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Over the weekend, I asked my female friends who live alone the most difficult part for them.
Here’s what they had to say:
Mariam/21.
“I have the compulsive feeling that I am being watched. And I live in a three-storey building. So, when I am doing anything, I feel like someone is watching me. It’s worse when I want to have my bath. I don’t expect it to be a woman watching me, always a man.”
Gbemi/27.
“I am scared of being naked in my house even when it’s hot. My biggest fear is that someone will come in and invade my privacy. Like an armed robber will come in, rape me and kill me. At least if I wear clothes, I can reduce those chances.”
Tomi/29.
“I have to wear a ring anytime I invite an artisan to my house. So that at least, he thinks there is a man in the house and I am not vulnerable.”
Agnes/26.
“I have one of my male friends who comes to sleepover at intervals and poses as my husband. This is to deter male neighbours from trying nonsense or having any ideas. So, I always tell them that even though my “husband” travels a lot, he can come back anytime. This has been effective so far.”
Ijeoma/24.
“My brother’s name is on the invoice of the house rent that I pay with my money. He’s also my husband since we have similar surname. I had to do this because someone said the landlord uses his spare key to “check” up on female tenants that live alone. Me I don’t like trouble for my life so my brother has become my “husband” on paper.”
Take a break from this cruel world and get lost below:
Forget all you have read in those dusty magazines about what women love. Because we care about you so much, we have curated some of the best things you can do to change the game.
Let’s start:
1) Sleep and give her peace of mind.
Nothing beats peace and quiet.
2) Cuddle.
Romance.
3) Gist with her.
“How was your day?”
4) Help scratch her back.
Nothing says I love you like a good back scratch.
5) Pillow fight.
Yipee.
6) Shout kukuruku in her ear.
Rise and shine sunshine.
7) Give Gentle massage.
Imagine getting this after a long day in traffic.
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Today’s story counts the costs of what life is like living with illnesses like fibromyalgia and Poly Cystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS).
Every week, Zikoko seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it’ll be revealing.
#Nairalife stories require a lot of time to make. It’s why partnerships like ours with Barter means a lot to us. Barter makes it ridiculously easy to pay bills, send and receive money to people you care about, and help you create Virtual Cards. Where you’re Android or iOS, you’re invited to the Barter party.
Where would you like us to start?
It would have to be when I was a kid and my dad died. You know this thing when you’re a teenager and they don’t want you to know what’s going on? Yeah.
Things got so hard, and there was no greater evidence of it than that time my mum sent my older sister to the market to go buy stuff.
My sister came back with ₦10 change, and my mum collected it from her. That was when I knew.
Ahhh, I get this.
Man, things were rough after popsy died. I remember getting ₦600 to take to shop for school and use as pocket money. I just bought garri, sugar and milk. This was in the year 2000, and I just started SS3.
This was also around the time that everyone started to sell their jewellery – my sister and my mum – just to fund hospital bills.
What was your dad’s cause of death?
Headache – that’s all the hospitals said everywhere we went. The tricky part was that my mum had to leave her business to take care of him. That meant that she couldn’t earn. Then after he died, she couldn’t work for a while, so more money problems. We were living in a government house – my dad was a civil servant – but when he died, we had to move.
How did you fund that?
Someone bought us a house. I think it cost 10 million at the time.
Mad o!
Yeah. Brother-in-law. It was in an estate. One of our family friends bought his a few years later at 14 million. When he sold it less than 3 years ago, it went for 70 million.
It’s a duplex with 5 bedrooms and boys quarters. But yeah, my mum still had to hustle to put food inside the house. We didn’t have to worry about rent forever, but at least, we needed money, so the grind continued.
Did this push you to want to start making money?
That feels like the natural thing right? But not for my mum. University wasn’t an option. I tried to gain admission – I wrote the hell out of JAMB – but I was home for like two years.
All the time I spent at home, I was helping her with her fabric business. I mean, she paid me once in a while, but she mostly paid me with “AM I NOT FEEDING YOU?”
I eventually got into University in 2004. Now, an interesting skill I’d already picked up while I was in secondary school was sewing.
Tell me about that.
I wanted to start sewing for people, but my mum didn’t want me working, so all I did in 100-level was sew for myself on the weekends. But people wanted it. Do you know what I wasn’t giving?
What?
Value for my work, hahaha. People might compliment me and instead of me to charge them, I dashed them. I just knew I knew how to sew, I just didn’t know how to charge for it. I sewed a shirt for my boyfriend at the time.
Did he pay?
Nope. But he made all his friends pay. Then I started charging like ₦2,500 per piece and people were paying. That’s how I started making money. Then I started getting more gigs, like bulk gigs and making more.
There’s this job I did then, but I can’t remember what it’s called.
Try.
You know those events that they organise, where you bring people from other schools abroad and do a big ass event?
Like a student fair?
Yes! That. My memory is a mess. Anyway, I might not remember what it was called, but ₦10k a day for being an usher? I can’t forget those days. I used to eat at Mr Biggs’ every time I had those gigs.
What else fetched you money when you were in uni?
I was the last born, so I used to do the rounds with my older siblings, and then I’d skip the stingy ones. You know, all that “oya bros send me money na”
I left uni in 2009 and got a job at a fashion house.
How much did it pay?
₦25k. But then I got another one-month contract with another fashion house, then I called my boyfriend to tell him about it. I told him I was going to ask for 50k.
What did he say?
“Ask for ₦120k.”
That’s how I asked for ₦120k, and we settled at ₦100k. I was like, wow someone is confident enough to give me 100k for my work. All I did was sit in a room and design. So I started juggling this gig with the other one.
What happened?
As soon as my 1-month, 100k contract ended, my main employer added 10k to my salary, and I started earning 35k.
I think most importantly, that 100k gave me the confidence to go and start my own business. I was going to pour everything I’d learned from working in fashion into it.
By the end of 2010, I took the jump.
How did you fund it?
My mum sold her car for ₦258k. Then I took my ₦100k and poured everything into buying machines and materials. Well, not everything.
I’m listening.
The plan was to stock up on materials and hire tailors. That’s how when it was time to buy materials, my mum said: “I don’t have money to be spending please!”
I was like wooooow. I thought you said it was for the business! My dreams! Hahaha.
When I think about it now, I think I might have been too entitled.
Anyway, I started with about 7 machines and set up at the house.
What’s your day like running a clothing business?
If your business is mostly bespoke like mine, you’re going to have to go to the market a lot. You’re going to have to collect measurements and listen to what they want. Because my business is run from the house, I also have to deal with my mum every day.
And my tailors. Ahhhhh.
Ahhhhhhh.
Hahaha. Because I wanted to keep people happy in the beginning, I was designing a new dress for every customer that came.
I think I might have made up to 100 dresses in 2011. I can’t remember – the only reason I remember the business is 10 years old is that I had to make a dress for my friend’s wedding and her bridesmaids.
How did you find customers?
I’m shy af, so word of mouth did it for me. My happy customers told their friends, and that’s what has kept my business alive.
Not to brag, but I know I do great work. It just doesn’t feel as important to me as it feels for most people. I got nominated for one award. I was supposed to reply a message confirming my nomination – I didn’t respond, hahaha.
Tell me about how money moved when you started.
Imagine earning ₦25k a month, then becoming a person that was making dresses and earning ₦25k. In one day. Hahaha. Do you feel me? I was never a rich kid, so seeing money like that burst my brain.
What’s the highest amount of money you’ve invoiced in a day?
600-something-k. This was a few years ago. Around that time, I also started to fall sick a lot.
Why?
Stress. The demand increased, fashion was changing, and my customer base was growing. Also, my business never really had a structure, so I failed on the business end of things a lot. I think it was around this time that I first started feeling symptoms of fibromyalgia.
What’s that?
Imagine spending eight hours in traffic. Do you know how tired you’ll be? Then imagine you have malaria. Then imagine that before you got in that car to get into traffic, you got beat up by the police. Also, someone had a cold, and sneezes, so you catch that cold. And then you so much anxiety. And then, you’re sad.
That’s what fibromyalgia is. It’s perpetual pain in your heart, mind and soul, and body hahaha. It’s also eating at my memory.
I think I spent over a million naira on medical bills in 2019 – tests, admissions, consultations. Then there’s also PCOS to worry about.
What’s that?
I first realised that something was wrong was in my secondary school. My friend saw her period but I didn’t. I think it’s different for people, but for me, it mostly manifests in my period cycles. I menstruated thrice in 2019.
Then I’m treating Gastritis. Started in 2019. You know what, let me you all the things I’ve treated since the beginning of 2019.
First of all, what and what have you treated in the past year?
Poly Cystic Ovarian Syndrome. Fibromyalgia. Possibly asthma – a doctor called it intermittent asthma or something. Gastritis. General allergies. Sinusitis – fluid builds up in my sinus and my face starts to hurt, allergies trigger it. I’ve treated all kinds of other things like malaria, typhoid, stomach infections, UTIs, throat and chest infections, migraines. And all of this is because Fibromyalgia has weakened my immune system.
Let’s play a number game. How much do you think you’ve spent on these in the past year.
Let’s say out of 12 months, I was sick during 10. The lowest money I’ve ever paid at any hospital ever was ₦12k. I was shocked, ehn? Only ₦12k. I normally spend nothing less than ₦30k to ₦50k per visit.
One day, I walked into my room and there were papers everywhere. Receipts. Receipts from medical bills. Pharmacy receipts. Consultations. Everything. It felt like I had so many papers that didn’t feel productive. It upset me.
So I packed everything and tore it all up. I did this December 2019, but it wasn’t even the first time I’d done such.
When was the first time?
I was sick a lot in 2014, the stress came from everywhere – relationship, work. It was a lot. I think that’s when it really started.
Do you think your Fibromyalgia started then?
I don’t know, because if you ask me what happened in 2013, I don’t remember it. Anyway, those receipts piled up in 2015. My sister paid for me to go get checked in the middle east. I went, nothing. By the time I got back, I had so many receipts that I was bagging them. I didn’t get a diagnosis then.
When did you eventually get a diagnosis?
Mid-2017. In the US. I was on my a family member’s Insurance. Now, it’s either I’m spending my money on a medical bill or saving up for the next medical bill.
Let’s talk about last month, how much did you spend, and on what?
I put myself on a ₦200k salary. I spent ₦120k on my car’s gearbox, then I spent the remaining on my medical bills. I actually started tracking properly in 2020.
Let’s break it down.
From mid-January till mid-February, I was visiting the hospital – went at least six times. Treated Malaria, Sinus infection, some asthma, UTI. I’ve also spent ₦133,180 altogether.
Woah. Why haven’t you considered health insurance?
Isn’t it run by the government? I have no trust in those people. I can’t be dealing with my stress, and then have them add their own to it.
No no, there are a lot run by private companies.
Ah, I always thought it was run by the government. I guess that’s what happens when you’ve never had a structured 9-5. I’m definitely going to look into it.
Back to you, what do you honestly wish you were better at?
Saving. But how can I be saving when I need the money to do something. I need a Glucose Guardian. Write it there please. Give them my number.
What do you imagine life is like 5 years from now?
I don’t have any plans. I just want to be happy. I don’t want to be sick anymore. Because my immune system is so weak, every visit to the hospital feels like a last. I honestly can’t even plan long term because what really is the point?
It’s my only fear about Coronavirus – my immune system is a mess.
This question is a formality, but how would you rate your financial happiness?
Hahahaha. It does not exist.
…
Okay, let me be an adult. There are things I need and things I want, and I’ve learned to know the difference. My needs aren’t a lot. I just want food, I need to communicate, so data. I want to be able to pay my bills when I fall sick.
I make noise about wanting $3 billion, but I honestly don’t know what I’ll do with it. I’ll probably buy a house where the oxygen is different from all of you’s oxygen.
So, that’s it.
What’s something you bought recently that improved the quality of your life?
Diclofenac, hahaha. That shit is good. That’s one drug I don’t want to abuse so that it never stops working. The weed used to help with pain, but not anymore. It just helps with my mind.
The weed?
Ah yes, I smoke weed to help with the pain.
So how much did you spend on weed in say, December 2019?
I’ve bought ₦70k weed since. Basically, my dealer sells 2 rolled up blunts for ₦2,500
Aren’t your painkiller cheaper?
It’s cheaper, but then painkillers don’t kill the pain in your mind. Last year, I realised I wasn’t using weed as a painkiller but as a mind-numbing device. The amount required to help with the pain has increased over time. So now, it’s my fuck-it drug. It’s safe to say I’m addicted.
I don’t think it’s easy to be a drug user in Nigeria without being addicted. The stress will send you running back to it, every time.
This question is not about money, but why do you show up every day?
I love making nice dresses. I really do. Also, I have (medical) bills to pay.
Ever watched one of those Hollywood movies with serial killers doing serial killer shit and just started shuddering? Movies like Seven and The Silence of Lambs? From troubled childhoods to bouts of insanity or using a particular motif, serial killers in movies usually have a very peculiar pattern that boils down to a “why” and“how”. Surely, everybody knows this.
That’s why it’s crazy that with the news of a serial killer on the loose, the Nigeria Police quickly concluded (without public evidence to back it up) that the victims were prostitutes in a tone that said, “Oh, look, they don’t really need protection.” As if that wasn’t enough, they advised women to desist from prostitution. And that’s all they could say.
Let’s back it up a little bit for context:
It started in late July, or early August. Different accounts tell it differently. It was in a hotel in Olu Obasanjo Road, Abia State; a man strangled a 23-year-old woman, Maureen Ewuru. When the news came out initially, the police said the prime suspect was her boyfriend. They also assumed it was an isolated event, but more events sprang up to prove that there’s really really likely a serial killer on the loose.
“After having sex with her, he locked the room and took flight but unfortunately for him, he left a trace which is helping us in our investigation”
– The Nigerian police.
A few days later, this time in Owerri, Imo State, a hotel attendant found the dead body of a woman under a bed in one of the hotel rooms they had to clean. Apparently, the woman had come in with a man on a Saturday, and by the next day, she was dead and the man was nowhere to be found. There was evidence that sex had taken place; whether it was consensual or not remains a mystery, but the police again concluded that the man in question had to have been her lover.
Hotel in Woji, GRA
A week later, and two weeks after the very first incident, another woman was found dead in a hotel in Woji, GRA phase one in Port Harcourt. Like Maureen Ewuru, she was strangled to death. It was at this point that the police started to suspect that it might be more than a “boyfriend kills girlfriend” type situation. In this case, the man took everything that could be used to identify her: from her clothes to her phone.
The most interesting part of all of this is that there’s a pattern. With the bodies of the women strangled in Port Harcourt, a white cloth (in some reports referred to as a handkerchief) was tied around their necks.
At a march organised to protest the killings at the police headquarters, the deputy commissioner of police in Port Harcourt, Chuks Envonwu told the protesting women to advise their fellow women to not go into prostitution because it’s only prostitutes that can fall victim of this crime. Wild right? Maybe not so much. If you step out of your bubble once in a while, it’s easy to realise that this is how the average Nigerian man thinks.
However, Soibi Ibibo Jack the woman who organised the protest gave it back to him. She told BBC that while the women killed were not sex workers, the lives of sex workers also matter. In her words, “They’re human beings and need protection too.” We stan.
Only a few days after this protest, on September 15, another death was recorded. A woman died in a motel in Rumuola area in Port Harcourt in another quite similar death by strangulation. While the chairman of Nigeria Hotels Association Rivers State Chapter, Eugene Nwauzi has said that they’re working with the Police, DSS and State Government to stop this menace, it’s quite sad that these many women have to die before more action is put in place.
What are the police doing? They claim to be investigating while going around calling the victims prostitutes and prioritising the investigation of a parody @policeng account on Twitter.
Meanwhile, investigation is on to ascertain the source of the fraudulent handle and deal with it appropriately.
As it is, there are unconfirmed reports of the suspected ways in which the women must have been lured to the hotel. One Twitter user posted a broadcast message. The woman in the message narrated her experience with another woman who wanted to purchase some products she sold. The female buyer called her over the phone and told her to deliver the products to a hotel in Port Harcourt. When she got to the reception of the hotel, the female buyer told her to come up to her room. Remembering that a serial killer was on the loose, she decided to run for her life.
It’s only a theory, but who knows?
Is it a gender war? Maybe, maybe not. There have been arguments about this all of last weekend, and theories about the motive of the serial killer. But what is clear so far is that women are being targeted, and by the definition of the term serial killer, the victims often have something in common: their demographic profile, appearance, gender or race. Reporting this story and seeing so many unconfirmed accounts and rumours made us wonder: just how many deaths from the hands of this serial killer have gone unreported? We do hope the police start acting right.
Over a hundred women have been arrested and detained by the Abuja police in the past couple of weeks. The arrests were made after raiding a couple of clubs in Abuja.
The women’s crimes? ‘Prostitution and/or clubbing’. But here’s the funny thing about that, nowhere in Nigeria’s Criminal or Penal Code is clubbing a crime. And although prostitution is a crime under the Penal Code, so is solicitation. However, only women were arrested.
Prisoner with handcuffs on hands
Public outcry only began over the last couple of days. But this weekend isn’t the first time this type of raid is happening. Before 70 women were arrested last Saturday night, 30 women were arrested in another raid two weeks ago. And these are only the raids we know of. We don’t know how long these raids have gone on for, and how long they’ll continue.
According to the police, noise pollution and the fact the property one of the clubs is located on, isn’t being used according to plan was the reason for the first raid. None of the club’s owners or managers were arrested in the raid. Do you know who was? Customers. And only female customers.
The police are now claiming the women arrested were prostitutes. But no evidence has been provided by the police to back up their claims. Also, the women are being denied access to legal aid, which is their constitutional right. This denial is a breach of their rights.
The worst part of this already heartbreaking story are the several reports that have surfaced of rape and sexual assault of the women in custody by the police.
If you were wondering what police leaders planned to do about this debacle, here is what Yomi Shogunle, the Assistant Commissioner of Police had to say about the arrests.
Again prostitution is only criminalised in the Northern states of Nigeria and Abuja, not the whole country.
The women are still in custody and no one is being allowed access to them.
The biggest takeaway from this? It’s clearly a crime to be a woman in Nigeria.
If you’ve been on social media lately, you’ve probably seen stories of guys who go out of their way to humiliate their girlfriends all in the name of testing to see if they’re wife material. In-laws are usually the main enforcers of these “tests of character,” which usually involve subjecting poor young women to insane levels of housework and/or dehumanizing tasks.
After reading a couple of stories like this, I wondered what it would be like if the roles were reversed. Ladies, have some fun and appraise your man today with these foolproof husband material tests I came up with 20 minutes ago.
Clog your toilets and insist on not calling a plumber.
Then insist he fix it by himself while your entire extended family watches.
Blow up your parents’ house and have him rebuild it by himself.
While your entire extended family watches. If his name happens to be Bob, then the universe has a joke all setup for you.
Tell him he has to go hunting with nothing but a pen knife because your father demands fresh meat before he agrees to hand you over.
Find a way for your extended family to watch this (without putting them in harm’s way) because this will be mad fun.
While on a date at an expensive restaurant, quietly invite your entire extended family to join you guys.
And have him pay for everyone.
Take him to your village and have him wrestle the strongest guy there.
While the whole village watches.
Secretly make colored photocopies of his important documents then “accidentally” set them on fire in his presence.
Just to see how he’ll react. Set up cameras to catch his reaction from different angles so your extended family can watch.
Break his finger.
This isn’t even a test. You know he’ll react badly because of the pain. But remember, ladies, the point of this exercise is to have fun, even if that includes a little violence.
Sleep with his best friend.
Nothing tests a relationship quite like infidelity.
Pick a fight about something irrelevant. When he points out how stupid the fight is, pretend to get angrier and smash the windshield of his car.
Gather round, boys and girls. Today, we’re talking about Feminism, feminists and stupid questions.
After decades of maintaining (and enjoying) the status quo, it seems the world is finally acknowledging how society has been unfair to the female gender.
Let’s take our society for instance.
The average Nigerian girl is raised to be a mother and little else. As a child, she often has to prove she’s as deserving as her male counterparts to even get a shot at anything. As an adult, more often than not, she becomes her partner’s side-kick and spends her prime years tending to her family.
All of her life, she is made to feel like an accessory to her male peers and treated as such.
Feminism is seeking to change all that.
That’s why it’s one of the biggest social movements of the last few decades. Simply, it’s an ongoing campaign for women to be seen as equal. Feminists are asking for one simple thing; that women are given equal footing and opportunity, with no recourse to their gender.
But as you would expect, people have reacted in different ways.
There are those who insist that today’s women are just spoilt brats who are complaining about the same things their mothers handled happily.
The people we want to talk about are those who are standing by the door – waiting for a nice, God-fearing feminist to explain what’s going on to them. They swear they would be feminists too, only if someone could just explain exactly how they’ve contributed to the status quo.
But do Feminists really need to explain anything to you?
The simple answer is NO.
Here’s why – To start with, you’re part of the problem
If you’re a man who breathes air and eats food, you contribute to and benefit from the problem.
How? You ask.
Odds are, growing up, no one ever told you to leave your books to join mummy in the kitchen so you could be a good wife.
You probably weren’t raised as if your role as a human is to bear children and raise a family.
And if we’re being serious, no-one has ever accused you of using runs money to buy your new phone.
If anyone should understand the system and how it benefits men; it’s you.
Or you’re just too lazy to task your brain.
Saying you need someone to explain feminism to you feels like plain mental laziness. It’s like saying you don’t understand why bad hygiene is a problem. So you’re going to continue soiling your trousers until the Minister of Health comes to explain hygiene to you.
Simply, it’s not a valid excuse. Feminism isn’t exactly rocket science.
But… there’s a BUT.
Is it possible to understand where these guys are coming from? The ones with their hands spread out, waiting for an explanation.
We can’t deny that there’s yet a long way to go, but in recent times, the campaign for women’s rights has been overtaken by a lot of… other things.
Frankly, it’s all very confusing and exhausting.
Terms like “Man-splaining” and patriarchy itself have become overused to the extent that they now only dilute the message.
Also, while feminism tries to draw attention to gender inequality, some funny people are hiding under its canopy to spread misandry – an ingrained prejudice against men.
What is this moral lesson in all of this?
What all of this means is that Feminism, in its purest form, is getting lost in the sauce. And that serves no one well.
The truth is that a world where men and women are treated equally, with equal access to opportunity and balance in responsibility, is better for everyone.
Maybe that’s why we need to talk about it more. Maybe, just maybe, we need to explain to those who want to understand but don’t.
Beyoncé says, “I love my husband, but it is nothing like a conversation with a woman that understands you. I grow so much from those conversations.”
If you have girl friends, you already know that the friendship is always beautiful and totally lit! Girls just understand each other in some almost psychic ways.
You know what they say; the more the merrier! Why have one girl friend when you can have two, or three, or ten!
Sha make sure they’re good people o! There’s nothing like having positive women around you that totally get you! More reasons you should build a girl squad are…
You have people to talk to that can totally relate.
I mean, who else will understand why you’re crying over your shattered BlackUp compact?
You have a solid support system
Need a shoulder to cry on? How about four or five that understand you completely? Girlfriends will encourage you and remind you why you’re fire! You won’t have to deal with anything alone.
You can be your absolute wild self with them, and they won’t judge you.
Because they’ve probably done worse lol. Be ready for some extreme trolling, though!
You always have people to gist with
Girls talk about everything. Lol you guys have no idea how lit a girls’ Whatsapp group is. You will be laughing nonstop as you drag everyone and everything!
Even if they’re not all available, you will have at least one person who’ll keep you company.
You will always have the best and most diverse fashion advice
Friends never let friends go out looking foolish, so trust that these ladies will have your back and tell you the truth!
You have people to borrow stuff from
Whether clothes, shoes, wigs, makeup or jewellery, your squad will come always have something nice for when you need something to complement your slay.
It’s Girl Friend’s Day! Show your ride or die girl friends some love today, and let them know how awesome they are! Women are so powerful when they come together.
So it started yesterday on Facebook in a group where the topic of fathers performing DNA tests on their kids to confirm paternity came up. The person that brought it up, just asked for people’s opinion on the matter but women in the group took offense.
And got Facebook to delete the group by reporting it for insensitive material.
There is a study that says that one in every 25 fathers is not the biological father of the child they believe to be theirs.
You didn’t know that, did you?
This, people of God, is why women are triggered. There are women out there who have stuff to hide and don’t want their husbands getting any ideas.
Check out some of the reactions from women. It’ll blow your mind. Like this woman that legit sent a death threat.
FAM! She sounded serious!
And this one woman that thought she made a valid point.
Then there were other reactions. Like this person that has exposed the plans of husbands everywhere after seeing this.
This person that revealed the real reason why so many marriages are still intact.
This person that kinda gave solid advice.
This person that insists that DNA testing is not in our culture.
This person that doesn’t even need DNA tests.
This joke based on real events.
This person that is tired of all the lying and deceit.
This person that has decided where his DNA is from without tests.
This one about deadbeat fathers.
Of course deadbeat fathers will want DNA tests. They’ll take any chance they get to escape responsibility. LOL
This person that suggests you do a lot of tests…..for some reason.
This woman that is all for DNA testing.
This person that came to offer his bizarre services.
And now, we leave you with this insane story/testimony.
Here’s a list of a couple things Nigerian women do to get into the groove when it’s sexy time:
1. Have a cool shower.
Gotta keep the surface area clean and smelling fresh. Might as well even trim the edges a little while we’re at it.
2. Remove wig.
No need letting the wig fall off by itself “in the heat of the moment”, or allow one man to come and pull it from your head in the name of making love. Better to just jejely remove the thing and keep it safe. Brazillian wigs don’t come cheap.
3. Tying a headscarf to protect natural hair.
Especially for the naturalistas, this is very important. Somebody cannot come and have a bad hair day the following day just because of some lil’ lovin’ from the night before.
4. Removing make up
Acne is very real. And in order not to look like you just fought with your neighbour, a girl has gotta remove that layer of foundation and eyeliner before the thing clogs up all her pores. It’ll also help the “morning after” glow to shine very well sha.
5. Brush teeth
A girl has got to keep everywhere clean before doing the deed so that if she sleeps off, her morning breath will not smell like Lagos gutter.
6. Practicing seduction tricks in front of the mirror.
It’s really impossible not to tell when a Nigerian woman is sending you signals.
Seriously. If a Nigerian woman likes you ehn, she can be as obvious and shameless as Oga Dino Melaye showing off his musical skills.
“A je kun iya ni…” Okay, you get the point sha.
Oya sit down and take notes.
When a Nigerian woman is sending you signals, you should see all or some of these things:
1. When you’re talking about sports and she’s looking at you like this:
If she’s NOT normally into sports, odds are she’s not really interested in what you’re saying but just the fact that you’re talking.
2. If she calls you “big head”, “mumu boy” a couple times a day, it’s really reverse psychology.
It’s not an insult, it’s more of an endearment. Just insert “my” before the “big head” and “mumu boy”.
3. She’ll do funny things at you with her eyes.
She’ll try not to be too obvious with the winking thing. She’ll fail woefully at it.
4. She’ll laugh at everything you say.
Like, not AT you sha. More of with you. Or because of you. But she’ll really find everything you say HI.LA.RI.O.US!
5. She’ll sha be touching you.
But not like in a creepy way. More like in a “ooo, let me see your watch. The strap is sooo smoooth” kind of way.
6. She’ll lean on your shoulders, play with your face, poke your stomach…
…you sha get. Think: Winnie the Pooh and his good friend Christopher Robin, where she is Christopher Robin. She’ll want to play with you like a teddy bear. Odds are she might have even named her teddy bear after you.
7. She’ll ask you, a hundred times a day, if you’ve eaten.
It is not only a Nigerian mother thing. Your physical welfare is her utmost concern.
8. She’ll give you a full frontal hug.
A complete full frontal hug with two arms around you, not just one.
9. However, if you find that you are not sure how to tell the signals she is giving you, then odds are she ISN’T. Abort Mission! Repeat: ABORT MISSION!
For more Zikoko Guides, see this one about making a Nigerian horror movie:
You’ve definitely heard of the Women’s March that held worldwide on January 21.
A woman holds a sign at the historic Women’s March on Washington. About 3 million people marched worldwide.
Women (and men) accross the world came together to protest against Donald Trump’s presidency, because of his disrespectful comments regarding women (regarding everything, really).
Protesters march in Melbourne, Australia.
They protested against his economic and healthcare policies as well as his controversial stance on climate change, the environment and immigration.
Women protest against Donald Trump in Barcelona, Spain.
The March did not hold in Nigeria, although a lot of Nigerian women were there in spirit.
Activists join the #WomensMarch in Karura Forest, Nairobi.
Now, some Nigerian men are saying they hope that ‘one day Nigerian women will also march for their rights’.
LOL what? Nigerian women have been marching and protesting and fighting back since before we were born.
The Aba Women’s War of 1929 when Igbo women protested against colonial rulers for hiking taxes.
Nigerian women have been marching for an end to violence against women and girls, for almost 3 years straight now.
Nigerian women protest in front of NASS, Abuja for the abducted Chibok Girls.
Nigerian women have been shouting, online and offline that NO means HELL NO!
Women participate in a Stand To End Rape (S.T.E.R) awareness march.
Nigerian women have been fighting for their right to life and a clean environment, because women’s rights are really human rights!
Nigerian women protesting naked against Shell in Bayelsa, after the oil giant refused to honour an existing clean-up agreement.
So is it our women’s fault that people have refused to acknowledge them here in Nigeria?
If you were previously ignorant of these facts, now you know better, You’re welcome.
The BBC ‘100 Women‘ list is a yearly feature of inspiring women across the world. Alicia Keys, Simon Biles, Nadiya Hussein among others made this year’s list as well.
Popular events planner, Funke Bucknor-Obruthe and Omotade Alalade (Founder of Bei Bei Foundation) have made Nigerian women immensely proud.
They’re both being recognized globally for their roles in breaking societal barriers that limit women worldwide.
For those who don’t know, Omotade Alalade is the founder of a growing infertility foundation, that is helping women with fertility complications find solutions.
Funcke Bucknor-Obruthe is the celebrity events planner every Nigerian has likely heard of.
Congratulations to both women, and kudos to all Nigerians out there winning for us all!
3. Mastering the science of packaging like this is key.
Because you can’t be forming chef all the time.
4. Learn how to carry face for all those street agberos.
Eyes front, heads up!
5. You must be able to sight Yoruba demons from afar.
This will actually save your life.
6. You must know how to trick your follow follow cousins.
‘Oya, go and wear your shoes’.
7. You have to perfect your side nigga game. PERFECT IT!
When Plan A surprises you, you sef surprise him.
8. If you don’t know how to turn down Aso Ebi, you’re on your own.
RIP to your bank account.
9. You have to know how to handle all your oversabi colleagues, so you can prosper.
Even if you want to scream, keep smiling.
10. If you’re not fitfaming, what are you doing?
So you can tension all your haters.
If you enjoyed this, then you’ll definitely love “Hustle”, an amazing new dramedy on Africa Magic Urban that follows the antics of Dayo, a JJC to the city of Lagos! Catch it on Africa Magic Urban 153 at 21:30 CAT (8.30pm Nigerian time) from October 3, 2016.
You probably never thought you’d see a 25-year-old female become a local government council chairman in Nigeria, but Hindatu Umar just shattered that glass ceiling.
Kebbi State Governor, Abubakar Atiku Bagudu, recently appointed Umar as the Chairperson of Argungu LGC, following the expiration of the former chairman’s tenure. Hindatu was previously the Deputy Chairman.
However, there have been ridiculous complaints over the appointment, because Hindatu is a young single female, with only secondary school certification.
If you’re familiar with Northern Nigeria’s culture of excluding women from political and economic discussions, you won’t find the outrage surprising. Northern states have high female illiteracy levels and President Buhari’s administration has been criticized for the low number of female political appointees.
Hindatu Umar has broken a record, please join us in celebrating her.
You know her as mother of the great Fela, but she was much more than that. A great advocate for women’s rights, Kuti led more than 10,000 women in a protest against native authorities at the palace of the Alake of Egbaland in 1949, causing him to relinquish his crown for a bit.
2. Yaa Asantewaa: Queen Mother of Ashante Kingdom.
Born in 1840, Yaa Asantewaa became famous for leading the Ashanti rebellion against British colonialism to defend the Golden stool- a symbol of the Asante Kingdom- from Frederick Hodgson, then Governor-General of The Gold Coast.
3. Queen Aminatu: Warrior of Zazzau.
Born around 1533 in Zazzau (now Zaria), Amina was a fearsome warrior with a great army and empire. Her story inspires the fantasy series: Xena, The Warrior Princess.
4. Moremi Ajasoro: Olori of Ile-Ife.
Married to King Oranmiyan, this brave queen risked her life by going undercover to learn the secrets of the tribe terrorizing her people.
5. Ana de Sousa Nzinga Mbande: Ngola of Ndongo
Some say she was a queen, others believe she was a ruthless ‘king’! At the turn of the 17th century, Nzinga fearlessly and cleverly fought for the freedom of her kingdom from the Portuguese, who were colonizing the area now known as Angola.
6. Winnie Madikizela-Mandela
Born 1936, South Africa’s first black professional social welfare worker chose to struggle for equality and justice for all people in South Africa. After her marriage to Nelson Mandela in 1958, she suffered harassment, imprisonment, and periodic banishment for her continuing involvement in the struggle against apartheid.
7. Flora Nwapa: Mother of modern African literature.
Born 1934, Nwapa’s ‘Efuru’ was the first book written by a Nigerian woman. Flora unarguably paved the way for a generation of African women writers. ‘Efuru’ (1966), is based on an old folktale of a woman chosen by the gods.
8. Chioma Ajunwa-Opara, MON.
Chioma was the first West African woman, as well as the first Nigerian, to win an Olympic gold medal in a track and field event when she emerged victorious in the women’s long jump event at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.
9. Margaret Ekpo: Political activist.
Born in Cross River in 1914, Ekpo was among the first wave of Nigerian women in politics. She was known for attending political rallies, and unionizing women to fight for their rights.
10. Miriam Makeba: Mama Africa.
Widely known for her incredible voice and music, Makeba was also a political activist. In 1963 she testified against apartheid before the United Nations. As a result the South African government revoked her citizenship and right of return. She stayed in America and married Stokely Carmichael, a Black Panther leader.
This is post is brought to you by MAGGI @ 50:
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With the progress of the world into more advanced times, one would think some men would quit giving women ridiculous tips on ‘How To Keep A Man’.
Just when it looked like Nigerian Twitter was going to get through the weekend without any drama, a ‘motivational Tweeter’, Sola Adio, hit us with his nugget of the day…
He compared a woman’s vagina to a fan belt, advising women to close their legs.
Lets pretend to understand his ridiculous message for a minute and imagine he was preaching abstinence. Even at that, he forgot to mention how abstinence could be practiced by MEN and WOMEN.
The way some men keep telling women what to do with their bodies, when/who to have sex with has become boring, sincerely…
But will some Nigerian men die if they call a vagina by its biological name? All of us kuku went to school and studied biology.
Can they stop making nonsense analogies about a penis being a master key and a vagina being the padlock that mustn’t be opened by any key.
It’s about time, people stop seeing sex as some sort of gift or favour, it’s not chin chin!
And for the olodos at the back, a vagina, which is responsible for the birth of a child CANNOT be slacked by any penis.
In record breaking and women-empowering news, Bauchi state got its first female judge when Justice Rabi Talatu Umar was appointed in June 2016.
She was appointed 2 years after the former Chief Judge, Justice Ibrahim Zango, retired in 2014.
However, her appointment didn’t come so easy. In March 2016, her recommendation as the most qualified and suitable candidate for the position of the Chief Judge of Bauchi State was met with protests and petitions.
One of them claimed Justice Umar wasn’t qualified enough because she wasn’t the most senior judicial officer nor an indigene of the state.
However, Bauchi state governor, Mohammed Abubakar, on the swearing-in ceremony argued that her appointment was legal and based on her long-standing record of being upright and professional in her official assignments.
Although haters tried to stop her, Justice Rabi has made history in Bauchi. We wish her all the best at her new job!
A woman belongs in the kitchen. A man belongs in the kitchen. Everybody belongs in the kitchen. It’s where the food is. If you’re hungry, go and get it!
2. Who should make more money?
Why do you guys think the man should earn more? Why is it wrong if the woman earns more? Did she do it on purpose? Like “Oh I must earn more than my husband”? If your wife earns more, please be happy and supportive. It’s more money for the family.
3. Who pays on a date?
I can’t believe we’re still having this discussion. We had it before! But here:
If you set a date up with someone who would otherwise be undisturbed in their house – and not spending money – you better be paying. It’s just courtesy.
4. Who provides money for upkeep in the family?
Do you both work? Yes? Then you both contribute what you can! If one of you doesn’t work, then the worker provides the money.
5. Who stays home with the kids?
*rolls eyes* First of all, the solution to this is easy. Who conceived the kids? Both of you, no? So just work out a schedule that works for you both. That’s actually not hard. If the kids’ school is nearer the husband’s office, should the wife still drive all the way? Does that make sense?
6. When you invite someone out, and they bring their friends, should you pay for the friends too?
NO.
7. When a guy and a girl or a group of people organize a hangout, who pays?
Split. The. Bill.
8. When you invite someone to come over, who pays for the cab?
If someone tells you to come over and you cannot afford it, say no. If you say yes, your transport is kind of your responsibility. No one sent you?!
9. On Valentine’s day, who buys a gift?
Valentine’s day is a day to show love. If you love your partner – and you have money – buy them a gift. All people need gifts.
10. Who should say ‘I love you’ first?
If you feel that your partner is not a demon and you arrive at this love crossroads first, by all means say it. It’s not a gender assigned duty by God.
11. Who decides when it’s time to get married?
See, before your partner goes and marries someone else while you people are still dating, you should discuss marriage. A LOT. So when it’s time, invariably, you would have decided together.
So stop fighting yourselves and let’s all get along.
Unofficial studies taken from Twitter rants suggest that men would absolutely refuse to marry women who are unable to pound yam. Another informal study shows that the ability of a woman to pound yam is critical to her desirability and the stability of a marriage.
1. Oprah Winfrey
The billionaire mogul has built a reputation by coming from nothing to becoming one of the most powerful media voices in the world. Pity she doesn’t have a reputation for yam pounding.
2. Kerry Washington
The award-winning star of the hit show Scandal, is happily married to Nigerian-born American football star. Unfortunately, this has not translated to skill in yam pounding. Can you imagine that? Marrying a Nigerian man and not pounding yam. Ridiculous!
3. Michelle Obama
You might be deceived by her toned arms but the First Lady of the United States is, unfortunately, not a yam pounder. Those arms are from gyming and trying to keep fit and not from domestic chores like God intended.
4. Viola Davis
The Emmy-winning actress is known for her groundbreaking roles in movies like The Help and is now the star of her own show – How to Get Away with Murder. She also seems to have gotten away with not knowing how to pound yam.
5. Shonda Rhimes
Single mother of 3 girls, award-winning show runner & creator of Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal and more. She spends all her time killing our favorite characters and she has managed to lose over 53kg this year! Maybe because she didn’t spend time eating and making pounded yam. Shame.
6. Beyonce Knowles
Beyonce. Super star, business mogul, power icon, wife and mother. But not a yam pounder. Sad.
7. Ursula Burns
One of the few black women heading a Fortune 500 Company, the CEO of Xerox has years of corporate experience but none pounding yam.
8. Angela Merkel
Rated “the most powerful woman in the world” by most major publications, she is unable to exert any power in converting boiled yam to a sweet, sweet paste.
9. Melinda Gates
Co-founder of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; this powerful philanthropist was once spotted carrying a bucket of water on her head to showcase the suffering of African women. Perhaps we should convince her to pound yam for the same effect.
10. Indira Nooyi
Ms Nooyi is the first CEO of global powerhouse – PepsiCo. Well-educated and multi-talented, she sadly did not pick up yam pounding as a skill.
11. Zhang Xin
7th richest self-made woman, Zhang Xin is known as “the woman who built Beijing” because of her many real estate developments with her company Soho China. Zhang grew up in poverty and spent 5 years working in a factory to save for her education but she did not find time to pound yam.
12. Loretta Lynch
The Attorney-General of the United States was hand-picked by Barack Obama. She has led the prosecution of FIFA officials which led to the downfall of Sepp Blatter. Her considerable talents are however missing in the field of yam pounding.
13. Serena Williams
21 Grand Slams Wins, Yes. 13 Women’s doubles Tournament wins, Yes. 2 Tennis Mixed Doubles Wins, Yes. Nike, Gatorade, Delta Airlines, Audemars Piguet, Aston Martin, Pepsi, Beats by Dre headphones, Mission Athletecare, Berlei bras, OPI Products, OnePiece and Chase Bank endorsements, Yes.
Pounding Yam, NO!
It seems that these women have been able to make a success of their lives without being able to pound yam. I might be wrong, but maybe we should stop making pounded yam such a big deal and encourage more women to contribute to our economy.You know, or just generally stop using domestication as a yardstick for femininity.
After all, if we need pounded yam, we could always buy this beautiful Yam Pounder from Konga.
But hey, I might be wrong.
Don’t forget to share this with one of your pounded yam-loving friends.