When the 25-year-old content specialist in this #NairaLife started her professional career at 19, earning $1,200/week, she thought it’d only get better. She was wrong.
Two years later, new immigration laws forced her to return to Nigeria and take up a ₦50k/month job. Her income has grown since then, but she still regrets some of her earlier financial decisions.
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In 2016, this 23-year-old was forced to leave home to fend for himself, thanks to absent parents. At his lowest, he almost turned to a life of crime. But that’s in the past now, and for the first time in forever, he has a sense of stability. What made the difference? Starting a POS business.
Dr. Diaso Vwaere's death in an elevator accident has sparked outrage among young medical practitioners, who are demanding accountability and better working conditions. They are not letting her death go unnoticed, and they are putting faces to the tragedy in order to demand action.
We imagined what it’d be like if different AI apps gave Nigerian-mother-like responses to your questions, and “chaotic” doesn’t even begin to describe it.
This week’s #LoveCurrency is our first-ever couple interview. They've been together for two years and married for nearly one. They work in the same industry and share similar goals, but how do they manage their one difference — handling money?
Jide (37) and Cynthia (35) are two asexuals with the intellectual connection of a lifetime. In this week’s Love Life, they share why they only have sex on New Year's, decided to adopt their two kids and the one thing missing in their relationship.
The death of 12-year-old Whitney Adeniran at Chrisland School, Ikeja, has sparked outrage on social media, but she's not the only one. A pattern of child deaths in school has emerged.
Read more on this and how we think this problem can be solved permanently
What’s it like to know you’re a side chick and not mind it? Here's Jessica's story.
Award-winning visual artists, Gbenga Adeku, Dotun Popoola and Samuel Anyanwu are converting Nigeria’s plastic, metal and textile waste into beautiful art and getting global recognition for their work.
In this personal essay, David talks about hoping and wishing for a dog for a long time. Now that he has one, he doesn't want him.