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School | Zikoko!
  • Failing At School Helped Me Figure My Life Out

    Failing At School Helped Me Figure My Life Out

    This is Tayo’s* story, as told to Sheriff

    Up until the time I went to university, I was always the best at everything — schoolwork and extracurricular activities. This genuinely made me believe that God anointed my brain to pass any exam . I never had it difficult. I never needed to study too hard for anything. The only time I ever studied hard in my life was in JSS1 when my position briefly dropped from 1st to 2nd because the competition increased. I was smart like that. But that belief was quickly challenged when I got into the university.

    I went to college at 15, like others do. But unlike many Nigerian kids who had set ambitions, I didn’t know what I wanted to do. I knew I wanted to work with technology, as I’d fallen in love with computers after getting my first one at 8. But that conviction wasn’t strong enough because I was also drawn to pure sciences and had a strong interest in physics. It also didn’t help that the prominent people in physics were revered as being super-smart. So I thought I could be like them. 

    You can imagine the look on my dad’s face when I showed him my JAMB form and he saw “Physics” on it. It was one of disgust. “Physics?” he asked. “What do you want to do with it?” I mentioned that I could work at CERN (a huge research lab somewhere in Europe) and that I just loved physics and wanted to pursue it. My man looked me in the eyes and said “Unless you want to become a teacher, I’m not paying for you to go and study this thing”.

    I argued this out with him for a few days but my dad is a stubborn man. It also didn’t help that I had zero leverage in this situation. When it finally came to it, he chose a course for me. And you know what he chose? Pharmacy. He argued that getting a job is assured and I could make more money if I start my own thing.

    It sounded like a good deal, so I chose it. I filled out the form, wrote the test and scored high enough to study pharmacy. That was the beginning of all my problems. Coming from a relatively comfortable school life, I was quickly introduced to running after lecturers in search of a lecture hall, sitting on the floor in overfilled classes, and extremely long hours under the sun in the name of ccomputer-based tests. In short, I suffered. But that was my first year.


    RELATED: What She Said: I Was Asked To Withdraw From Pharmacy In My Final Year


    In my second year, the suffering moved from physical to mental. 10-hour classes every day, with extra labs on top. That boy who never had to stress to get through school suddenly started freaking out every day. My first year dealt the first blow to my ego, but the real kicker came in my second year. 

    During my second year final exams, I fell sick. I was so sick that I had to be admitted in the hospital for a few days. I’d forced myself to push through three exams in my half-alive mental state, I failed those three courses. Three D’s in one semester. At first, I was confused. I had okay test scores. So how did this happen? As it turned out, I wasn’t dreaming at all. I had a D in all three of them, and in my department, that meant that I had three carryovers.

    What followed was the roughest period of my life. Denial was the first phase, so I started trying to prove to myself that it wasn’t really me and that something was wrong. I worked twice as hard as I used to, and even took everything way more seriously than I ever had. But nothing worked. My grades didn’t go back to being stellar. I’d have panic attacks before exams and sometimes fall physically ill whenever a huge deadline was coming up. In the end, my grades were slightly above average at best.

    This felt like an attack on who Ithought I was, and I spent the next two years nursing an identity crisis. I started searching for that validation outside of school. I learned new things and picked up new skills to prove to myself that I was still that guy. I guess it’s hard to know if I was because I didn’t have to write any exams. I got reasonably good at those things but the minute I realized that I was, I dropped it and started to pursue something else.

    Over that time, I learned to code, learned to write, and dabbled in finance, among other things. They all came in handy as I started earning a lot of money before I graduated from college. I was working two remote jobs at a point, making $1000 a month. I finished the degree and even though all my toiling in school had stopped, my personal scrambling continued. But one day, after stressing so much to get a finance certification, I realized that I wasn’t enjoying most of these things. I was doing them to prove something to myself. But I didn’t need to. School was already behind me and I could just face real life now, and the good part was, there are no exams here.

    To be honest, I think my life would have been so much easier if I’d cut myself some slack. I’m not that special, and there’s honestly no need to be. After coming to that realisation, I decided to take a step back from working so much to figure out what I actually enjoyed. 

    I realized that it was computers all along. This might sound cliche but while I’d changed so much, I’d also remained the same. I’ve always enjoyed working with them and learning about them. I had so much more clarity when I stepped back from overwork than all my years of trying to force my way through. I feel like I’ve finally figured my life out, and I just want one thing from here on out — to do what I love and make I life out of it. At the moment, I’m doing an MSc in computer science at a school in the USA and even though it’s not easy, I know I chose for myself this time.

    *Names have been changed for the sake of anonymity


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


  • Dislike For School Made Our Friendship Bond Stronger — Nine and Mudi

    Dislike For School Made Our Friendship Bond Stronger — Nine and Mudi

    My Bro is a bi-weekly Zikoko series that explores and celebrates male friendships of different forms.

    Nine and Mudi’s friendship started in 2019 with a similar taste for certain types of music. With over three years of friendship, they talk to #ZikokoMyBro about ditching classes for their interests in crypto and tech, which has improved their standard of living.

    Nine and Mudi

    How long have you been friends?

    Mudi: Four years. That was probably around 2019.

    Nine: June, 2019 actually.

    How did you meet?

    Mudi: It was in uni. We stayed on the same hostel block.

    Nine: And we’re both engineering students. We’ve seen each other in class and hostel.

    What was the first connection?

    Nine: It was our matric day. Both of us stayed back in the hostel (laughs).

    Mudi: Yeah, I didn’t want to go for the matric. I woke up late and I saw somebody who also didn’t feel like going. I approached him and asked, “how far, you no go matric?” He said he’d go most likely later. Did he go? Find out next year.

    Nine: (Laughs) Bro, that was like our first interaction. The whole matric vibe was dead. So we stayed back.

    That was the only connection?

    Mudi: When Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding album came out, I didn’t have a music player to jam it. But someone constantly played the music out loud on my hostel floor. I always wondered who it was because I really fuck with Posty’s music, then I went to check who the DJ was and turned out it was Nine.

    Nine: So from there, we started talking about music and school.

    Mudi: We skipped classes a lot too (laughs).

    Nine: Sometimes I’d be in class, he’d be nowhere to be found. When I wake up sometimes, I often discover I’m not the only one sitting back in the hostel, Mudi is around too. We began spending time together.

    Mudi: One time, a math test was coming up, so we went to the class. We didn’t understand a single thing the lecturer taught. We eventually left and did our first night class together to read for the course. That made us closer. My fellow unserious nigga.

    Nine: We didn’t want to fail. We knew who sent us to school. Even though we’ve never liked school, we still wanted to try our best with it. And that’s how it has been until now. I think that’s a bond for us too.

    Mudi: Thankfully we’re almost done. Just a year left.

    What was your first impression of each other?

    Mudi: He seemed cool, but I wasn’t sure until he interacted during the matric. He was a calm guy and he minded his business. The music too, no one was listening to Post Malone on the hostel floor that time. 

    Nine: Other guys would bash our taste.

    Mudi: Na Naira Marley boys dey play for speaker. I’ve nothing against that, but I was happy immediately when I heard Post Malone from him. I was happy I wasn’t alone; like thank God o, make e no go be like na me be the only foreigner for this entire place.

    Nine: It was just cool. The vibes were just right. Having someone that likes the same things as you, almost the same way you do, I couldn’t ask for more.

    Apart from stabbing classes?

    Mudi: We actually went through sapa together too.

    Nine: Ah. Fuck. We don suffer before we begin soft. Now, things are better than good.

    Mudi: We don dey soft small, I’ll not lie. ‘Cause previously, it was sick man. We’d be cooking spaghetti when it’s past 12 a.m because that was when we had money. Just two of us. It wasn’t funny, man.

    Nine: It’s plenty o, but there was another mad phase in 100 level. We stayed away from parties because we couldn’t afford tickets. Other guys were there, not us.

    Mudi: We no get 1k for ticket, even though we always dress nice. But there was no money. We’d tell each other about parties that were happening but we’d discourage each other from going.

    Nine: We’d decide not to go. When people asked we just told them it’d be a boring party and kept it moving.

    Mudi: When we stroll past the party venues, we’d just shake our heads. Because of 1k. The only parties we went to happened because I was part of the organisers and I quickly pocketed some tickets. Looking back at it now, it’s crazy. Now, we’re the ones hosting parties and running things.

    What was your situation after 100 level?

    Nine: Things got a bit better. We began staying together from 200 level till now. We went from hostel floormates to flatmates off campus. I moved out and he moved in with me.

    Mudi: Aside from the music and truancy, we decided to grow together. It was like, this is what I’m doing at this point, what are you doing? Let’s make each other’s lives better. It was still rough, but way better than how we used to be.

    How did you guys go from being broke to renting out an apartment off campus?

    Mudi: Na bull run o. It saved our lives. That period, the prices of tokens were generally rising. There was more inflow of cash to the crypto market and that in turn yielded more profits on investments.

    Nine: It was the bull run, man. We thank God.

    Mudi: Nine actually introduced me to crypto. In fact, he had been eating good from it before I got into it. It was around the lockdown period. There was distance between us. I was in Lagos but we got talking and he gradually introduced me to it. And we started working hand-in-hand. Little money here and there served us.

    Nine: We did stuff together to make money. We’re like the real life crypto bros. There’s also tech stuff. Mudi is a game developer. Got into tech before me. He taught me basic things I needed at that time. Supplied me tutorial materials and made sure I didn’t miss anything. I do UI/UX now.

    Got a story to share? Send a pitch here.

    And how has it been?

    Mudi: Omo, let me not lie, it’s hard sometimes. Trading coins, buying and selling NFTs, creating and running crypto projects, etc. Dem dey chop our eyes, we dey chop their eyes too sha. It’s wins and losses; steady wins, major losses. I remember how hard it was starting from the ground up a couple times. Same as getting back up from a couple of bad investments. The space is very unkind to whoever gives up and we just pull through with knowledge and experience.

    Nine: It’s what has kept us not only afloat but majorly above what we should be running at this level. Nobody wants to hire an undergraduate for doing something they don’t know entirely and man has to feed, look good and still chest billings. I think we’ve been trying sha; learning, working and taking care of self. It’s been better.

    How do you hold yourselves accountable?

    Mudi: Hmm.. by being vocal. I don’t mind if disagreements probably come from it (we’d settle in few hours). Long as I let you know you’re know when you fuck up and need to do better. He knows me.

    Nine: You know I’m the same way too, bro. In doing that and getting things off our chests, we also make sure no one has any pent up resentments or anger. Air out the grievances and make the other party knows how we can do better moving forward.

    Mudi: Also, it’s harder than it seems most times because we regularly have to show up for both aspects of our lives (school and our individual career paths). The solution I put forward for us is to regularly have checks about school work outside our friendship. It helps us know what’s happening regarding school. For each other, we develop a reading schedule close to exams and tests and we get stuff done at least.

    What holds your friendship together?

    Mudi: We always stay in contact, whether we’re in the same area or not. We like to know what’s going on with each other, so there’s no information that’s lost between us at any point.

    Nine: We don’t have major friends outside of each other. We’re secluded from school right now. Another thing, we don’t hide anything from each other. Nobody does something without telling the other person what they are up to. Just like the crypto and the tech thing. That’s how it is.

    Mudi: I also think the drive for our friendship is fueled by our ability to be there for each other at any point; heartbreaks, finances, even school (laughs). As long as I know I have his back and he has mine, I’m good to go.

    Any particular time the other person came through for you?

    Mudi: There are countless times, but after we moved from the hostel to an apartment outside school, things were a bit slow for me because I’d just started getting into the crypto space. Nine helped me with funds, taking me through the baby steps, ensuring I was always in the know about what was happening, and helped me even when I needed help with cash.

    Nine: There’s been a lot but there was a time I was sick and had to go home. We had a test in school, he took my test for me and submitted.

    Mudi: Other things done for each other probably includes being wingmen for each other when it comes to getting women (laughs). Also basic house stuff like cooking and making sure the other person has something to eat when they get back from somewhere.

    What would you change about each other and your friendship?

    Nine: It’s the money sha. If we were richer, we’d be doing crazy things together.

    Mudi: There are many things we’ve been dreaming of doing together. We’ve banging ideas but funds are necessary. Nothing happens when the money is low. I just hope we’ll work harder than we’re now, so that we can get to where we want to be.

    Nine: There was a time we got supplies for clothing and made these custom lightning pants but we couldn’t continue with the mass production even though the final product was really nice. It’s little things like this that spark our desire to upgrade to better positions.

    So it’s not just crypto and tech?

    Mudi: No. We’ve a small fashion startup.

    I create custom made fits and I also paint on clothes. The lightning pants were for my fashion brand. Nine handles the creative direction for the brand and also in general. It launched during the lockdown. I made a couple of products, particularly painted trousers for a few people and demos and we got good reviews. 

    Where do you see yourselves together in five years?

    Mudi: Personally, I see myself managing Nine’s music career. Honestly I’d be content with that. He should blow up and I’ll manage his music. Funny thing, I didn’t even know he made music until later I heard some songs he did. I listened and loved them. Since then I’ve been telling him we’ve to push his music.

    Nine: I see us making more money together, travelling the world and just achieving.

    Music is just what I do when I am alone, tbh. It’s not really a major thing for me. That was why I hardly say anything about it. Most people still don’t know I make music. But I’ll work on being more visible.

    What have you always wanted to tell each other?

    Nine: Hmmm, it’s the usual sweet stuff we’ve always said na (laughs). Mudi is awesome, nice, cool and great. He knows I have his back anytime, though.

    Mudi: Na macho man, he no dey do emotions.

    As for me, what I always wanted to let him know is that I like how he works hard towards everything he gets his hands on. His attitude towards life is what I admire too. Although we can change and switch things up, for now this is it. Also, I want to thank him particularly for stuff he’s done for me in the past. I wouldn’t be here without him.

    Do you have an interesting bro story you’d like to share? Fill this form and we’ll get back to you.

  • The Academic Journey of a Kid Who Used to Be Smart

    The Academic Journey of a Kid Who Used to Be Smart

    As you progress in your academic journey, things have a way of becoming more complex. For many people, this turn takes them by surprise, where they now struggle to pass. It’s even more annoying when you remember how you once cleared all your exams. It starts like this: 

    It’s primary school, and you always come first in class

    Student receiveing prize
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    This was the story for many. Academic excellence in the lower classes was a norm.

    But then you finally come second

    Student receiving prize
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    Some other smart kid would beat you to the first prize, and you accept the second prize reluctantly.

    You start reading so you can get your rightful position back

    keke palmer reading
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    All that’s on your mind now is getting your first place back.

    You gain admission into the university thinking it’s business as usual

    Pawpaw beating table smiling meme
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    You’ve already planned how you’ll get 30/40 on your test and at least 45/60 on your exam. There’s no way you won’t get an A.

    Classes start and things begin to look blurry

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    It’s at this point that lecturers will say things like, “Your teacher should have taught you this in SS3, so I’m skipping this topic”. But then your SS3 teachers said, “I won’t go deep into this because when you get to uni, your lecturers will explain”.

    You consider going back to primary school when things were easier

    Pawpaw thinking meme
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    At least in primary school, your biggest problem was parts of speech. Now, your whole life is an exclamation.

    You start to research how to revive your CGPA

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    How do you make the best of the years you have left and save the reputation you’ve built?

    Then people begin to ask what went wrong

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    I’m sorry you’re disappointed, but I’m trying to find a solution too.

    The day you eventually graduate

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    It’s a big deal only because that chapter is finally over. When your uncles ask what you graduated with, you tell them, “I graduated with my mates”.

  • Why You Should Go Back to Primary School

    Why You Should Go Back to Primary School

    Primary school may have stressed you out at the time, but now that you’re older and wiser (and have experienced small capitalism), you’re actually best equipped to kill it.

    You can come first this time

    Primary School

    When you brag to your kids about coming first when you were in their class, this time, it won’t be a lie.

    Nobody can beat you

    Primary School

    Your teachers will be dragging age with you so the fear you had for them once won’t even exist. Even if you don’t do your homework, they’ll only beg you to do the next one.

    Automatic prefectship

    Primary School

    There’s no way you’ll be in a class with a couple of 10-year-olds, and you won’t be made senior prefect. You are the oldest, smartest, and most mature, so why not?

    You get to have an actual break time every weekday

    Primary School

    Playing around during break time without a worry in the world was amazing. Wouldn’t it be nice to experience it again?

    You need rest

    Primary School

    You’re getting old and Nigeria has stressed you enough. Primary school was when you had the most rest. It’s time to go back to maximise it.

    You don’t have to buy clothes

    Primary School

    Uniform >>> You now have the perfect excuse not to spend money on clothes. Don’t thank me; I do it out of the goodness of my heart.

    You need colour in your life 

    Source: Guardian.ng

    One thing primary school classes always have going for them is the great interior decor. The colourful paintings and bags all over the walls is exactly what you need.

    Speaking of paintings, you finally get the chance to have fun sip and paint sessions at HERtitude 2023. Click here to get your tickets.

  • Ranking Secondary School Classes From Best to Worst

    Ranking Secondary School Classes From Best to Worst

    Secondary school holds a lot of fun memories for some people. For others, not so much. Regardless, we all had our best and worst memories. We’ve decided to rank the classes from “so good you wouldn’t mind repeating” to “so bad if you could leave after the first term you would”.

    SS3

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    Taking on the tag of “final-year student” is amazing. The risks that are taken and the flex of writing external exams put it right up there as the most enjoyable class. The joy of finally leaving secondary school is one of the top three most amazing feelings; probably after reading an inside life article and a pregnancy scare.

    SS1

    Very few feelings beat the joy of finally moving to Senior Secondary School. The new uniforms, the ability to drop some subjects, and the general flex of being in Senior Secondary School put it at no 2.  There hasn’t been a more iconic change of fits since the transfiguration.

    Secondary School
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    JSS2 

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    It might be an unpopular choice, but hear me out. 

    In this class, everyone just wants to have pure undiluted fun; run, play, and make stupid jokes. It’s also the first time you have “juniors”.

    JSS3

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    It’s not a completely bad class, to be fair. It feels nice being at the end of Junior Secondary School but that’s where it stops. The constant classes and the crazy preparation for the Junior WAEC (West African Examinations Council) exams make it a more unlikeable class.

    SS2

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    This is a perfect case of so close yet so far. The SS3 v SS2 rivalry is real. To make things worse, all the subjects get so much harder. To cap it all, the SS3 guys will still make a ritual of going after the SS2 girls.

    JSS1

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    This is the real ghetto. The best description is that it’s life at the bottom of the secondary school food chain. It’s a new environment with higher academic expectations, and often times, bullies. It gets better, but the first few months are brutal. 

    Speaking of lists, HERtitude is at the top of everyone’s party list.  Click here to get tickets to the coolest gathering of hot babes.

    Bonus – Holidays

    It isn’t a class but it’s definitely the best time during secondary school. Why can’t every day just be a holiday?

  • The Different People You’ll  Find at Every Inter-house Sports

    The Different People You’ll  Find at Every Inter-house Sports

    We know it’s not the Olympics but it felt that way as a teenager in secondary school. The sports, the competition, the joy of winning, and the pain of defeat. Secondary school inter-house sports had everything. Apart from Yellow House always coming last, here are the type of people you’ll find at every school’s inter-house sports.

    The all-rounders

    These ones can run, march, jump and play football. It’s almost as if they were created for sports.

    Inter-house sports

    The sprinters

    All they care about is winning the races. The 100 metres gold is all that’s on their mind. The rest of the house should go and hustle their own medals.

    Those waiting for teachers’ race

    Inter-house sports
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    They don’t care about the whole ceremony. They just wanted to watch their Intro-tech teacher tumble to the ground in the sack race.

    The Couples

    Inter-house sports
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    When everyone else is all about their house position these ones are usually boo’d up laughing at inside jokes and not paying attention to the races.

    Cheerleaders association

    Inter-house sports
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    Every house needs a supporting cheer group. They’re always loud and notice everything, even drawing the attention of the officials to the things they missed.

    The march past commander

    Inter-house sports nysc
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    This person turns the march past into a military parade ground. They take their jobs a little too seriously. 

    Kings and Queens

    Inter-house sports
    Source: Zikoko Memes

    Usually at the front of the march-past parade, waving their hands and feeling fly in their house colours.   

    Speaking of colours, the hottest babes will be in their best colours at HERtitude. Click here to get your tickets

  • Just Imagine: If Nigerian Universities Had Honest Slogans

    Just Imagine: If Nigerian Universities Had Honest Slogans

    University of Lagos

    “Your graduation year is just a suggestion.”

    “For the pursuit of second class upper because A is for God”

    University of Ibadan

    “We’re older than the Nigeria that’s been showing you shege. What do you think we’ll show you?”

    University of Ilorin

    “We say ‘Better by far’ but we really mean ‘Better by stress’”

    “Struggle to get in; struggle to get out”

    “Forget what you heard, we strike harder than thunder”

    “Welcome to a life-long abusive partnership”

    Obafemi Awolowo University

    “For learning and suffering”

    “You think you like BDSM? Think again.”

    Covenant University

    “You think you have rights? LMAO”

    “Even if you call us a prison, we’re still the best one”

    Lagos State University

    “At least, you’re in Lagos”

    “Don’t get too attached to your school fees. People change”

    Babcock University

    “Struggle today, struggle tomorrow, struggle till you graduate”

    Crawford University

    “Forget the cute name, there’s a church service every day.”

    Redeemer’s University

    “In God we trust. Everybody else must bring money”

    Ahmadu Bello University

    “Forget the education. Come for the connections”

    University of Port Harcourt

    “For those who love living dangerously”

    University of Benin

    “The peak of your terrible life choices”

    “Your life will flash before your eyes”

    Unviersity of Nigeria

    “Where Nigeria itself learned how to dish out shege”

    “F is our favourite letter. It’ll be yours too”

    Afe Babalola Univeristy

    “For the bragging rights”

    Usman Danfodio University, Sokoto

    “If the stress doesn’t melt your brain, the sun will”


    NEXT READ: 12 Ways Unilorin Will Seriously Frustrate Your Life


  • QUIZ: What Prefect Position Do You Deserve?

    QUIZ: What Prefect Position Do You Deserve?

    Since we’re all students of life, what prefect should be?

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

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

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

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

    Tell me how you met 

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

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

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

    LMAO. How did that work out? 

    Elizabeth: We exchanged numbers and kept in touch.

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

    When did you start talking again?

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

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

    Is this what our future doctors are doing? 

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

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

    What about your boyfriend? 

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

    Oyin: We talked in every class and even after.

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

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

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

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

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

    Oh? Tell us about this girl 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Wait. Was the friend that babe?

    Elizabeth: Gbam! I was so pissed. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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    How did the kiss happen?

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

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

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

    Elizabeth: Gbam! 

    Oyin: Fair point. 

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

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

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

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

    Elizabeth: Hmm.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    But navigating all this while studying medicine? 

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

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

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

    Oyin: We always find a way. 

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

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

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

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  • 9 Times We Wanted to Fight Puleng From “Blood and Water” For Being Chaotic AF

    9 Times We Wanted to Fight Puleng From “Blood and Water” For Being Chaotic AF

    Is it me, or are the main characters on TV shows created to be annoying and chaotic all the time? Anyone who’s seen Blood and Water will confirm that while the lead character, Puleng Khumalo, is lovable and smart, she can be very annoying in her mission to prove her schoolmate, Fikile, is her long-lost sister. 

    In honour of the return of one of my favourite high school dramas, I’m looking at all the times I almost jumped into my TV screen just so I could drag Puleng for being messy AF. 

    The time Wade said she looked like Fikile, and she just went with it 

    Everyone knows the usual response to “You and this person look-alike” is, “I don’t see it”, but not my good sis, Puleng. In the very first episode, while gate-crashing Fikile’s birthday party, Wade (a total stranger, by the way) randomly told Puleng she looked just like the birthday girl, and boom, she decided Fikile might be her long-lost sister. 

    Was she correct to start the investigation? Yes. Was it a bit extra? Also, yes. 

    Starting this whole investigation in the first place like she’s Eniola Holmes 

    I can’t remember the last time I saw Puleng read a book, do homework or just go for a jog. From the moment the show started, Puleng put on her Eniola Holmes hat and refused to take it off. There could be an earthquake, tsunami and jailbreak happening at the same time, and we’d still find Puleng digging through Fikile’s trash for DNA samples. 

    The time she tried to steal Fikile’s tampon to get her DNA sample 

    Talking about digging through trash, can we also go back to the time Puleng tried to fap Fikile’s used tampon in season one so she could run a DNA test? I mean, smart move doing the DNA thing, but my good sis, trying to steal someone’s tampon is a bit much. Or what do you think? 

    Her love triangle with KB and Wade 

    Puleng must really think she’s Bella Swan from Twilight or something because why was she juggling two fine ass men like it’s nothing? 

    There’s KB, her boyfriend and original love interest from season one, and then there’s Wade, her sidekick who told her multiple times that he liked her. To be honest, everyone is tired of the “not noticing my best friend is in love with me” trope. Even though she ended up with Wade in season two, she still kissed KB in the last episode, turning her relationship map into an actual triangle. Good job, sis.

    The time she slapped Fikile (and her teammate) senseless 

    One thing about Puleng is she’s never going to miss an opportunity to bitch slap someone. She slapped her teammate from her old school after she made the team lose a match. Then, she decked Fikile when she found out her supposed sister was behind the leaked tape of their father’s arrest. 

    Puleng’s slaps are annoying because they land her in trouble every time. But I can’t help but mutter a little “Yasss, bitch” under my breath everytime it happens. 

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    Using KB to get an internship someone else deserved 

    This episode in season two confirmed that Puleng was actually written to be an annoying protagonist who would do anything to move the plot forward. Despite having zero interest in law, Puleng manipulated her relationship with KB to get an internship with his dad’s law firm, knowing other deserving students wanted the slot. Did she have a good reason? Yes. But it didn’t make her move any less shitty. 

    The time she tried to prove she wasn’t a drug addict by doing shady drug addict activity

    In season two, when Puleng’s parents suspect she might be using drugs and call a rehab to pick her up, this babe decided to wear a hoodie, pack a bag and steal some money from her brother’s piggy bank (not the app, an actual piggy bank), so she could run away. Like, what was she trying to prove? Because if it was that she was drug-free, then she failed woefully. 

    When she finally revealed her investigation but didn’t drag her parents’ like small gen 

    African parents blaming drugs once their kids breathe different will never be wild to me. After it’s revealed Puleng isn’t a drug addict but a sergeant with Panti police station, she misses out on a wonderful opportunity to drag her parents on behalf of the rest of us. She could’ve at least hissed or rolled her eyes because they deserved small disrespect in that scene. We were rooting for you, Puleng! 

    Going to the hood unsupervised 

    Sometimes I believe Puleng wakes up every morning thinking she’s Lara Croft or an avenger. If she has any superpower or martial arts training we don’t know of, now would be a good time to share with the class. I don’t understand why she dragged Wade to the hood on an investigative trip, but of course, it ended with them being attacked by some bouncer-looking man. Puleng, abeg now. 

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