Malobi (31) and Tunde (28) met in 2017 and have been together since. In this week’s Love Life, they talk about bonding over shared interests but struggling to stay exclusive after seven years of dating, five years of cohabiting and having a child together.
1000 results for "what she said"
The 31-year-old artist in this #Nairalife has had her share of terrible luck in businesses and relationships. In 2015, she lost a lucrative detergent business after an ex-partner defaulted on a ₦450k loan. Then, in 2022, an agribusiness she co-owned with another partner went belly up after a series of bad decisions plunged her into a ₦13m debt, getting arrested and losing her apartment.
Muiz (42) and Gbemi (35) have been married for a decade. On this week’s Love Life, they share how they met on the roadside, knew they loved each other during their first meeting, and how his ex refused to let him go until they relocated to Jordan in 2017.
I recently listened to a friend rant about someone who didn’t agree with the way he sat crossed leg in public. His experience sent me on a short quest to find men who have had similar encounters. These are their stories.
Bolatito* (25) talks about gaining admission into a Canadian uni in April. Her aunt who initially promised to sponsor her education went back on her words and even turned it into a fight unless Bolatito* studies nursing instead of the MBA she was offered.
The 34-year-old in this #NairaLife set out to escape a life of poverty in Mushin, but a decision to follow God meant abandoning a ₦150k/month offer and a promising civil engineering career for ₦5k/month to volunteer at a Christian mission in 2015.
Now, he can hardly boast of a monthly income, but he’s sure of one thing: he’ll never be stranded.
On April 1, 2018, my phone rang. The lit screen read ‘Dad’, but my father had died in February. “What horrible thing had I done that my dead father was calling me from the grave?” I answered and steeled myself for what was to come. After the longest three seconds of my life, my sister’s […]
My mother used to say, ‘Just you wait, my girl, women will run this world.’