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Soulmate | Zikoko!
  • QUIZ: Where’s Your Future Partner Right Now?

    Is your future partner getting booed up or are they currently looking for fuel?

  • QUIZ: Plan a Date and We’ll Reveal Your BBN Soulmate

    We can guess which BBN Level Up housemate you’re most compatible with from your idea of a perfect date.

  • What Life Is Like When Your Best Friend Is Your Soulmate

    For the people whose best friends are their soulmates, here are some of the struggles you deal with regularly. 

    Fight dating rumours every second 

    Every two to three business days, someone and their family member assumes you and your best friend are dating. You’ve told them it’s not true, but they simply don’t believe friends can be soulmates but also platonic. 

    Can’t be sneaky around them

    There’s nothing you can hide from them because it feels like they can read your mind. You might say one thing, but they know you really mean another. Tough stuff. 

    RELATED: QUIZ: How Rich is Your Soulmate?

    Dating is hard 

    A lot of partners will feel threatened by the relationship you have with your best friend. Sometimes, reassurance is not enough, and they leave. But at least, your best friend is available as a shoulder for you to cry on. 

    Hard to have other friends

    If you’re part of a friend group, the other members might feel left out because of how close the two of you are. If you’re not, you might find it difficult to navigate friendships with other people because you have everything you need in one person.

    You get addressed as one person instead of two 

    People stop addressing both of you as separate individuals, but as different parts of a whole. The pronoun “you” becomes plural because it refers to both of you. 

    RELATED: 6 Nigerians on Falling in Love With Their Best Friend

    You consider nurturing life with them

    Might be a child, lamb, or plant, but you constantly look at them and have the desire to nurture life with them. It seems like a new way to express the love in your friendship. 

    RELATED: 5 Nigerians on Having Platonic Soulmates 

    Zikoko is launching a new series where we explore those friendships, familial and romantic relationships that are no longer sailing.

  • “The Yin to My Yang” — 5 Nigerians on Having Platonic Soulmates

    Soulmates don’t always have to be romantic partners; these five Nigerians have platonic soulmates: people who’ve been there for them in good times and in bad. 

    “He’s invested in my safety and constantly fights for me” 

    — Frank, 23 

    My platonic soulmate and I have known each other since we were kids, but we started talking when I was sixteen. One day, about a year into our friendship, we were at a church camp meeting and we stayed up talking throughout the night. We talked about a lot of things: family, existence, love, our friendship. After that night, there was a shift we both recognised —  we were always going to be in each other’s lives. It’s as if we’d unlocked a new friendship level that night. Since then, it’s been the most beautiful friendship of my life. As a queer person, I was a bit scared to come out to him, but when I did, it changed nothing. If anything, he became more invested in my safety and has constantly fought for me.

    There were some bumps in the road in our friendship. For example, we both go to different schools. At first, our communication suffered because I didn’t know how to communicate my feelings properly, but I’m getting better now. I honestly can’t map out exactly how we worked it out, but it involved a lot of honest conversations and setting ground rules. Now, we text everyday and call each other every week when we’re in our different schools. 

    Also, towards the end of 2021, we had an argument when I complained that he wasn’t opening up to me, but after some self-reflection, I realised I was being selfish. He needed someone to be there for him, not someone to prod him about things he’s still working through. He’s told me that my existence in his life makes him constantly happy, and I’m grateful to have him. 

    “I’ve outgrown so many people and so many dynamics, but not her.”

    — Cynthia, 20

    My platonic soulmate is my best friend, and this year makes it our 10th year of friendship. We met in secondary school, but we also managed to have a relationship outside of school because we also went to the same church. She was everywhere around me, so our friendship was bound to happen. 

    Even though we had a friend group, we’ve realised that our friendship had a different dynamic than the rest of the group. We’ve been with each other through a lot. For example, five years ago, I had a car accident. After I called my mum for help, I immediately called her and cried into the phone. It just made sense to call her because she’s like my sister. 

    When she got admission into her dream university, she told me about it before she even told her parents. 

    I’ve outgrown so many people and so many dynamics, but not her. We’ve seen each other through so many transitional periods. Even when she started dating a mutual friend and we had issues because she tried to keep it from me, but it didn’t last up to twelve hours. The littles we do for each other and how deliberate we are about our friendship, convinces me that she’s my soulmate.

    RELATED: 8 Friendship Milestones BFFs Can Relate With 

    “They’re the yin to my yang”

    — Morenike, 21

    We were in the same year and same class in uni but we didn’t properly speak till our second year. I had tweeted some depressing thoughts and they asked if they could come see me since we were in the same hostel. Since then, we’ve been extremely close. 

    I really feel like myself with them. Externally, we’re really different physically, but I feel like we get each other. They’re the yin to my yang because through our similarities, we’re still the same person. They even got us matching earrings where I’m the sun and they’re the moon. 

    We don’t even have to speak every day, but it just works. I can always tell them how I feel, no matter how terrible or confusing that thing is. I’ve never been one to be comfortable expressing feelings for my friends, but one time we were at this party and I was super anxious so I called them. While we were talking, we called each other soulmates and that’s the perfect description. 

    Sure, there are disagreements because at the end of the day we’re different people who handle things differently, but our friendship helps me to look inwards and just see things differently. 

    “We FaceTime each other just to stay on the phone and breathe”

    — Anita, 25

    I consider the person my soulmate because we have had moments where our conversations fizzle out, but we always find our way back. The only thing disrupting us is distance, but even then we find a way to make it work. We FaceTime each other just to stay on the phone and breathe, and sometimes I watch him read for his exams. 

    We talk about everything even when  we both had romantic partners, and it’s still the same now that we’re single. It feels good having someone who’s always there for me even when I’m unstable. We’ve fought a couple of times, but we also calm down and address our issues so we don’t say things we don’t mean. 

    RELATED: 7 Nigerian Women on Platonic Relationships With Men

    “I think I’m in love with her”

    — Adaeze, 21

    I met her on Twitter and although we’ve not known each other for long, she’s easily the other half of my soul. She gets me in a way even the people I date don’t. 

    She loves me the way I’ve always wanted to be loved, and I love her right back. We try to talk as often as possible and have girl dates where we just talk, eat, and remain beautiful. 

    I could be having the worst day possible, and her voice is all I need to feel better. I’m always there for her, even when I’m not ready to be there for myself. Showing up for her is the easiest thing I’ve had to do, and I’ll keep doing it for as long as possible. I think I’m in love with her — not in the way lovers fall in love, but in the way two people whose souls are intertwined do. That’s the only way to describe exactly how I feel about her. We’re the same person in different fonts, and I’ll be forever grateful for the day she reached out to me.

    RELATED: 8 Nigerian Women Share the Best Thing a Friend Has Done For Them

  • QUIZ: What Is Your Soulmate’s Zodiac Sign?

    Is your soulmate a Virgo, Capricorn, or something else entirely? Take this quiz and we’ll tell you.

  • QUIZ: Which BBN 2021 Housemate Is Your Soulmate?

    Take this quiz and we’ll tell you which Shine Ya Eye housemate is your match:

  • QUIZ: How Rich Is Your Soulmate?

    Everyone has a soulmate. Whether you want to believe it or not. Now this is the part where you take the quiz and find out how rich yours is.

    Good luck!

  • QUIZ: Where Will You Meet Your Soulmate?

    Most people believe in the existence of soulmates and wonder where they’ll meet theirs. Will you meet yours at work, on social media or inside danfo?

    Let’s find out!

  • What She Said: This Is What It’s Like To Lose A Soulmate

    One of my favourite stories is the one in which man and woman were created as one being. With four arms, four legs and a head made up of two faces. Then Zeus pulled a Zeus and split us into separate parts. Condemning us to spend the rest of our lives looking for our other half. Our soulmate.

    In this week’s interview, I talk to a woman who is a firm believer in soulmates. But unlike in every variation of the Greek story I’ve ever read, her soulmate is a woman, her best friend. I talk with her about the good, the bad and ugly of their friendship and what it felt like to lose her when she died last year. 

    Soulmates? 

    It seems idealistic, I know. I’ve just always believed in the notion that there’s someone for you out there. But not always in a romantic way. In fact, we miss out on our soul mates because we are always looking for fairy tale types.  

    I believe human beings are like incomplete jigsaw puzzles. And we never realize it until we find someone who fits into our missing pieces and completes us. 

    And who was your soulmate? 

    Aduke is my soulmate. I don’t use was, even though she’s gone. I feel like it implies that she can be somehow replaced. That you can lose a soulmate and gain another. When you find your soulmate that’s it. Some people are lucky to find theirs and grow old and grey with them. Some are unlucky enough to never find them. And worst of all some of us find them and lose them before we’ve even lived half of our lives together. I’m not sure what is more tragic. Living your life never meeting that person who completes you or meeting them and losing them a quarter of the way through. 

    How did you meet? 

    We met in primary 1 through our mums. We attended the staff school in a university and there was a women’s society both our mums belonged to. They hit it off and started seeing each other frequently. Now that I think about it we didn’t exactly meet in school. I think her mum came to gossip with my mum one day and brought her along. After that, it was a back and forth between both our houses. We were both only children. Anytime my mum went to her house, she’d take me along, and if her mum came to mine she’d bring her along. This was like every weekend and almost every other day on holidays. Then in primary 2, they put us in the same class and we just became inseparable. 

    How would you describe her? 

    Gorgeous is always the first thing that comes to mind. By the time we were in secondary school (we went to secondary school and university together), she was turning heads on the streets. We would be walking home and grown-ass men in cars will slow down to ask this 15-year-old girl in uniform for her number. Apart from the fact that they were disgusting paedophiles. I understood it. No matter what age or gender you were, your first reaction when you saw her was ‘who be this’? 

    She was also very aware of how fine she was and very vain but not in an obnoxious way. I don’t know how to explain it. She was the type of person you would tell something like ‘do you know you are the most beautiful person I’ve ever seen’ and she’d reply with ‘yes I can see how that’s possible’ or something. She wasn’t very kind, this is weird to say I know. She wasn’t unkind but she didn’t have a bleeding heart. So things like beggars on the streets or a GoFundMe for someone with cancer wouldn’t move her. 

    But once she decided you were in her corner there was nothing she won’t do for you. People who knew us always talked about how I was the nicer, sweeter or warmer one and how she was colder. She just didn’t like to wear her heart on her sleeves. But she was the type of person to fly into Lagos from Abuja because one stupid boy has broken my heart. 

    What was your fondest memory with her? 

    There are so many. One of the most recent was early last year. We spent the night before my wedding alone together in my hotel room. Drinking wine and just gisting. It was one of the rare occasions she got very emotional. We talked about how much we meant to each other and how my getting married wasn’t going to change anything between us. 

    A couple of months before, we had had a fight. She never really liked my husband. He cheated once when we were dating and we broke up. He begged and begged, I forgave him and took him back, she didn’t. When he wanted to propose, he first went to her to talk about what kind of ring and proposal I’d like, she told him I’d like him not to propose and then came to meet me telling me all his plans. 

    I was livid, we had a huge fight and didn’t talk to each other for like 2 weeks. Then one day my fiance said we should go for brunch and she was there. She had reached out to him, apologised and asked him to talk to me on her behalf. I know how hard that was for her because even till my wedding day I could tell she didn’t like him. She did a very good job of hiding it though. 

    How did you lose her? 

    Car accident, 11:10 pm December 29th, 2019. She has family in Kaduna and Abuja so she shuttles between the two states pretty frequently. She was going from Kaduna to Abuja, for a party the next day. A trailer had crashed on the road and nobody put any warning sign out. The driver drove full speed ahead into the trailer. The car, the bodies — nothing was recognisable. Her, the driver and a cousin she was with died immediately. We didn’t find out until the next morning.

    What was the last thing you said to her?

    This is the exact conversation we had on Whatsapp. She said: “I don’t think I want to wear that yellow dress again, the cleavage is too much”. I said “It’s not jo, wear it like that”, she read this. Then I sent “if you don’t now wear it, what will you now wear?” she didn’t read this. I didn’t think too deeply about it when she didn’t reply. I probably slept off like two minutes after. It was her mum’s call that woke me up the next morning. The unread message I sent was at 11:10 pm, I’m sure that was the exact moment it happened.

    What’s it like? To lose a soulmate? 

    It’s emptying. It doesn’t feel like you lose half of you, it feels like so much more. You know how if you drink Capri Sonne, when you are done you will squeeze the pali and use the straw to suck out the last few drops. I felt like that empty about to be squeezed pali. There are just enough drops of Capri Sonne for me to keep living, but it’s such an empty empty life. Is that a weird analogy? I don’t know. It just seems like the most accurate.

    I’ve been in deep mourning, I might never come out of. My whole world is grey. My husband was understanding at first, then he wasn’t. One day he made a comment that if this is how I handle loss, will I now kill myself if he dies. I didn’t want to start a fight, but the truth is losing him could never be as painful as this. 

    No one could ever understand our relationship, we weren’t just best friends. That fight we had before my wedding, if she had given me an ultimatum and made me pick between our friendship and my husband I’d have picked the friendship. I love my husband, he’s a wonderful companion but he’s not my soul mate. She was and I’ll miss her every day until the day I die. 

  • QUIZ: How Good-Looking Is Your Soulmate?

    Is your soulmate an absolute stunner or are they simply beautiful on the inside? Well, whether you’ve met them or not, this quiz will let you know just how good-looking the person you’ll inevitably end up with is.

    Take to find out:

  • Quiz: When Will You Meet Your Soulmate?

    Everyone who believes in the concept of true love also believes in the existence of a soulmate. However, nobody really knows when they will find their soulmate, and that usually comes with some anxiety. Not to worry; Zikoko is here for you (as always) and we’re ready to tell you when you will meet yours, so you can start preparing for the moment of the magical connection.

    Let’s begin!