my son. And no, he’s under no illusion that my son will call him Daddy… but he loves him.

    “He’s constantly asking if I’m okay and doing things to make me feel better.” – Love, 27, married 

    My partner and I have been on-and-off for about five years. We’re married now with a 25-day-old. My husband owns his own company, so he can do “whatever he likes,” like take paternity leave to care for the baby even though his mum and I are in the house. He also got a nurse for the baby in addition to the maid and cook we already have. He helps feed her on days when I’m too tired to even hold her. She sleeps through the night, so our sleep isn’t disturbed, but she eats every three to four hours. Sometimes, when the alarm goes off, he tells me to keep sleeping and goes to take care of her. 

    He’s constantly asking if I’m okay and doing things to make me feel better, like giving me massages and picking up my favourite snacks every time he goes out.

    He’s white, and I’m black, so he stands up to idiots who decide to call my baby a zebra.

    “He always makes himself available for anything I need” – Elizabeth, 39, married 

    We’ve been together for nine years, and every day, I wake up grateful for how my husband takes care of the kids and me. He shares the household and childcare workload with me; he cooks, cleans, does the dishes, feeds the children, bathes and dresses them up. When I need a break, he’ll take the children for walks. He listens to all my concerns, provides reassurance and always makes himself available for anything I need.

    “I can go to sleep knowing our toddler is getting the best care from him.” – Caroline, 29, married 

    We’ve been together for about ten years and married for three. I often joke about how I’m not sure I could have done motherhood with anyone else. He bathes our baby, while I make her breakfast, and whenever we all go out together, he keeps an eye on her. He’s better at managing her energy level than I am. I can go to sleep knowing our toddler is getting the best care from him.

    “I know motherhood is about my children, but he makes it easier by just taking care of me.” – Grace, 53, dating

    We were together before I got married. After I lost my husband, he was available, so we just continued the relationship and have been together for about two years. My kids are in different countries right now. I know motherhood is about them, but he makes it easier by just taking care of me. He keeps me company, makes sure I know I’m loved and cared for, and takes up the role of a father in the children’s lives.

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  • 50+ Unique Birthday Messages You Can Send a Friend

    50+ Unique Birthday Messages You Can Send a Friend

    Short of gifting them a Benz, birthday messages are one of the most thoughtful things you can send a friend. Who wouldn’t love reading sweet nothings on their special day?

    No one.

    Since you’re here, you probably need some help crafting the best heartfelt message for your bestie. We got you. So, whether your friend is 30+ or Gen Z, or you just want to send something funny, you’ll find these sample birthday messages useful.

    Birthday messages for your bestie

    Image: Zikoko memes

    They already know everything about you, so it may be hard to impress them. But, take it from us, your best friend would love these:

    • Thank you for being the best thing that’s happened to me since jollof rice was invented. Happy birthday!
    • I hope you find money on the floor today. And not turn to yam, of course. Happy birthday!
    • Happy birthday to you! I’d give you the finest things on earth, but you already have me. Lucky you.
    • When I count my blessings, I count you twice. Thank you for being the best bestie ever. Happy birthday!
    • Have an amazing year. May you continue to age with flawless skin.
    • For your birthday today, I promise to start listening and taking your advice at least 5% of the time. 
    • You survived another year of being my best friend. Congratulations on your achievement.
    • There are friends, and there are fake friends. Thankfully, you’re neither because you’re my bestie. Happy birthday.
    • I’d spoil you today, but we both my account just laughed in disbelief. Happy birthday, bestie.

    I love how you always have my back. You’re the best, and I wish you a birthday as amazing as you are.

    Birthday messages a Gen Z would love

    Image: Zikoko memes

    Is a Gen Z-inspired birthday message complete without the lingo? These messages will automatically put you into the good graces of your Gen Z friend.

    • It’s giving a new age! Happy birthday, boo.
    • Not gonna lie, the world doesn’t deserve your awesomeness. Yet, you give it so freely— a gracious queen.
    • The littest person in the world was born today, and that’s on period. Happy birthday.
    • The fact that I get to celebrate you on this day honestly gives me life in more ways than one. Happy birthday.
    • Here’s an annual reminder that you’re the best to ever do it. You snatch wigs for a living, and there’s no one like you. Happy birthday.
    • It’s literally your birthday! You’ve slayed all year round, and I can’t wait to see how you shine even more.
    • You’re literally the coolest person I know. Happy birthday.
    • I stan a one-year-older king/queen.
    • Happy birthday, boo. You’re the most amazing person I know, and that’s on Sola Sobowale’s left knee.
    • Damn, you’re actually getting older. What next, back pain?

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


    Birthday messages for your 30+ friend

    Black lady blowing a birthday cake, with her two male friends by her side.

    Image: Freepik

    Yes, because even 30+ people need love too, and you don’t want to send something less than perfect. Trust me, they’ll know.

    • You’re like fine wine. You keep getting better in age. Cheers to a fantastic year.
    • Sure, you’re getting old, but who’s counting? Happy birthday.
    • Happy birthday! I wish you an amazing day. I’d say break a leg, but you’re already managing back pain.
    • You’ve earned the right to say stuff like, “What an elder sees sitting down…” Congratulations on your old age!
    • At this rate, we will need to start buying candles in their cartons if we’re using your age to count. Cheers on your birthday.
    • I wanted to send you a meme, but I don’t have the strength to explain its meaning. Happy birthday to you.
    • Don’t think of your age as “getting old”; think of it as becoming a classic. Everyone loves classics.
    • Happy birthday. If anyone’s encouraging you to do drinks or party today, they’re your village people. Avoid them.
    • I wanted to get you a gift, but they were all sold out of pots and vacuum cleaners. This is much better. Happy birthday!
    • Life is short, so smile while you still have teeth. Seriously. You may not have it for much longer.

    Funny birthday messages for your partner in crime

    Two ladies high-fiving each other.

    Image: Zikoko memes

    Only your fellow troublesome friends will appreciate these birthday messages.

    • I would live an incredibly boring life if your parents didn’t choose to bring you into this world. Happy birthday.
    • I just sent you dollars …. is what I thought I’d tell you today, but we thank God for life.
    • May your next birthday not meet you in Nigeria. And everyone said, “Amen”
    • There are millions of people who share the same birthday with you. Just in case you’re feeling too special. I still like you like that sha.
    • You’re one year older! I’d say “One year wiser”, too, but that’s debatable.
    • Happy “womb escape”. Cheers on being the sperm that survived.
    • You know all my secrets, so I have to be nice to you. Happy birthday!

    Heartfelt birthday messages that might jerk a tear or two

    Image: Zikoko memes

    So they can cry and forget that you didn’t send them a gift.

    • You’re the brightest light in my life. Keep shining on your birthday!
    • If it were up to me, today would be a public holiday. But wetin we go do? I celebrate you every day, but especially today. Happy birthday.
    • Don’t tell anyone, but you mean more to me than small chops. Happy birthday.
    • Happy birthday! I hope you know how much you’re loved today. Thank you for being my best friend. 
    • I may not be a baller, but your friendship is easily the most expensive thing I own. Happy birthday.
    • It’s your birthday, but I’m the one who feels like I’ve been given a gift. Your friendship is a gift, and I hope never to take it for granted. I love you.

    Birthday messages for your unserious friend

    Three friends enjoying time together.

    Image: Pexels

    Because we all have one or two in our corner.

    • May this be the year you eventually have sense.
    • Eat as you like today. Calories don’t count on birthdays.
    • Happy birthday! Let’s hope you’ll stop shouting “Up Nepa” this year.
    • Very soon, you’ll get married and have kids. I pity your family in advance.
    • I’d say, “Slap a soldier today”, but we both know you’ll actually do it. Please, don’t.

    NEXT READ: 7 Women Talk About The WEIRDEST Messages They Have Gotten

  • Love Life: We Started Our Relationship as Christians

    Love Life: We Started Our Relationship as Christians

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

    So tell me, how did you both meet?

    Rita: Did we really meet? We were coursemates at university, so there was no particular standout moment like, “This was when I met him”. It was just like, here’s this cute guy I always see in class. 

    Ivan: Well, I noticed her right from our first year in school. That was around 2016. I think she was trying to log into her laptop for something. I was behind her, and I noticed her picture was the wallpaper. Very narcissistic, but you know…

    Rita: Wow.

    Ivan: LOL. I was like, “Is this person in my department?” I asked one of my friends and found out she was in a relationship at the time. Interestingly, his name was Ivan as well, so I just closed my mind from that direction.

    What made you re-open your mind to the direction?

    Rita: In second year, our friendship circles began to intertwine and found ourselves always sitting beside each other in class.

    Ivan: Our surnames even followed each other in the school register, so we were constantly thrown together for group projects, labs, etc. Around that time, I also got to know she was single again. So, even while we were friends, I knew I liked this babe and wouldn’t mind if we started something. I tried to drop one or two hints here and there.

    Did you take the hint, Rita?

    Rita: Honestly, I was about to enter my hoe phase. You know, trying to get out there, but then I was also feeling him. I thought he was hot, so even though I was dodging his hints left and right, we’d still find ourselves randomly flirting. 

    One day — and this day is burned in my mind — we were together at one slightly deserted spot in class. I was chewing gum, and he asked for one, and I was like, “Come and take it”. It was obviously in my mouth, so just imagine the heavy innuendo.

    I said that then I walked up the stairs, and he followed me. We didn’t kiss immediately. We just stood at that point and talked for about an hour. I still don’t know how we didn’t get tired. We stood so close together, and at a point, it was like I’d basically merged into his body. In my mind, I went, “It’s about to happen.”

    Is it getting hot in here?

    Ivan: I asked if I could kiss her — because, consent — She said yes, and we did. That’s basically how we started dating.

    Awww. So what were the first few days like?

    Ivan: Interestingly, our relationship also coincided with the period I first started questioning my faith. This was towards the end of 2017. In fact, just before we became official, I told her I was now an agnostic.

    Wait. Rewind. Were you both religious before?

    Ivan: Well, we used to pray together sometimes and go to our school’s chapel, but it’s not like we were very spiritual like that in our relationship. Rita was from an Anglican background, and I was Pentecostal.

    Rita: Both his parents are pastors.

    Ivan: Yeah. I had a lot of interaction with the church setting growing up. I could — and still can — quote scriptures off the top of my head. I had a very good relationship with the Bible. But from my second year in university, I started questioning my faith. I’d read some books that made me ask myself questions I’d never asked before, and I didn’t know how to phrase what was happening. I wanted to allow myself the space and time to think through the questions properly, so I told everyone, including Rita, that I was now agnostic.

    My friends laughed and called it a phase. Some of my friendships experienced a lot of friction at the time.

    How did it affect your new relationship?

    Rita: It wasn’t really a big deal to me. I’d always been something like a distant, lukewarm Christian. He was more of the firebrand church boy. So, his decision to be agnostic wasn’t something that bothered me. It’s not like I dismissed it, though. We discussed it as best as we could, but it wasn’t a deal breaker.

    Ivan: But then I returned to Christianity shortly after, at the beginning of 2018.

    That was short 

    Ivan: I concluded it wasn’t worth losing my friends, so I went back into the fold and threw myself into it. Almost like I was trying to make up for leaving in the first place.

    Rita: Again, it didn’t really change much for me. It was just like, “Welcome back”, and we went on as usual. Then in 2019, I became an atheist.

    I feel like I’ve missed some steps

    Rita: It was our fourth year in school, and I was just turning 19. A lot was going on with me. My grades weren’t bad, but everything just felt overwhelming. We studied engineering, and the workload at that point was heavy. It was hard balancing all that. Plus, I was at an age where I was trying to be responsible and learn how to navigate the world, but it was just a lot.

    I started getting closer to God. You know how they say, seek Jesus so something would happen. It wasn’t really doing it for me. Nothing was happening.

    I’m a very introspective person, so I tried to figure out what the problem was. I decided to learn more about myself. And after reading a lot of feminist books, I fully identified as a feminist for the first time. I’ve always had feminist ideals, but I think that period triggered it.

    Soon enough, the Bible started to conflict with my feminism. There were a lot of things jumping out, and I started to realise, “The Christian God doesn’t like me as a woman. Do I really belong here?” Even before I decided I didn’t believe in God, I already disliked him. I decided I didn’t like this character, even if he was real. I started to read books for and against the Bible. I’d read materials by Christian apologetics and atheist books alike. 

    I concluded: I’m an atheist. I didn’t tell Ivan immediately because school was on break, and we were home in different states. It didn’t seem like something I could say over the phone.

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

    So, what happened next?

    Rita: There was a Twitter argument about Christians, and we were on opposite sides. He was on the side of the Christians, and at a point, I was just like, “I can’t keep pretending again.”

    Ivan: She said she didn’t think she believed in God anymore. It was a heated conversation, and in the end, we decided to break up till we got back to school so we’d decide if we were still compatible. She’ll claim now that I called two days later, asking for us to get back together.

    Rita: That’s exactly what happened. He said the break-up wasn’t necessary, and we could figure things out together, but as a solid babe, I stood my ground and insisted we stick to the break.

    Guess what? I broke down and asked him out again myself, like three weeks later, in the early hours of New Year’s Day 2020.

    Scrimming

    Ivan: We still intended to talk about the faith thing when we saw. So, I spent time gathering information from Christian apologetics like Ravi Zacharias and William Lane Craig so I could convince her about God. I watched debates between apologetics and atheists to get material. To be honest, I was also trying to convince myself, but I ended up with more questions. 

    I remember crying one night because my entire belief system was falling apart right before me. I eventually got to the point where I decided I was irreligious. 

    What happened next?

    Rita: We didn’t have the compatibility issue again, so we continued our relationship. I’ve always been aloof, with some pretty contrarian views, so people weren’t surprised when I opened up about my atheism. But it was different for Ivan. He’s quite open, so friends directed all their questions and complaints to him. Since I became an atheist first, there was this notion that I’d turned him away from God and pulled him into the devil’s den, not minding that he’d done his research and decided on his own. And this was one of the reasons I refused his attempt to reconcile us then, so it wouldn’t be like I influenced him.

    Israel: It was a difficult time. I’d told a couple of friends about my decision because I didn’t want anyone to interfere, and the news somehow spread to even people outside our friendship circles. There were rumours like, “Oh, Rita pulled him just like that”, and “Ivan has gone to follow Rita”. It was quite insulting. 

    It felt like people were trying to create a different story because they didn’t like the outcome of a personal decision, and it was hurtful because it was coming from people that were really close to me. Most of them didn’t come to actually sit me down to have a conversation, save for a female friend who did and was really nice and supportive about it.

    Many of my friendship dynamics changed during that period. Of course, some also thought I’d just backslid and would come back. They were wrong.

    Did ditching religion affect your relationship?

    Rita: I battled depression for a year after becoming an atheist. With religion, you have a sense of security that someone in the sky can do things for you. Losing that suddenly was hard. I had nowhere to go when I was anxious about something. I’m not that close with my parents, and I couldn’t go to friends because they’d want to “pray for me”. But having my partner beside me helped greatly.

    Ivan was my support system. We went through everything together, sharing YouTube videos, books and answering each other’s questions. Sharing knowledge and bouncing ideas off each other really helped strengthen our new beliefs.

    It’d have been much more difficult if I didn’t have him by my side, and I’m really grateful for that.

    Do people try to change your stance on religion?

    Rita: Initially, yes. But it’s not easy to challenge someone who’s well-read. I can tell you straight up why everything you’re saying doesn’t make sense. People don’t try to convince us anymore. They might still be praying silently for us, though.

    Ivan: My parents don’t know about our beliefs yet. I moved out after school for work and to be in the same city as Rita, so I haven’t really been in the same space with my parents. I’ll tell them one day, maybe when I’m out of the country.

    What does the future look like for you both?

    Ivan: We both plan to travel out of the country for our Master’s at some point. We’ve been together for five years, and I honestly can’t see myself in my head with someone else. I don’t know what the future holds, but I just see us being together.

    Rita: Aww.

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

    Rita: 10. We’ve been friends from the beginning, and everything just feels easy. Our communication, our love, it just comes easy. I feel like nothing we’d encounter would be difficult for us to navigate. And we always want to spend time together. It’s become obsessive at this point.

    Ivan: I wanted to be funny and say 11, but yeah, 10. I can talk to her about anything without overthinking it. Even when we argue, we don’t fight, shout at or call each other names. We talk ourselves through every single one of our problems. She’s managed to convince the entire world that she’s a hard guy, but she’s ridiculously romantic. She dey burst my brain steady.

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

    NEXT READ: We Love Each Other But Can’t Live Together

  • Love Life: We Love Each Other But Can’t Live Together

    Love Life: We Love Each Other But Can’t Live Together

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

    Let’s start from the top. What was day one like for you two?

    Boma: We were university mates in the same level, but he was studying computer science, while I was in architecture. We knew each other because our school was rather close-knit. But we became friends in 300 level, when we joined the technical (TC) unit of our school’s chapel. 

    When we came back for our final year in 2015, he asked me out.

    John: I was surprised she said yes because our fellow unit member had asked her out in 300 level, and she said no. He told me not to bother since she wasn’t looking to enter a relationship until after graduation. Turns out, she just used scope to tell him off.

    I thought she was really cool. Quiet but not too much because she also had lots of friends. The first thing we connected on was cartoons. Not even all these cool new animations; we’d talk about old cartoons we loved when we were kids. She had episodes of Kids Next Door and Ed, Edd n Eddy on her laptop. I remember giving her my hard drive and begging her to share them with me.

    Boma: Yeah. That was fun. The good times, before adulthood came calling.

    Hot tears. So what happened after the relationship kicked off?

    John: We started hanging out more, outside of TC activities. My department was in the same building as hers, just a floor beneath.

    Boma: As you know, final year is hectic, so it was good to have someone to share the burden with me, to run thesis research and attend the many general lectures our school forced on us. We always made plans to eat, study, attend and stab classes together. 

    But when we got home, we barely saw, even though we lived in the same PH. We spoke over the phone when we could, sent each other plenty memes and skits, and that was it.

    I’m now curious how y’all have lasted seven years together

    John: When we resumed school for the final semester, we got much closer. Especially during final exams. We’d stay in class till like 9:30 p.m. — so we could make it to our dorms by 10 (we weren’t trying to get expelled at the 11th hour) — studying together and making out in between. We weren’t really talking about our commitments post-uni, so there was the bittersweet feeling that this could be the end. 

    But when we met each other’s parents during our convocation ceremony, I knew I wanted our relationship to last beyond that day. She had such a positive, loveable vibe, and her family is so nice. Our families bonded really well. It was beautiful to see.

    Boma: So we kept in touch. We texted and DMed for months after convocation. I was talking to other people too, but nothing was clicking. 

    Then, in November 2016, we decided to meet up before NYSC, for what felt a lot like a first date. We went to a nice bistro, had sandwiches and fries and talked forever. After that, we started going to events and parties together, and sometimes, I’d stay over at his when he was at his brother’s flat.

    When did love enter the equation?

    John: Right after our “first date”. 

    I got posted to Enugu for NYSC, but she got Rivers and stayed in PH. So I had someone cover for me in exchange for all my government allowance, while I moved back to town after the orientation camp.

    Boma: I loved the idea that he moved back because of me. I also liked the way I felt when I knew I was about to hang out with him. He’s good vibes all through. We can chat for days and make out for days too. Plus, he’s really kind and respectful.

    John: Wow. My head dey swell.

    What do you talk about? Simulate your average day-long conversation right here, right now

    John: Our gist always starts with whatever is happening at that moment. Like, we could be talking about the food at a restaurant, but somehow, music or cartoon must enter the gist. We still watch a lot of animations, and she’s passionate about music, so she must bring up one of her faves. Someone from Hillsong, Beyonce, Mercy Chinwo, you name it. 

    Boma: Then he’ll somehow bring in football or more food or clothes. He loves fashion die. He’ll find a way to stroke Queen Bey’s latest performance outfit and still compare her to some random footballer. DFKM.

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    Interesting. So how has your relationship evolved since the beginning?

    Boma: We’re definitely more grown now, so a lot of our deeper set personalities have come to light. I mean, we’ve moved in with each other three times now, but each time, the co-habiting thing fails. 

    The first time was when we both moved to Lagos for work. It made sense to move in together as a way to save rent money, and of course, be closer. But NGL, the “always seeing ourselves” thing came on too strong for us. There was constant friction; we tried to laugh it off until we couldn’t. 

    That’s when he found out I was a grumpy morning person and prone to mood swings.

    John: And the sleeping in the same bed thing. It was good for easy sex. But then, I snore, and you’re a light sleeper. LOL. 

    Remember that first time I got a cold and fever? She couldn’t sleep the whole night because of my constant sniffing, coughing and sneezing. Meanwhile, me, I somehow managed to sleep. We decided we’d sleep separately if one of us was sick. But there was only one room, so someone had to sleep on the couch for like a week.

    We lived together for a total of two months before I went and found a room in my cousin’s house to avoid destroying our small romance.

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    You didn’t take that as a sign to break up?

    John: Nope. We still loved and love each other. We’re just maybe not ready to be that committed yet?

    Boma: Yeah. I mean, we’re so compatible in a lot of other things. It’s just the little things that haven’t gelled yet. I think that’s normal.

    John: Yeah, because the second time we moved in together, we were reckless about it. I got this nice fully-furnished Lekki apartment at a stupid price by pure luck. This place was fine fine. When she visited one day, she literally came back with some boxes and refused to leave again.

    Boma: But we tried to set some ground rules, so I wouldn’t say we were reckless. 

    First and foremost, we took separate rooms. Another thing he didn’t mention earlier was that I like sleeping in the cold, and he loves to be all warm and toasty under all the duvet in the world. O wrong nau. We only got into the same bed when we wanted sex or cuddles.

    John: She moved out weeks before the one year even elapsed. I don’t even know when she moved out exactly. I just realised she was sleeping more and more at her own place.

    But you guys still tried again?

    John: It was the love o. All our other friends were slowly moving in with their partners, so I guess it was also peer pressure. A side of us wanted that extra physical closeness because it’s seen as the natural next step when you really love someone.

    Boma: So when we both moved to Abuja in September 2021, we tried what we’d tried with our move to Lagos again. We got a place together. This one was a spacier three-bedroom apartment that cost us most of our salary at the time. But it was such a nice space, and I loved it.

    John: In that place, we learnt a lot of lessons that have benefited our relationship. We learnt to form our own rules and expectations separate from what we’d grown up to believe had to happen in relationships.

    Like what?

    John: We don’t share things just because we’re “supposed” to. It’s important for us to keep everything separate to avoid any of that confusion and resentment that comes with one person’s likes and needs getting lost in the other person’s.

    Boma: For example, we made sure to use products we liked and buy our groceries separately. We like different types of food and different brands of basic things like pasta, toothpaste, air freshener, even milk. We don’t make it a big deal; we just buy what we want.

    John: Neither of us has to eat a meal that one of us cooked. She can cook what she feels like eating and eat, while I might want something else, so I’ll go and fix it for myself too.

    Boma: Another thing that works for us is letting go of that constant need to check up on each other when we’re separate. 

    John: Oh, I still have PTSD from the people I entered the talking stage with before I became more committed to Boma. I know it’s supposed to show love and care, but why am I out for an event or whatever, and you’re constantly texting me to make sure I’m alright? 

    I think it’s also PTSD from our strict parents. Once it’s like 11 p.m. those days, they’d start hitting up my phone. Why are we trying to get to know each other and you’re cosplaying as my father? 

    Boma: We don’t see how the constant check-ins make either of us safer. We trust each other to take all necessary safety precautions and also stay faithful. We’re both adults. 

    I too had my strict parents insisting on calls every hour on the hour.

    It seems you had a good understanding. Why the co-habiting break this time?

    Boma: We stopped “dating”. 

    In the ten months we stayed together, we went out on a proper date once. Between work and online school when I started my MBA programme, we always saw each other. So at first, it was about saving money or energy. Then, we just weren’t taking out time for small small romance. 

    We’d enjoy each other‘s company doing mundane things like going to the supermarket or laundromat. He’s my best friend, so we have a good time no matter what. But then, it got boring. Life was happening too much for my liking. I felt old all of a sudden and was getting more irritable about it.

    John, what do you have to say to this?

    John: I was constantly stressed out by my demanding job, so I couldn’t really be as attentive to the mood of our relationship as I would’ve liked. So when she told me she wanted to move out barely a year in, I was honestly shocked. I thought we were settling into a nice rhythm together.

    Boma: I felt guilty for days prior, that I was about to ruin a good thing. But I didn’t want to settle. I wasn’t satisfied, so I needed a break to step away and process why. He understood that and let me go.

    John: I emphasised that I didn’t want the relationship to break off because of her move, and she agreed. Of course, she still comes over to visit, and I go to hers too. But since she packed out in July 2022, we’ve talked more about definitive future plans. And how we’d navigate a home together considering our peculiarities.

    Boma: That’s how he’s basically proposed to me without coming direct. All these corners. Sigh. 

    For now, though, we’re embracing this casual commitment to each other.

    John: Yeah, it’s important to be able to give each other breathing space when we need it.

    How would y’all rate your Love Life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    John: I’d say 6-7. We have a lot to sort out, but what I do know is we love each other very much. Everything we do is from a place of love.

    Boma: 7 because I’m so sure we’ll make everything work in the end. It’ll just take a lot of intentionality from both of us. But yes, I love you, John.

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

    HERE’S MORE: Love Life: We Found Love, Then the Nigerian Civil War Started

  • All the Ways Friendship Breakups Are Worse Than Romantic Ones

    All the Ways Friendship Breakups Are Worse Than Romantic Ones

    Friendship breakups hurt like hell, especially when you didn’t see it coming. But breaking up with your best girl? That’s worse than chopping romantic breakfast, and here’s why.

    No one to share your hurt feelings with

    At least after a romantic breakup, you can cry to your bestie, and both of you can shit-talk your ex in one accord. But when you break up with your bestie, who do you cry or complain to?

    Or even stupid gist

    Some days, you’re too tired to make sense. All you want to do is share memes or rubbish one-liners only your bestie would relate with. Is it an ordinary friend or crush you want to do that one with?

    They know all your secrets

    If they’re petty, they can decide to start washing all your dirty linen in public. Even if they aren’t, imagine someone you aren’t on good terms with knowing weird stuff about you. Like how you think semo is elite. Eww.

    You’re too old to start looking for another bestie

    Is there even a talking stage for best-friendship? Do you just do trial and error to find someone else worthy of the “bestie” status? So many questions.


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    You lose a personal photographer

    Everyone knows female friends are pros at catching all your great angles. If they’re no longer around to do it, who will? Your boyfriend? LMAO, please.

    No one to gas you up on social media

    Who’d rush to your IG and drop fire emojis under all your new pictures as if they didn’t help you choose the picture to post in the first place? It doesn’t matter that you have a boo. Boo’s comments don’t count.

    You have to break up with their parents too

    You mean I can’t go to Mummy Steph’s house to eat firewood jollof again? That’s even the most painful part.


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