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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Aina: It was at a tech conference in Lagos in 2021. 

    I was there to speak on a panel and explore how technology could improve my agro business. Leke was one of the other speakers, and his talk on the intersection of agriculture and technology caught my attention. 

    Leke: During my presentation, I noticed her in the audience. Of course, I did. She’s made huge contributions to her industry and even though there were many other important people there, everyone kind of looked at her with this different level of regard. 

    So how did you meet?

    Aina: After his presentation, I approached him with some questions. I remember feeling a mix of curiosity and admiration for this young man. What really stood out when we spoke was his willingness to listen and offer insights without hesitation. It wasn’t just his ideas that impressed me, but also the respect and seriousness with which he treated my questions.

    Leke: When she approached me afterward, I was taken aback by her directness and the depth of her questions. But I felt proud that she would approach me for any type of guidance.

    Aina: That conversation turned into several brainstorming sessions and calls, and eventually led to a beautiful friendship.

    And how did the friendship develop after the conference?

    Aina: Our friendship developed unexpectedly. 

    I reached out a few times with questions about implementing some of the tech solutions he had mentioned. He was always very responsive and helpful. Over time, our interaction shifted from strictly professional to more personal. We started meeting up for dinner to discuss ideas and eventually began sharing more about our lives outside of work. I found myself drawn to his fresh perspective on things. 

    Leke: I admired her tenacity, the way she navigates the business world with such grace and strength. You know how running a business is in this country, talk less of doing it as successfully as she has.

    Some months later, she invited me to her factory outside Lagos to show me the practical side of her business and how some of the tech solutions we discussed were being implemented. Not many people take my words seriously and actually implement them.

    What happened during this visit?

    Leke: Spending the day together, away from the city and our usual environment, allowed us to see different sides of each other. There was a moment when we were both laughing about a silly mishap with a processing equipment, and I just felt comfortable. 

    Aina: Later that evening, we ended up having a long conversation about our dreams and fears, and I realised how much I valued his presence in my life. I found myself caring about what he thought. 

    But I tried to shift it out of my mind as I’d had a tough first marriage that didn’t end well. And then, I knew Leke was younger and realistically wasn’t thinking anything serious about us.

    But turns out he was? Did the age difference ever come up between you at this point?

    Leke: Some three months after the trip to her factory, we talked about it. 

    During those months, we grew unexpectedly close. Our professional meetings often turned into long dinners and late-night talks, and there was this unspoken tension that held us back. I was questioning myself at every turn. 

    Between my work and business, I didn’t really have time for a social life, so I thought I felt drawn to her only because she was mature and easy to talk to when I could hardly talk to my peers.

    Aina: Likewise, I did a lot of rigmarole in my head about what was happening and if I was right to keep talking for long hours to this man. My two children, siblings and close friends were all outside the country. My mum died years ago, so it’s just my dad in Ijebu. It must’ve been loneliness that was affecting me. I told myself I had to respect myself. So there was a period when I kept off. 

    But then, he started reaching out and coming to look for me.

    Is this when you had the talk?

    Aina: Not immediately. For a while, things were arbitrary between us. We didn’t know if we were just friends or business associates or more.

    Leke: The eventual conversation was triggered by a series of events. I remember one instance vividly: we attended a social gathering together where a few people made subtle comments about our age difference. It was nothing overt, but enough to make us both feel a bit uncomfortable. 

    And it wasn’t like we attended as a couple o.

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    I guess people caught on?

    Leke: Maybe.

    A few days later, after a tough day at work, I was at Aina’s place for dinner. I don’t even know when I started going to her place to eat after work. But anyway, she had cooked jollof rice — even though she had a chef — and we were both exhausted but enjoying each other’s company. 

    As we sat on her porch after dinner, I couldn’t shake off the comments from the gathering. I was quiet, and she noticed. 

    Aina: Yes, but I just patiently waited for him to talk. I already knew something was happening between us. I just didn’t know what. I hadn’t been in any kind of relationship since my divorce was finalised in 2012. So that was nine years of being a single mother.

    What was it about each other that triggered romantic feelings?

    Leke: Honestly, her maturity is exactly why I fell for her. She has a wealth of experience, and she’s very kind as she shares them. Also, this might be shallow but she looks much younger than she is. The fact that she’s taken care of herself and body so well is truly inspiring to me.

    I agree

    Leke: There was this one time before we had that conversation, I was really down because a project I had been working on fell through. I was frustrated and doubting myself. She called me up, and we met at this little café — that’s another thing, she knows all the best places to eat and relax in private. 

    She listened to me vent for hours, and then, she shared stories of her own failures and how she overcame them. Her eyes were so full of warmth and understanding, and she said, “Leke, setbacks are just setups for comebacks.” She’s one of those motivational speakers.

    Aina: He’s talking like he values my motivational speak now, but really, he never stops making fun of them.

    Leke: The way she balances being strong yet vulnerable inspires me too. I realised that her life experience brought a depth to our relationship that I’d never experienced before. It wasn’t about her being older; it was about the incredible person she is. 

    Aina: In truth, the thought of our age difference has never left my mind till now that we’re married and just had a baby. I still think about it every day and wonder what I’m doing.

    Why, though?

    Aina: Maybe because I’m the older one. It’s just there.

    But he’s never treated me differently because of our age difference; instead, he’s valued my experience and perspective, which I never ever got in my first marriage. Also, his passion for his work combined with his genuine curiosity about my life and business created a bond that was hard to ignore. 

    Leke: At the beginning, I was honestly conflicted too. 

    I was deeply drawn to Aina, but the age difference and societal expectations were at the back of my mind as well. Nigeria, as you know, can be quite traditional, and relationships where the woman is older are often met with scepticism or outright disapproval.

    But I decided I wanted to be with her, so I did it.

    Aina: Leke made me feel seen and appreciated in ways that transcended age. He challenged me intellectually and emotionally, and his youthful energy was infectious. Not so much now that we’re married. I think he’s aged up to meet me mentally.

    So how did that conversation on Aina’s porch go?

    Leke: I mustered the courage to ask, “Aina, does it ever bother you that I’m younger?” It was a question that had been weighing on my mind. We hadn’t even talked about a relationship, but why else would I be alone with her at her house at past 7 p.m.? Why else would she cook for me?

    True 

    Leke: Her response was honest. She shared her concerns about my future and whether I might regret being with someone older. We both opened up about our fears and reassured each other that our connection was worth it.

    Aina: I asked him about what his family and friends would say, and he just turned it around on me. He said, “Your family and friends would also disapprove. How do you feel about that?” We both kept quiet.

    Leke: This was in 2022. I introduced her to my friends and then my family some months after that conversation to get it out of the way.

    What was their reaction?

    Leke: Well, we’re married now, so does it matter?

    Aina: When we decided it was time to introduce ourselves as a couple, I was a bundle of nerves. My family’s reaction was mostly positive. We planned a trip to meet two of my siblings in Canada. They were curious but supportive. They could see how happy Leke made me, and that was what mattered most to them. My dad was a lot more reserved, but he respected my decision.

    Leke: On my side, it was a rollercoaster. 

    I decided to start with my closest friends. I invited a few of them over for dinner and introduced Aina as my girlfriend. There was a moment of silence, and then the questions started: “How did you two meet?” “What’s the story here?” Some joked about her being my sugar mummy, but I could tell it came from a place of affection and not malice.

    And your family?

    Leke: I’d told my mum about her as soon as we decided to be together. She was sceptical, of course.

    Then months later, I brought her to a family gathering, and as expected, there were a lot of curious looks and whispers. My mother was the first to speak up, asking straightforwardly about our age difference and how we saw our future together. Aina handled it with grace. My father asked whether I was truly happy, and if I’d thought this through. 

    Aina: The presence of guests nearby made them a lot more gracious and considerate.

    I can imagine

    Leke: Over time, as they saw how serious and committed we were, my family started to come around. My siblings, once they got to know Aina better, were especially supportive. It wasn’t an overnight acceptance, but gradually, the scepticism gave way to understanding and acceptance.

    Aina: It was a challenging process, but it ultimately strengthened our bond as a couple. We learned to navigate the judgement and stand by each other.

    Then as soon as my ex got wind of the relationship, he started calling to harass me. He’d make fun of the fact that I was sleeping with a gigolo, or threaten me not to bring him near his children. It was so childish.

    How did you handle that?

    Aina: He’s in the States so I blocked him. Haha.

    Leke: The man must have been so insecure to keep reaching out. He himself remarried a younger woman several years ago, so?

    Aina: My children are both young adults and in college. They honestly couldn’t care less who I’m with. Everytime we speak, it’s to tell me they just want me to be happy. 

    Leke: They’re the smartest, most well-adjusted young people I’ve probably ever met. 

    [ad]

    When did you decide it was time to get married?

    Aina: It happened about a year and a half into our relationship. We had grown incredibly close. We took a trip to a quiet resort outside Nigeria. One evening, as we sat by the beach, Leke brought up the topic of our future in the most business-like way. 

    Leke: Don’t laugh at me. I was trying to be serious.

    Aina: He asked me where I saw us in the next five years. It was a simple question, but it opened up a heartfelt conversation about our dreams, aspirations, and what we truly wanted in life.

    How did you respond?

    Aina: I told him I wanted to expand my company and have a stable, loving partnership. Leke spoke about his ambitions and how he envisioned us supporting each other’s goals. 

    Leke: I think I knew before I asked her the question, but during this conversation I knew for sure that we both wanted to spend our lives together.

    Did you propose immediately?

    Leke: When we returned from the trip, I couldn’t stop thinking about proposing. 

    I spoke with my closest friends and got their support and advice. The next step was talking to my family. I visited my parents and told them about my intentions. It was a serious discussion. They were concerned about the age difference and the potential difficulties we might face. I assured them that Aina and I had thought through everything and that we were ready to face any challenges together.

    Aina: I had a similar conversation with my family, mostly my siblings. I reassured them about our commitment and how we’d navigated our relationship so far. The proposal itself was simple but heartfelt. 

    Leke: One evening, I invited Aina to a quiet dinner at her favourite restaurant. After dessert, I took her hand and told her how much she meant to me, how I couldn’t imagine my life without her, and then I asked her to marry me. Her eyes filled with tears, and she said yes. 

    We had a civil wedding the next month and both moved into a new self-detached that we’d put a deposit on.

    Neat. So you mentioned something about a baby earlier?

    Aina: Given my age, we knew there could be challenges. We had numerous conversations about starting a family well before our wedding. We discussed our options, including natural conception, adoption and surrogacy. Both of us were committed to raising a child together, no matter the path we took.

    Leke: We both wanted children and were open to the different ways of making that dream a reality.

    Aina: After our wedding, we consulted with several fertility specialists. It became clear that natural conception would be difficult, and we had to consider other options seriously. Surrogacy came up as a viable option, and after much thought and discussion, we decided to pursue it.

    How did that go?

    Aina: It was tough because of work, but he found a way to be present and supportive throughout the process.

    Leke: We found a reputable agency that helped us through. We met with several potential surrogates and finally connected with a wonderful woman who understood our story and was excited to help us start our family. 

    Aina: Throughout the surrogacy journey, we made sure to stay involved and connected. We attended medical appointments, stayed in close contact with our surrogate, and prepared ourselves for the arrival of our child. 

    The entire process, from the initial consultation to the birth of our child, was emotionally taxing but ultimately incredibly fulfilling. I’m just glad we were able to still use my eggs. This decision was important to us because we wanted a biological connection to our child.

    Leke: The day our child was born was one of the happiest days of my life. Holding our baby for the first time, all the challenges and obstacles we faced seemed worth it. 

    Right now, we’re focused on giving our child the best upbringing possible and enjoying every moment of being parents. But expanding our family is definitely something we’re considering for the future.

    Did you get any push back from family or friends about going the surrogacy route?

    Leke: We really didn’t give people the space to comment. They also respect Aina and I in a way that not many people are quick to question or criticise us. 

    Aina: We’re very private people, even to family, so the whispers are easily ignored, if there are any.

    What was your first major fight about?

    Aina: It happened about six months into our relationship, not long after I first invited him to the factory. We’d been spending a lot of time together, and the reality of our different worlds began to surface. 

    The fight started over something seemingly small—Leke had made plans with his friends without checking with me, and I’d planned a business dinner on the same evening.

    Leke: It started as a small misunderstanding but quickly snowballed into something much bigger. I felt that Aina was trying to manage my life like she did her business, and I resented that. I raised my voice, and she did too. It was the first time we saw each other truly angry.

    Aina: I felt that Leke wasn’t considering my busy schedule and the demands of running a business. He, on the other hand, felt that I was being too controlling and not respecting his need for personal time. The argument quickly turned into a heated exchange about our priorities.

    How did you navigate the situation?

    Leke: We both said things we didn’t mean in the heat of the moment. I remember feeling frustrated and storming out of her apartment. I couldn’t go back home, so I went to stay with a friend for the night, and it gave me time to cool down and think about everything. 

    I realised that a lot of my frustration was actually rooted in the pressures we were both feeling from our different worlds and the societal expectations placed on us.

    Aina: After Leke left, I felt a mix of anger and sadness. I knew I had been too harsh, and I regretted the things I said. The next day, we both reached out to apologise. We agreed to meet and talk things through calmly. 

    I realised I needed to not let my business mentality dominate our relationship. 

    Leke: I also had to learn to communicate better and respect the demands of her work.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Aina: I’d rate our love life at a solid 9. There’s always room for growth and improvement, but I wouldn’t trade what we have for anything.

    Leke: I’d also rate it a 9. Of course, no relationship is perfect, but overall, I’m extremely happy with where we are.

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    INTERESTING READ: Love Life: I Know He Has a Wife and Kids in Nigeria

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Teju: We met at work when I just got to the states in September 2019. We’re both nurses in a state hospital. She and one other Nigerian guy were the only Africans at the time. She’d been here for close to two years before me. So she took me under her wing, helping me to navigate and survive in the new environment. 

    Malin: I liked him immediately I met him because I have a thing for Nigerian men. But we started off platonic. I’d been happily married since I was 23.

    We started working closely together for long hours, so we got to talking and oversharing stuff about our lives. From day one, we both knew the other was married. I’d say loneliness brought us together.

    How did you both find yourselves in the US without your partners?

    Malin: We planned to relocate together very early on in our relationship before we got married. But I got my master’s visa, and he didn’t. They’ve consistently denied him one, so he’s still in Dar es Salaam. Now, he’s working on Canada. Once that works out, we’ll figure out how to unite… if we still want to.

    Teju: I didn’t come in the most straightforward way, so I couldn’t bring my family — my wife and two kids. I’m supposed to put things in place then send for them. But it’s becoming much more expensive to plan that. And I’m no longer in a hurry.

    Why not?

    Teju: This will get me in trouble. 

    I’m just comfortable with the way things are now. I love being with Malin. Things had gotten dry between me and my wife when I left Nigeria. I won’t lie that we were about to break up, but we weren’t the most passionate couple. 

    Malin: For me, the fact that he hasn’t been able to get his visa approved for so long is a red flag. I’m tired of waiting and hanging on to that hope. 

    Do they know you guys are together?

    Malin: No. Why would I want to start that kind of drama?

    Teju: I’ve considered telling my wife, but I think it would be cruel. I know she wouldn’t understand. It’ll just break her.

    Let’s go back a bit. How did you get into this relationship?

    Teju: We went from working closely together to her helping me get a better place to stay, figure out the subway and commute. In that first month, we were always together — at work, on the road, at home. She also helped me figure out my meals. In between all that, love happened.

    Malin: Like I said, I was lonely. And it helped that he wasn’t a creep. I met a decent, likeable Nigerian guy when I was at my lowest point, and it felt good helping him out. I knew staying so long in his space and being so accessible would lead to something else, but I couldn’t stop myself.

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    What happened next?

    Teju: COVID came, and being essential workers, we worked even longer hours, wearing PPEs and moving around when everyone else was stuck indoors. That was the highpoint of our friendship. Just constantly exhausted while making jokes with our other coworkers. We slept most nights in the hospital. 

    October 2020, the lease was up on my apartment, and we somehow started talking about being housemates so we could pool money together and get a decent two-bed.

    Malin: We ended up getting a three-bed with a third girl I knew from my former building. That’s when we technically moved in together. It’s also when we started sleeping together. He ended up spending most nights in my room.

    Were your spouses aware you had housemates of the opposite gender?

    Teju: My wife found out.

    I was originally supposed to live with my aunt when I moved here. Malin convinced me I could get a cheap flat closer to our workplace, and I was so excited to not have to squat with a relative at my age.

    My aunt eventually came to visit when I’d moved into the new apartment. She met Malin but didn’t say anything. Next thing I knew, my wife brought it up on one of our video calls. My aunt had called to tell her. She wasn’t happy at all, but I assured her not to worry about it.

    Malin: My husband knew we were housemates then. He didn’t think too deep into it. Maybe because there was another girl with us. But he doesn’t know we have a small house on mortgage, and we’ve moved in together. 

    When did that happen?

    Malin: In July 2021, and we’ve lived there together since. Our relationship levelled up after that. We started talking plans and finances because we wanted to move our life forward. 

    Teju: We’d spent too long in one place, struggling to reunite with our partners. We were ready to move on, at least in our careers and personal development. We took courses so we could get promotions and so on.

    Malin: The bulk of his money goes to his kids’ education in Nigeria. I’m happy he does it, but it’s also a constant reminder of his external responsibilities and what that means for our future.

    Have you discussed the future yet?

    Teju: Not much. 

    But some months after we moved in, one of our coworkers suggested that we declare a common-law marriage so we could get some benefits. So we did. 

    Malin: To all our friends and colleagues and the state of Texas, we’re married.

    And your actual spouses don’t suspect a thing?

    Teju: They don’t. I talk to my wife once a week and still send her money. We’re also still saving up for them to join me here. We decided the best way is for me to get a PR then invite them over.

    Now that Malin and I did the common-law thing, it might not work. She doesn’t know that. We’ll cross the bridge when we get there.

    Malin: I don’t think my husband suspects. He’s still hyper-focused on Canada. That’s all we talk about now. He’s working towards relocating in 2025. Fingers crossed for him. 

    We try not to talk too much about our marriage because I think we’re both trying not to trigger sadness and regret.

    So what happens when they finally make it out of Africa?

    Malin: I don’t know yet. 

    I love Teju, but I’ve confided in him that I might still have feelings for my husband. He was the love of my life before the whole unfortunate split. And Teju has his kids to figure out.

    Teju: I don’t see it happening anytime soon. I see Malin and I staying together until then. We’re a good team, and I can’t imagine figuring out life in this country with anyone else.

    How have you managed to build a working relationship on the back of infidelity?

    Teju: Ahh. We don’t think about it that way. We just did our best with the circumstances life gave us.

    Malin: Our relationship works because we don’t focus on guilt and regret. It’s about being each other’s support system in this lonely world. 

    We work together as well, so it’s been much easier to have someone to do everything with.

    [ad]

    You guys give “work spouse” a whole new meaning 

    Malin: Yes. I suppose you could call us work spouses that took the name seriously.

    I don’t feel like I’m cheating actually. My husband and I can’t be together, and I’m supposed to just put my life on hold?

    Teju: The only thing I feel bad about is I know my family would’ve been here much faster if I didn’t get together with Malin. There are some things we could’ve done by now if I was a lot more excited for them to be here.

    Malin: Yeah, it’s tough because if his kids were here, we wouldn’t have to spend so much on school bills.

    Do you see yourself continuing to send money home for as long as they’re there?

    Teju: Yes. One thing I’ll never do is default on my responsibilities as a father. My dad was an absent father, so I feel bad enough that I’m putting my kids through that.

    Malin: That’s the only thing that brings friction to our relationship. His kids might be the only people he loves more than me.

    And how do you feel about that, Malin?

    Malin: Sometimes, it feels like baggage I didn’t bargain for. But I know it’s insensitive to say that given the circumstances.

    Teju: Yeah, there’s no way around that.

    Have you ever thought about having your own kids?

    Malin: I’m not sure I want to with him yet. 

    Teju: We decided we’d wait till we figured out where we stand with the people back home first. But it’s not completely off the books. At least, not for me.

    Malin: It’ll be a huge step. I don’t want to bring a baby into too much drama. We could get discovered at any moment. It’s both exciting and terrifying.

    Discovered by your spouses?

    Malin: Yes.

    Have you had any major fights yet?

    Teju: Not really.

    Malin: We argue a lot about very many things. But it’s always chill. I don’t think we’ve ever been genuinely angry with each other.

    Teju: We’re almost always at work anyway. So between that, sex and sleep, not much time to fight.

    Sweet. How would you rate your Love Life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Malin: 9. We just get each other, and the way we support each other‘s rights and wrongs without judgement is so precious. The uncertainty makes things exciting too, but I know we’re not in la la land and shit can hit the fan at any moment.

    Teju: I guess I’ll say 9 too. I love being with her. I love that I’m doing life in the states with her. She’s helped me achieve way more than I ever imagined.

    The 1 will probably be for the fact that she still loves her husband and I still love my kids.

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    ANOTHER ONE: Love Life: He Thinks Condoms Are for Laying With Harlots

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Aliyu: We met through family in 1988. Our fathers knew each other, and one day her father came to visit mine with her in tow. They stayed for about an hour, and we were introduced. She was shy and barely said a word. She just sat in a corner, and I remember me and my brothers watching her from the corridor to our rooms and talking about how beautiful she was. 

    Mariam: I was so self-conscious to be in a strange house with nothing to do but watch my father talk with his friend. I wasn’t supposed to accompany him there; he’d just decided to stop by on our way to getting the things I needed for school. 

    After that, we met more often during family and religious gatherings, and we just got close.

    When did you start to like each other?

    Mariam: After he kissed me in my father’s compound when no one was looking. It was the day after Ileya in 1989. I’d only ever been kissed once before, and it was nothing like his own.

    Aliyu: My brothers and cousins had discovered I liked her sometime before that. They saw that I’d sometimes stare at her. So at this gathering, they teased me into kissing her and telling her how I felt. I didn’t tell her how I felt. I just kissed her and disappeared. 

    What happened after?

    Aliyu: We went back to our lives. 

    She was still in school, and I was trying to get into the family trade of poultry farming. Not much happened until the next year when she was back from ABU for a long break and we met at the water factory her brother worked at. We talked a bit, and after she left, I told her brother I wanted to marry her. Imagine me with no money saying something like that.

    Mariam: My brother came back home and told me about it. I just laughed. I crushed on him since the day he kissed me without regard for my father’s house. But I didn’t want to believe he liked me back. I returned to school and thought about him for weeks, imagining us married.

    Why was marriage the first thing that came to mind and not dating?

    Aliyu: Maybe it was the times, but that’s what I wanted when I saw her. I wanted her to be my wife. So I worked hard while she was in school. I did everything to make more money. I started buying and selling goats and rams. I did deliveries briefly. I saved most of the money I made.

    Mariam: In school, I had a few other suitors, but I chose to wait for the possibility of being with Aliyu. I used it as a catalyst to focus on my studies. 

    He waited till 1992, my last year in school to go to my father and ask him about me.

    And then, you got married?

    Aliyu: No, we courted for another year. I wanted her to finish first. I didn’t want to rush or scare her.

    Mariam: During this period, he’d send me money and gifts all the time. 

    A lot of my friends were getting married while in school, but I appreciated the wait. The truth is I was scared of the responsibility of marriage. Learning from my friends’ experiences helped me feel prepared after graduation.

    What was the wedding like?

    Mariam: It was big. Our parents invited every single person they knew. We had three different ceremonies, and by the end of it all, I was exhausted. In fact, whenever I think back to my wedding, I associate it with tiredness.

    Aliyu: We didn’t get the time to bond before and during the ceremonies. Then after, we consummated and moved in together. The excitement wasn’t really there anymore.

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    What d’you mean?

    Aliyu: I’m not sure what I thought would happen, but I wasn’t prepared for how dull living with one person was. Everyone just avoided us because they didn’t want to intrude on our brand new marriage. 

    But we just continued on with life. She got a job, I ran my businesses, and we performed our duties.

    Mariam: I think we were fine until the kids started coming. 

    I had our three children in the space of four years and that was really hard for me. Once the third one was out, I got on family planning, and he didn’t like that.

    Aliyu: I understood why she had to, but she didn’t consult me first. What if I wanted one more child? I also didn’t like how it affected our sex. It became like a chore trying to get her in bed.

    How did you navigate this period in your marriage?

    Mariam: Taking care of the children mostly on my own was hard. I had to quit my job after I had the first one, but I was still always tired. Even with my mother and younger sister’s help. 

    Our communication was zero at this time, but he always provided, so I was content. 

    Aliyu: In my mind, I was giving her space and time to focus on motherhood while I focused on making us comfortable. Running the businesses was no piece of cake.

    Fair

    Mariam: Once the children were all old enough to go to school, we were never able to build our relationship. We were fully adults with adult worries and responsibilities. There was no time for gisting and jokes like I saw my friends do with their husbands. 

    I’m not sure how everything went so wrong.

    Aliyu: I found out she was sleeping with someone else.

    Sorry, what?

    Mariam: After I’d just had our third baby, I got close to one of my old friends from ABU, one of the “suitors”. He was still unmarried. So we met a lot when Aliyu was away at work and I wanted to get out of the house and the chaos of crying babies. We never had sex, but we got intimate sometimes. 

    Aliyu: I was also sleeping with my secretary at the time. But it didn’t stop me from being angry. Instead of telling her I found out, I just held it in and resented her.

    Did it eventually come out?

    Aliyu: Yes, when I saw her with another man different from the first one.

    We moved to Abuja from Kaduna in 2004, and I spent less time at home because I had to travel more. I had a new girlfriend, and most times, I’d take her on these trips with me. I was considering making her a second wife.

    One day, I saw Mariam leaving our house with this man when I’d just returned from a trip.

    Mariam: A trip with his “girlfriend” I’m sure, but he had time to judge me.

    Aliyu: Later that day, I confronted her about it and she just apologised. I couldn’t say anything again.

    You just let it go?

    Aliyu: Yes. I didn’t want stress, and I didn’t want to chase her out of my house. So what was the point of pushing it? I also thought it’d make her more agreeable to my bringing in a new wife.

    Mariam: Him not getting angry made me realise he didn’t care what I did. He didn’t care about me. He just wanted someone respectable to bear him children. And since I’d given him two sons and dared to do family planning, he was done with me.

    Aliyu: That’s not true. She was cold and that surprised me after we got married. I could never really get her to ease up and have fun with me.

    [ad]

    So what happened after this second bout of infidelity?

    Mariam: This is when I feel we separated without separating. We just started leading different lives even though we still lived under the same roof — and slept in the same bed for nearly ten more years.

    Aliyu: I continued travelling constantly and we hardly talked. In 2007, I married a second wife, we had a son, and things were peaceful. But in 2012, the second wife left me for another man.

    Mariam: When he went to marry someone half his age. Guess who had to take care of an additional child for him.

    You?

    Mariam: Yes. The woman left her son. I recently heard she’s relocated overseas with her new husband and their children.

    Aliyu: I’d never have let her take my son to another man.

    After this, I just decided I wouldn’t take another wife. 

    But did the affairs continue on both sides?

    Mariam: Yes. I’m not proud to say it, but I’ve found other men I’ve felt more committed to than my husband. I considered remarrying once. In the end, I didn’t want all the drama and stigma. And I didn’t trust that the new man wouldn’t disappoint me. I also had three growing children to think about.

    Aliyu: I didn’t date anyone for years after my second wife left. It felt irresponsible of me to do so. Every woman I was with after, I only had sex with.

    Do you think your children feel any type of way about you living separate lives?

    Mariam: Probably when they were younger, but they’re now all grown with families of their own. 

    My daughter often calls me to try to force a reconnection between us because she’s feeling righteous. But I tell her off. She thinks it’s my fault the marriage isn’t “working well” because I never treated her father with respect. Imagine.

    Aliyu: There were times you could’ve been more humble.

    I think the children understand how hard life and marriage is now, so they’re fine. 

    Do you think you’ll ever divorce?

    Aliyu: No, I don’t believe in that. Even the prophet said that of all things permitted, divorce is the most hated by God. 

    Even though you’re both committing adultery?

    Aliyu: I believe marriage is for life. And I still love my wife. She’ll always be my first love. I do everything I can to treat her right. She’s also given me three beautiful children.

    Mariam: If I didn’t do it when I was maybe in my 30s, I don’t think I’d ever divorce because there’s no guarantee that what’s outside is better than what’s here. Aliyu is my partner in many ways, even though God did not permit that sex and companionship be one of them. 

    Today, we’re friends and we’re each other’s confidants.

    Right. What was your first major fight about?

    Aliyu: When she suddenly wanted to start using condoms during sex.

    Mariam: He never agreed to use them. That’s why I had to get the implants in secret. When I later told him, he was angry but placated that at least he didn’t have to put on a condom.

    Aliyu: Condoms are for laying with harlots.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Aliyu: 5

    Mariam: 5. Average.

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    NEXT UP: Love Life: Nigeria Should Let Us Marry in Peace

  • We asked AI to share a full guide, and it’s response? “Sure, here’s a humorous take on staying in a marriage with a cheating partner in Nigeria.”

    Master the art of selective hearing

    When your friends start whispering about your partner’s escapades, develop the skill to only hear compliments. “Did you hear he was with that girl?” magically transforms into, “Did you hear he bought you a new car?”

    Enroll in advanced detective training

    Become Nigeria’s next Sherlock Holmes. Follow clues, check phone messages, and decode cryptic texts. You’ll be so good that even the local police will ask for your help in solving cases.

    Perfect your poker face

    No matter what bombshell news comes your way, keep a straight face. Channel your inner Nollywood actor. Your reaction should be so composed that it makes news anchors look like they’re overacting.

    Join the “don’t ask, don’t tell” club

    Adopt the policy of blissful ignorance. If you don’t ask about their whereabouts, they won’t tell you lies. Ignorance is bliss, after all.

    Become an Instagram detective

    Who needs private investigators when you have social media? Check tagged photos, comments, and new followers. Be the Sherlock Holmes of Instagram stories.

    Develop an appreciation for bad excuses

    When they come home late smelling of unfamiliar perfume and mumble something about a “late-night office meeting,” smile and say, “Of course, dear. Those office meetings must be really aromatic.”

    Keep a diary of creative excuses

    Document every outlandish excuse they come up with. One day, you’ll publish a bestseller: “The Encyclopedia of Spousal Excuses.” It’ll be a hit, especially in the humor section.

    Turn to Nollywood for inspiration

    Watch Nollywood movies for strategies. See how the characters deal with cheating partners. Dramatic confrontations, fainting spells, and breaking plates are all valid options.

    Create an imaginary friend

    When things get tough, talk to your imaginary friend about your troubles. They’re always there to listen, never cheat, and have excellent advice like, “Have another slice of cake.”

    Keep a stash of comfort food

    Always have your favorite comfort foods on hand. There’s no problem that pounded yam and egusi soup can’t solve, even if it’s just for a little while.

    Plan elaborate fake business trips

    Whenever you need a break, plan a fake business trip. Post pictures from random locations, and enjoy your “me time.” Bonus points if you can get your partner to believe you’re actually on a work trip.

    Join a support group

    Find like-minded people who understand your plight. Meet regularly to share stories, tips, and a good laugh about the absurdities of life with a cheating partner.

    Embrace the power of prayer

    Attend church services and pray fervently. If nothing changes, at least you’ll have a direct line to divine wisdom. Maybe your prayers will even inspire a miraculous transformation in your partner.

    Learn the art of subliminal messaging

    Subtly leave books like “Faithfulness for Dummies” around the house. Play songs with lyrics about loyalty. Perhaps some of it will seep in through osmosis.

    Develop a sense of humor

    At the end of the day, laughter is the best medicine. Laugh at the absurdity, the drama, and the ridiculousness of it all. After all, if you can’t laugh, what can you do?

    ChatGpt’s Disclaimer: This listicle is meant for humor and entertainment purposes only. Cheating in a marriage is a serious issue, and it’s important to seek professional advice and support when dealing with such situations.

    Hope you enjoyed this tongue-in-cheek guide!

    YOU’LL LOVE THIS: Arise, O Nigerian Hope: What Chatgpt Thinks Our Anthem Should Be

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Ene: We met through a women-only LGBTQ+ support group exactly ten years ago. I’d just joined the community through an invitation from someone I met at work, and they hosted a book club meeting about a month after. I love to read so I happily attended. 

    I sat beside Nduka; her big smile and nice scent caught my attention. We became fast friends.

    Nduka: I remember we discussed “The Goldfinch” by Donna Tartt, and she made a joke about how hard it was to get copies of new foreign books. She’d read a pirated ebook online, and it turned out more than half of us in that room had done the same. We exchanged numbers and email addresses because I wanted to send her some other books I liked. 

    When did you realise you liked each other?

    Ene: The group organised hangouts at least once a month, and we’d always chat each other up to check if the other person was attending. She lived not too far away from me at the time, so we started attending together. I don’t usually like going to places where I don’t know anyone, so I’d have stopped going to those things if not for her. 

    By the third time we did that, we’d formed a bond outside my usual friend group. She became the only person I could talk to about anything remotely queer; all my friends leaned toward homophobia.

    Nduka: I’d been part of the community for about a year then, and had made many friends. But with her, I drifted apart from the other girls. Something about her being new to the whole lifestyle made her really attractive to me, so I did all I could to support her without being pushy. 

    I knew I liked her the first day we went for a games night together in the same cab. I wanted to kiss her many times, but I held back. 

    What was the turning point from all that holding back?

    Nduka: Months after we met, she asked me if we could be friends outside just meeting because of the community.

    Ene: I liked her a lot, but we only ever talked or hung out when there was a community activity. I wanted more than that. She said, “Of course,” but between work and the fact that I was paranoid about being outside together, we still only hung out with the community for months. 

    Nduka: Then one Sunday, I just called and asked if I could come to her house. She still lived with her parents, so her “yes” was hesitant. I came anyway, and we stayed in her room the whole day talking and reading. 

    Our relationship shifted to something beyond friendship that day. We kept looking at each other and our conversation was strongly flirtatious.

    Ene: I was so shy and was constantly blushing.

    Walk me through how you started dating

    Nduka: After that day, we started having these long phone calls. But we also missed several community hangouts.

    Ene: I think we were scared to be together in public. I was probably the scared one.

    Nduka: No, I just knew I’d try to kiss or constantly hug you. And I don’t think you were ready for that.

    Ene: The founders kept calling me to make sure I was fine. I wanted to tell them I think I’ve fallen in love with another member, and I don’t know how to act.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill out this form.

    I feel you, girl

    Ene: Thank you.

    Nduka: Anyway, during those phone calls, I’d sneak in that all I wanted was for her to be my girlfriend. And she’d find a way to sidetrack. It was so frustrating.

    Ene: I didn’t want to read too much meaning into anything. And I’d also never dated a girl. I really didn’t know how to act.

    Nduka: One day, I landed in her house once more. It was a Saturday, and it was just her mum who was home and in the living room. I kissed her, we made out for a bit, and I looked her in the eyes and said, “Please, be my girlfriend.” She shook her head but still said yes. That’s how I knew I was in for a rollercoaster.

    Scrim. What happened?

    Nduka: Our relationship for the next year or so was just her sneaking into my house — I’d moved out of my parents house and only had a roommate — and us making out, sometimes, having sex. That was it. I tried for a little romance. We’d buy each other gifts all the time, but we could never go out, and I couldn’t even hold her hand at community hangouts.

    Ene: I was shy and scared.

    Nduka: At first, it was fun showing her all the ways queer sex is better for women. But after a while, I wanted more. 

    Don’t get me wrong, we also had very beautiful conversations. We’d open up to each other about everything and I’d feel so connected to her. So I told myself to be content with that.

    Did you talk to her about wanting more?

    Nduka: I brought it up. But I was also scared of pushing her back into the closet, so I treaded carefully.

    Ene: She’s a really affectionate person. I kept thinking we’d be in public and she wouldn’t be able to help getting close to me and patting my hair out of my face or something. 

    I also knew my friends wouldn’t accept her because she’s always been so openly queer. Yet I admired that about her. How boldly she’s who she is.

    How has your relationship evolved since then?

    Nduka: We’ve come so far, and it really just took us getting comfortable with each other. 

    There were times when I thought I’d leave her for someone else. But I knew the other people wouldn’t be as open and sincere as her. I’d been with like four people before her and the relationships were always shallow and sexual. Not with her.

    It was jarring to accept that I’d fallen in love with Ene at some point.

    Ene: She was patient with me. 

    I remember when we went on our first date in 2018. I was like, what was I so scared about. It was a lovely dinner at a restaurant, and it felt good to be with her in the open. We didn’t overthink or talk too much about it beforehand. It was just time.

    Nduka: In 2019, we talked about getting married. But it was a funny conversation because we weren’t even discussing marrying each other. We were talking about if she’d have to marry a man. Her mum had suddenly started asking her about it, and it was the first time we addressed the fact that we couldn’t even get married. What did that mean for our commitment to each other?

    Ene: I decided I didn’t want to marry anyone if I couldn’t marry her, so we moved in together soon after.

    How does not being able to wed really feel?

    Nduka: It sucks. 

    Ene: It makes me feel vulnerable, and sometimes, insecure about our relationship.

    Nduka: After so long together, it’s something we can comfortably ignore. We focus on what exists: the love between us, how important we are to each other. Everything else is just semantics.

    [ad]

    After so long together, do your parents, family or friends know?

    Ene: I came out to my parents finally in 2021. And it was the scariest experience ever. I don’t know how I did it. I think they were so shocked they just pretend I never existed.

    Nduka: I mean, they still check in on you from time to time.

    Ene: My eldest brother heard and kept saying, “But you’re both so feminine. How does it work?” He was just laughing at me. It felt invalidating. I don’t know which would’ve been worse, what I got or anger.

    Nduka: My mum knew I was queer from my uni days. But she’s prayed against the “spirit in me” to this day. 

    I think what’s surprising, though, is how our families still quietly support us despite their differing beliefs. They still check in on us. My elder sisters are always in my house wanting to hangout. Most of my friends are open minded. But we had to lose most of her friends.

    How did you feel about that, Ene?

    Ene: Sad. 

    But I never felt truly accepted among my friends, so I don’t let myself get too sad. This one “friend” actually started telling everyone, spreading gossip and lies about our relationship. It was toxic. Those weren’t really friends.

    Nduka: We’ve made so many new healthy ones together.

    Ene: The community has been the perfect support group. Our friends there are some of the best people I’ve ever known.

    What does the future look like for your relationship?

    Ene: We’ve been talking about children. I’ve always wanted kids so it’s been a major topic between us for the last couple of years. We’re still torn between getting a sperm donor we know or using a sperm bank for the IVF.

    Nduka: We’ve been visiting fertility clinics, and they’ve been surprisingly homophobic.

    Ene: We realised it’s smoother to approach them as a single mother than as a queer couple. And that’s been heartbreaking because it’s not like they particularly support an unmarried woman wanting kids either.

    Nduka: Adoption was ruled out for obvious reasons. Crazy, but IVF is actually cheaper too.

    Interesting. What about the pushback you may get while raising children as a queer couple in Nigeria?

    Nduka: We’ve thought about it. But society has already taken the option to marry away from us. We won’t let them take this too.

    Ene: I know it’ll be drama, especially when they start going to primary and secondary school. I guess we’ll cross that bridge when we get there. I’m scared, but not scared enough to not at least try.

    Fair. What was your first major fight about?

    Ene: We fight about money a lot. She’s too extravagant with her spending, especially on gadgets and appliances.

    Nduka: Or you’re too thrifty. She’s saving for the apocalypse or something. She can go days without spending a dime, which is a skill that’s thankfully rubbed off on me.

    Ene: A little. 

    Anyway, I wouldn’t call them major fights. Don’t think we’ve had a major fight.

    Nduka: No.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Nduka: 8. Nigeria should let us marry in peace.

    Ene: Yes, 8. When it’s just us, it’s perfect. But once the world comes in…

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    READ THIS NEXT: Love Life: I Met Him Through a Radio Show as a 40+ Single Mum

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Adeolu: I met her at a friend’s place in January 2016. I liked what she wore. Just jeans and a top, but her clothes were fresh. I remember thinking, “This girl is so fresh”. She was one of the first people I saw with natural unpermed hair then, before it became a thing.

    Jane: Our friend introduced us and said we would make a “good pair”. Then she left us together in her sitting room. We chatted for some time, and it was nice. Nothing too deep. We chatted with other people too.

    When did you realise you liked each other?

    Adeolu: We ran into each other at the mall the next day, and we were happy to see each other. As soon as I saw her face, I knew I liked her and would love her to be my girlfriend. But in my head, I was so sure she was taken.

    Jane: We hugged and parted ways. A few minutes later, he messaged me on Instagram, and we started chatting consistently from then. After a couple of days of chatting, I started to like him. He was funny. He was always making jokes, but sweet ones that made me feel soft inside.

    How did you end up dating?

    Adeolu: In between chats, we kept meeting at people’s houses, so we hung out a lot. During one of these hangouts, I asked her out, but she was shy because people were there.

    Jane: We were watching a movie outside with someone’s projector, and this guy just casually asked me out. It’s not like he shouted it, but almost everyone heard and turned to us. 

    I told him yes, but I was a little annoyed about the scene.

    Did you feel pressured to say yes because he asked in public?

    Jane: I wanted to say yes, but it was also pressuring to have to decide in front of our friends.

    Adeolu: I just had to ask her there and then. It came to my mind, and I didn’t want to chicken out.

    Jane: We went on our first date the next weekend, and I realised I really really liked him. We had almost all the same interests. We liked the same kind of movies, and we both loved anime. We both wanted to code too. 

    I almost thought he was just trying to get me to like him, but the more we talked, the more I knew he was actually interested in these things. We learnt coding together for months, and it helped us bond. It felt like we were soulmates.

    So you’ve been dating for eight years?

    Adeolu: Yes. But we broke up for almost a year in 2019, after I was involved in a car accident. I was in the hospital for about a month, and when I got out, I had to break up with her.

    Jane: That’s the summarised version.

    He and his friends had been drinking when they got into a car back home from the club in the middle of the night and crashed. It was terrible. It’s a miracle any of them survived. But the driver died.

    Adeolu: I was in pain and grief for a long time.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill out this form.

    I’m so sorry. How did this lead to a break up?

    Adeolu: Jane was by my side throughout the hospital period. We’d been dating for about three years then. But I wasn’t happy she got to see me at my worst. 

    My legs had terrible injuries, and the doctors were scared they’d have to amputate. They eventually didn’t, but it was an emotionally draining period for me even before I found out my guy was dead.

    Jane: I did my best to support him. But I was scared to death and spent most of the time crying. My parents and siblings were worried for me. He felt bad about that and would beg me to just go home.

    Adeolu: I was also concerned about how it was affecting her work because she was almost always with me at the hospital. When I could finally go home, I waited for her to go home too, then texted her that I wanted us to break up.

    How did you take it, Jane?

    Jane: I was so angry. 

    I knew he was hurting, but I also felt he didn’t care about my own feelings. I was in love with him and wanted to see him get well. I called and called him, but he didn’t pick up, so I went to his house a couple of times, and he refused to see me. 

    Ah, come and see heartbreak. I cried o.

    Adeolu: I was just in a low place and needed some time to heal on my own. I also believed I was sparing her the heartache of sticking with someone who was going through a lot. 

    It took me months to learn to walk again, and I was in constant pain. I was also ashamed I was involved in such a terrible decision that cost a life and my parents considerable amounts of money.

    How did you get past this stage?

    Jane: After about seven months, I got a call from his mum that I should come and see him and talk to him. She was concerned that he was sinking into depression and hoped I could help draw him out. 

    I was hesitant, but I went to see him.

    Adeolu: I was ashamed to see her because I was out of shape and felt weak. So I acted immaturely. I wouldn’t talk to her. 

    But she helped because seeing her made me want to do better about my appearance. I also started looking for a new job because my old one let me go after my continued inactivity. Four months later, I called her and apologised.

    Jane: I accepted his apology, but I was in a talking stage with another guy. Even though I still loved Deolu, my friends had talked harshly to me about putting my life on hold for him.

    While things moved forward with this new guy, Deolu and I tried to establish a friendship. I kept up with his progress and was happy to see him flourishing.

    Things didn’t work out with the new guy?

    Jane: He was jealous of the fact that I was still tight with my ex. He got really insecure about it, and I had to choose between them. It was a tough choice, but I chose Deolu. My best friend was so upset.

    The day after we broke up, Deolu was at my place, and we spent the whole day making out.

    Deolu: We’d grown too attached. I couldn’t imagine my life with anyone else at that point. I wanted her to break up with the guy so bad I tried everything.

    [ad]

    What did you do?

    Deolu: Nothing bad. 

    I’d just call and text her a lot. And sometimes, when all three of us were at an event, I’d say things only Jane would get. It always triggered him, but Jane was so oblivious.

    Jane: The way he’s always boasting about this thing. You need to know it’s not a flex.

    Deolu: Anyway, we got back together that night. And I was the happiest I’d ever been in my life. We’ve been together since, and we moved in together last year.

    Any chance you’ll get married soon?

    Deolu: Yes, of course. I love her.

    Jane: We talk about the future all the time. We’re not engaged yet, but we’re thinking of doing it this year. We have money goals we want to hit first.

    Deolu: We’re very close to hitting them.

    I like that you’re taking the engagement decision together 

    Jane: He still has to figure out how to surprise me when he proposes, but yeah, we’ve both agreed on when would be a good time to take that next step.

    Deolu: The timing shouldn’t be something one person just decides. Marriage is a partnership, after all.

    True. What was your first major fight about?

    Jane: When I discovered he was hooked on prescription drugs. We’re still working through it now.

    Deolu: I grew to rely on them painkillers after the accident. At first, I needed them to function because the pain was truly on bearable. But then, I started using them just in case, even when I wasn’t in pain. They made me feel numb to the overwhelming grief and shame I had at the time.

    Jane: When we got back together, I didn’t notice anything at first, until the mood swings came. He’d go from extremely happy and energetic to brooding and touchy in seconds. It was scary. 

    I found his prescription drugs stash when I spent the night at his place once, and we had a huge fight about it.

    That does sound scary

    Jane: And I didn’t handle it well. 

    My first instinct was to report him to his doctor so they cancel the prescription, or to his sisters to stage an intervention. But I was scared I’d only expose him to more shame, so we tried to work through it together. I don’t think I’d do that again.

    Deolu: We struggled and fought a lot after she found out.

    Mostly, I was ashamed and really wanted us to get back to that happiness we found after we got back together. A female friend of mine suggested therapy, and that helped.

    Jane: We’ve been able to help him taper off them slowly, but the early withdrawal period was crazy. I wanted to break up with him again a thousand times. This love thing, ehn? Sometimes, it meant forcing myself to create boundaries, dating and supporting him from afar. 

    Our therapist instructed me that boundaries would help him realise he needs to do better if he wanted the same level of trust he once had from me.

    Just how crazy was the withdrawal period?

    Deolu: I kept going on and off. And then we’d had to start the whole process again. I could tell this really annoyed her.

    Jane: This happened twice in 2021. Coupled with the stress of the pandemic, it was a lot.

    Deolu: I couldn’t sleep. I would feel body pains that I wasn’t completely sure was there. I was angry all the time, but I’d try really hard not to express my anger to her, or let it affect work.

    Jane: He’d vomit sometimes. I remember his friends making jokes about him being pregnant. They didn’t know what we were battling. I saw he was struggling yet again, and it was heartbreaking to watch.

    But you moved in together last year, so things are much better now?

    Jane: Much much better. 

    Deolu: Midway into 2022, things normalised. I was off drugs completely and was finally feeling like myself again. We didn’t do a lot of going out in 2021 because of everything, so I made it my business to take her out and kind of thank her for being there for me.

    Jane: Yeah, we went on a lot of dates in 2022. 

    It felt like we could finally breathe and be young lovers for once. We were still sensitive around each other for a while, always asking the other how we felt or if something we wanted to do was okay. I didn’t want to stress him too much because of the long healing period he’d had to go through, and he seemed to feel like he owed me because I stuck around. 

    Till today, we’re still so gentle with each other and I think that’s the best gift we’ve gotten out of that journey.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Deolu: 10.

    Jane: 9. I want him to recover from the painkiller use fully.

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    ANOTHER MATCHMAKING STORY HERE: Love Life: I Met Him Through a Radio Show as a 40+ Single Mum

  • HBO’s “House of the Dragon,” the “Game of Thrones” spinoff, is back for a second season after a two-year break.

    House of the Dragon is a captivating return to the complex and treacherous world of Westeros, a 200-year prequel to the acclaimed TV show, Game of Thrones. Adapted from George R.R. Martin’s “A Song of Ice and Fire” book series, this new installment dives deep into the history of House Targaryen, exploring the events that led to the infamous Targaryen civil war, known as the Dance of the Dragons.

    Or simply put, this queen…

    Queen Rhaenyra | Photograph by Theo Whitman/HBO

    …versus this queen…

    Dowager Queen Alicent | Photograph by Theo Whitman/HBO

    …who, if you’ve watched the first season, is her ex-bestie turned late father, King Viserys’s second wife (long story).

    It starts where season one left off, post-King Viserys’s death and Alicent’s mishearing of his final words to mean that her son, the overindulgent Aegon Targaryen, should rule after him instead of his first child and official heir, Rhaenyra.

    But where season one was perhaps slow-paced, big on setting and character development up until after the king’s tragic death — ending with Rhaenyra’s second son’s untimely death at the hand of Alicent’s second son and his giant dragon — this season expectedly begins chaotically. 

    With mourning, reprisal attacks after reprisal attacks, intricate politics, familial betrayals and epic battles, fans of the Game of Thrones universe finally get a taste of what they’ve come to expect — brutality. Expect dragons, battles, crazy misunderstandings and a bunch of petty guys causing avoidable complications. 

    But also, expect a lot of waiting around for something… more to happen.

    Photograph by Ollie Upton/HBO

    It opens in Winterfell, on a trip to the Night’s Watch and a mention of “Winter is coming”, immediately throwing us deep into nostalgia and a promise that everything good about the original show is about to come back to us?

    While the show has finally found its balance, there are still scenes where logic flies out the window, random twists without feeling and too many side plots that make it hard to care about the main battle for the Iron Throne.

    At some point, we have to join Aegon to ask what’s up with the game of thrones? Are they going to fight the fight or not? However, the bratty new king, who thinks like most that being king is about doing whatever you want, is hardly a worthy contender. 

    King Aegon | Photograph by Ollie Upton/HBO

    At least, not without support from his mum, granddad (and “hand to the king”) Otto Hightower, and crazy brother, Aemond. Even then, Aegon gives us nothing to particularly hate, fear, love or all of the above, like Joffrey, Cersei or Daenerys of the original. 

    On the other side is Rhaenyra, backed by her own crazy husband/uncle Daemon, her in-laws/cousins the Velaryons, and her kids who everyone knows are illegitimate. She, at least, gives us something akin to an uninspiring Daenerys-lite. Perhaps it is unfair then to even compare this spinoff to the OG show.

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    It’s “green” versus “black”. Green for Aegon and Alicent; black for Rhaenyra and Daemon.

    There are tons of other characters you might not remember, and the show doesn’t care to reintroduce them. In fact, fans may need a quick recap of the last season to even remember some plots and players, and why they matter. New silver-haired little children spring up, and no one really seems to know whose they are. 

    Everyone’s angry, constantly about to fight a dumb war. 

    Photograph by Ollie Upton/HBO

    The first four of eight episodes were made available to critics like us for review, and from what we can tell — without obviously spoiling anything — the mix of stunning cinematography, meticulous production design and grandeur of the Targaryen dynasty through magnificent sets and costumes gives way to a show that’s okay, and sometimes, good. 

    The lead actors’ talents feel wasted, left to do their best with often hair-pulling dialogue and threadbare plot. 

    Matt Smith’s Daemon still doesn’t know who he is. Is he blood hungrily soulless like the show tries hard to portray or is he devotedly loyal to Rhaenyra? While the constant dichotomy is familiar ground for this universe where two-faced (or no-faced?) characters are the order of the day, this time, it feels most like the show itself is altogether unsure. 

    Rhaenyra x Daemon standoff | Photograph by Ollie Upton/HBO

    Is Emma D’Arcy’s Rhaenyra to be a strong, capable queen or is she just going with the flow? Does Olivia Cooke’s Alicent actually know what the hell she’s doing? The only sure thing is Fabien Frankel as Ser Criston Cole with his faux-clueless look of steadfast hypocrisy as he righteous-indignantly blusters through the plot. Does he love being a fuck-boy for queens or not?

    Also, the plot twists need too much disbelief to work. Some things are too easy and some things are too complicated. Too much potential is lost in boring decisions and lackluster performances that appear to have no end result.

    Rhaenyra x Daemon standoff part two | Photograph by Ollie Upton/HBO

    Except of course, if the end is to build our impatience for some real action to a fevered pitch that would be satisfied by the latter half of the season. 

    But don’t let that deter you — there’s still plenty to love. As the green versus black conflict heats up, it’s clear that the Targaryen civil war is just getting started. So, grab your popcorn and get ready for a wild ride. Because if there’s one thing this season guarantees, it’s that the dance of dragons is far from over, and the best (and most brutal) is yet to come.

    Photograph by Courtesy of HBO

    Soft plantain for anyone who can name the dragon above.

    Season two of HOUSE OF THE DRAGON debuts today, June 16 (9:00 – 10:00 p.m. ET/PT) on HBO and will be available to stream on Max. The eight-episode season will continue with one new episode weekly through August 4.

    THIS IS ACCURATE: The Most Annoying Characters on “House of the Dragon”, Ranked

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

    What’s your earliest memory of each other?

    Nnamdi: We met after we got matched on a night-time radio show last year. I was single and searching, so possibly as a prank, one of my mates called in with my profile and then reached out to me when they found a match. 

    I was just laughing, but I decided to give it a try because I had nothing to lose. I reached out to her through the contact the radio station shared, and because she seemed open, we met at a restaurant close to her place. It was nice, she looked so good, and I thought I got lucky. I had this preconceived notion that there was no way I’d meet a good-looking person through a radio show, yet there I was.

    Favour: I wasn’t necessarily searching at the time. I sent in my profile just for fun. I had this friend who was married but used to send her profile all the time. I’d done it once some months before that, but I chickened out of meeting with the guy they matched me with. 

    This time around, I thought, “What the heck?” But the same way he assumed any woman who’d be on such a show wouldn’t be attractive is the same way I thought any guy on it would be over-desperate. I didn’t get any desperate vibes from him. If anything, he seemed noncommittal.

    What did you talk about during this first meeting?

    Favour: Our work, careers, interests, why we were single at over 40. 

    After we’d spoken for a while, and I’d decided he was a cool guy, I told him I had an 11-year-old son from a failed marriage. He didn’t flinch. He just asked if he could see his picture and if I was comfortable talking about the marriage and why it failed. I enjoyed his maturity — not all 40+ men are mature — and I thought, “I’d love for us to be friends.” He didn’t really seem interested in a serious relationship, and I wasn’t even sure I was ready to take risks with love again.

    Nnamdi: I told her I’d never been married at all, and she said that was a major red flag. But we laughed about it. In the end, it all came down to neither of us believing anything real could come out of being matchmade on radio.

    Why did you never marry?

    Nnamdi: Japa happened. 

    I had a steady girlfriend then I moved to the US in 2005, when you could still get chosen for a visa through draws. I got there and decided to stay longer, with the hopes of getting a green card. She decided she couldn’t wait any longer after the first two years. I ended up staying for 11 more years. The whole time, I found it extremely hard to date there.

    Favour: I’m sure he gave off this playboy energy. If you don’t get to know him well enough, you’d think he was an unserious person. He’s not, though, just laidback.

    Nnamdi: Tell them.

    I returned to Nigeria in 2018 to set up my business and ended up having my head buried in work for the next couple of years. The girls I dated thought I was too busy or didn’t prioritise them enough. That’s why when Twitter boys say women only want money or “just buy her everything she wants and she’ll stay,” I wonder what they mean. That’s never been my experience. They definitely want your love and attention too.

    So that’s how I found myself single and on a radio dating show at 45 years of age.

    Wild. Favour, wanna talk about why your marriage failed?

    Favour: Oh, he was abusive. He’d beat me then beg and gaslight. I completely bought into it until my eyes opened, and I got myself out of there fast.

    What do you mean “bought into it”?

    Favour: Abuse is scary. You never know when you go from completely sensible to irrational.

    I started believing the beating was normal. He couldn’t help it because of all the pressures of life. Me sef why did I do this or that. He beats me because he’s so in love and passionate about us. Maybe it’s even advanced BDSM. I remember it being so normal after a while. I started liking and craving for how he’d beg and make me feel special after he’d given me a dirty slap. 

    Nnamdi: I wish I could set up some soldiers on the guy.

    Favour: One day, our son was in the picture. When he was around two, I looked at him and thought, “I must be crazy to want to raise this boy here.” 

    It took me two more years to leave. I stayed with this man for eight years of my life. I found it almost impossible to even think about dating after that.

    At what point did you reveal these things to each other?

    Favour: I told him my ex was abusive on that first meeting. But I’ve only recently shared most of the details with him.

    Nnamdi: I told her about my relationship history the first two or three times we talked. It was a prerequisite to even continue with whatever would happen between us because I think she wanted to make sure I wasn’t a major red flag.

    During our first meetings, we carried on like new friends trying to keep the connection going because we’re at that age when we have a little more free time after a decade or more of grinding and losing friends to capitalism.

    Favour: My life revolved around my mum and my son, so making a new friend in such an interesting way was exciting. I think also cancelling out the possibility of us dating from the beginning helped me let my guard down and open up a bit, in a way I’d never thought I would to a stranger.

    So when did you realise you liked each other?

    Favour: I think it snuck up on us. I can’t pinpoint a time. 

    Maybe it started with me wanting to make time during the weekends to see him, or when about a month after we met, I wanted him to meet my son.

    Nnamdi: I knew I liked her on the second meeting. We were both surprised when I reached out to her about seeing again the very next week after the first meet. We were still playing it friendly, but I knew I wouldn’t get that interested in seeing a new friend so soon.

    When she asked if I wanted to meet her son, I knew she liked me two but maybe hadn’t realised it yet. I played it cool for all of two months before I finally asked if we could become romantic.

    Is that how you asked? “Can we become romantic?”

    Nnamdi: I think so.

    Favour: He said, “Please, let’s date romantically.” He was a little nervous, and I found it cute. I said yes even though I was also scared as hell. I kept checking his approach and attitude next to how my ex-husband did his own, to make sure I wasn’t falling for the same tricks.

    I wanted to ghost him the week after I agreed to date him because I didn’t trust my judgement. It was tough.

    Nnamdi: Thank you for opening your heart to me.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill out this form.

    What was meeting the son like?

    Favour: It was normal, quiet. But he was happy to see Nnamdi. He had this soft smile on his face throughout. My son is quite shy. We met at my house, so it was his comfort zone, and Nnamdi didn’t stay too long. I watched them talk quietly for about 30 minutes then he brought out his Legos to show Nnamdi what he could build. I knew we’d won his approval.

    Nnamdi: We weren’t under much pressure because we were still just friends. I just cared about her enough that I also cared to know that she wasn’t struggling to take care of her son. I wanted to be there to help. When I met this well-behaved young boy, I knew his mum had to be a good person.

    How do your families feel about your relationship?

    Favour: It’s been just my mum and I for like a decade now. She’s accepted him wholeheartedly. In fact, she was my litmus test in the first month of whether I made the right decision to let him in, and they got along right from his visit to our house to meet my son. They have such a good rapport.

    Nnamdi: I’ll admit my parents are less accepting. They would’ve preferred someone younger, someone who wasn’t married before and didn’t have a child already. 

    They said as much when I told them about her earlier on. But they’d also given up on me finding a wife deep in my 40s, and I have four happily married siblings, so they’re less willing to push my preference on her.

    Favour: Yeah, my relationship with his parents is mixed because I can clearly see I’m not their preferred choice, but they’re also quite well-behaved about it. I’m never disrespected. 

    Although I don’t know what might happen if Di now decides to marry me.

    Is marriage already in the conversation?

    Nnamdi: Well. That’s the natural direction right now. We celebrate a year of dating in July. At our age, you don’t date for that long without thinking about marriage.

    Favour: But he hasn’t proposed yet. 

    We talk about the future a lot, hypothetically. We talk about our career trajectories. We’re also currently figuring out children. I think that’s the one thing maybe holding us back.

    How so?

    Favour: Well, I’m on the tail end of my fertility journey, and I know he wants his kids. Some years back, I froze some of my eggs. We’re in that interesting period of checking out all our options.

    Nnamdi: That’s not holding me back, Fave.

    Favour: Ok. I’m just saying what I feel. I know it’s important to you.

    What would happen if you find out you can’t have any more kids?

    Nnamdi: Thank God for technology. We’ll invest in surrogacy. I don’t mind that at all. I’m just glad she had the foresight to freeze her eggs.

    Favour: I’d be sad for sure, but I’m already bracing for the worst. I know that sounds pessimistic.

    Nnamdi: I think we’ll be fine. It’s more important to me that I’ve found someone I can connect and feel like an equal with. We’re so well matched in terms of work, finances and the kind of conversations we can have. 

    And I love the way she’s raising her son, how involved she is even though she has her hectic work schedule.

    Do you get pushback from society?

    Favour: Some of his friends. Actually, I can tell his friends don’t like me.

    Nnamdi: That’s not entirely true. 

    There are two particular friends who don’t like that I’d have to take care of another man’s son, and I’ve told them off. 

    Favour: I think a lot of them expected that you’d end up with someone younger. Especially that friend who set you up on the radio show in the first place.

    One time, I saw him text Nnamdi that since he held out for so long, he thought he’d use the opportunity to get someone in her 20s.

    Nnamdi: I’m so embarrassed of my friends right now. But it was also a very stupid “man” joke.

    Do you find it funny, Favour?

    Favour: Certainly not. I replied him “fuck off” as if I was Nnamdi, LOL. Ok, maybe I found it funny a little.

    Nnamdi: But the same guy also asked me when I’m putting a ring on it just last week. I swear it’s all chill.

    Favour: Well, my ex also gets in our way, showing up unannounced at times to get our son. I think the side with him and even his parents will always be complicated, so I get why Nnamdi’s friends are worried. Being a single mum is not pretty.

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    Can you tell us just how complicated it gets?

    Favour: The major thing is not being able to plan out your kid’s life with the person you love. Instead, you’re doing it with someone you most likely hate. 

    I don’t know which is worse, having an active baby daddy you now hate or having a totally absent one. From where I’m sitting, I’d choose the latter any day.

    Nnamdi: I’m not sure if I have the right to talk about this, but there’s also the worry that someone you know is abusive still gets to take care of your young child, and you’re not there to make sure they aren’t abusive to them as well.

    Favour: Oh yes, thank you. That scares me all the time. 

    There’s nothing you can do about this?

    Nnamdi: Like, Nigerian law is so vague and heavily patriarchal-leaning on child custody after divorce that I don’t know if there’s any way she can appeal for full custody. 

    Favour: My feminist ally! 

    But so far, my ex has proven to be a good father, and I keep praying that he will continue. I pray for my son ceaselessly. I just wish I never had to see my ex again.

    Understandable. Have you two had a major fight yet?

    Favour: Have we? No. 

    Nnamdi: Ahh. You don’t remember the day you almost screamed my head off for talking over you and telling your aunty that you’d allow her side of the family to take over accommodation arrangements during your father’s remembrance in February.

    Favour: I was hoping you wouldn’t bring that up. 

    Tell us your side!

    Favour: All of a sudden, he was telling my relatives he’d sorted this and handled that and set up this other thing. I was upset that he was going over my head; he didn’t discuss any of it with me. I didn’t even know what he was talking about in some cases.

    Nnamdi: I thought I was helping by taking things off her plate in her time of grief. I had no idea she hated it until after the conversation with her aunt. That night in our room, she started screaming and crying. 

    I was angry too because I didn’t expect that reaction after all my sacrifice. But I also understood she was overwhelmed. I just walked out. 

    Favour: The next day was the event, and we were both carrying face.

    Nnamdi: Later on, we talked about it and apologised to each other. 

    What she recently shared about the abuse she endured from her ex has also made me understand her reaction that day.

    Have you both considered seeing a therapist about it?

    Favour: We’ve talked about it. We probably will. I know I’ve healed from it in many ways thanks to my relationship with God, but the trauma is still there psychologically.

    Nnamdi: I’d highly support that. I’d love to know how not to trigger her but also make sure I’m not compromising my own emotions as well.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Nnamdi: 10. Don’t look down on matchmaking, guys.

    Favour: Yes, 10. Also, don’t look down on finding love at any age.

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    COMPULSORY READ: Love Life: We Found Out He Was Impotent After the Wedding

  • Ahead of Democracy Day, June 12, we asked Chatgpt to reimagine the Nigerian national anthem, and this is what it came up with.

    Verse 1

    Arise, O Nigerians, great and bold,

    Our hearts and minds, together we mould.

    With unity and strength, we stand,

    To build a future, hand in hand.

    Chorus

    From the North to the South,

    To the East and the West,

    We rise above challenges,

    Together, we are blessed.

    With justice and peace,

    And the freedom we seek,

    Nigeria, our homeland,

    In unity, we speak.

    Verse 2

    We pledge to fight corruption’s hold,

    With honesty, our story is told.

    Empowering youth, our future bright,

    In education’s path, we find our light.

    Chorus

    From the North to the South,

    To the East and the West,

    We rise above challenges,

    Together, we are blessed.

    With justice and peace,

    And the freedom we seek,

    Nigeria, our homeland,

    In unity, we speak.

    Verse 3

    In health and wealth, we’ll find our way,

    Together, we build a brighter day.

    In diversity, our strength is found,

    With love and care, we are bound.

    Chorus

    From the North to the South,

    To the East and the West,

    We rise above challenges,

    Together, we are blessed.

    With justice and peace,

    And the freedom we seek,

    Nigeria, our homeland,

    In unity, we speak.

    Bridge

    O Nigeria, our cherished land,

    With faith and courage, we will stand.

    For brighter tomorrows, we strive and pray,

    In harmony, we’ll lead the way.

    Final Chorus

    From the North to the South,

    To the East and the West,

    We rise above challenges,

    Together, we are blessed.

    With justice and peace,

    And the freedom we seek,

    Nigeria, our homeland,

    In unity, we speak.

    Outro

    In unity, we speak,

    In unity, we rise,

    Nigeria, forever,

    Under African skies.


    The end. Now, someone run us the melody.

    MEANWHILE: A Case For Portable Rewriting Our National Anthem

  • Whether you’re a fan of fluffy slices or crispy crusts, bread is a staple that rises to the occasion at every meal. Let’s break bread with Nigeria’s most beloved bread types, according to those who knead it the most. We asked around and this is what Nigerians think of the most popular bread types, from mid to upper crust.

    Raisin bread

    Raisin bread is rich and filling, but not everyone likes the too-sweet raisins.

    Wheat bread

    Source: 31 Daily

    Whole wheat bread might be a healthier alternative due to its higher fibre content, but let’s all just admit we find it less palatable compared to the sweeter and softer white bread.

    Brioche bread

    Is it bread or is it a pastry? Buttery and sweet, this one gives luxury or special-occasion bread because it simply always costs more — or maybe it just looks like it does? Either way, Nibbles Bread is about to introduce its version, and we guarantee it’ll be easy on the pocket.

    Tea buns

    Tea buns are enjoyed as a treat, especially with tea or coffee, but like brioche, they tend to be considered more of a snack than a staple.

    Sliced bread

    It’s convenient, good for sandwiches and widely available. But beyond being the perfect plain base for peanut butter and anything else you might like, it’s simply not that tasty on its own like the bread types above it.

    Sardine bread

    Great for when you want something savoury without having to spend on a spread or filling after buying your bread. The only reason why it’s not top of the list is because if it’s not fresh, it’s nasty.

    Coconut bread

    Source: Amy’s Delicious Mess

    It’s like biting into a sweet, nutty hug from the one Grandma who always brings you Gurundi and Shuku Shuku when she visits. Whether you enjoy this soft, moist bread plain or slathered in your favourite spread, it’s always a win. Throw in the health benefits of the coconut’s fibre and healthy fats, and what’s not to love? The only downside is how scarce it is.

    White loaf

    Source: Conde Nast Traveler

    Are you really surprised this is at the top of the ranking? Soft, fluffy and sweet, this is the go-to that defines what a “bread” should be. The OG, Agege bread, is low-yeast, and all other types and brands model themselves after it. But Nibbles family loaf is fluffy and sweet with a good price and longevity.

    Nicknamed the “bread of life”, Nibbles is one of the best bread brands in Nigeria today. People, especially those who like their bread fluffy, love it for its quality and variety of options. Today, it has family loaves and tea buns, with many new variants on the way. Available on a quick stop at any Kilimanjaro restaurant or any store or supermarket nationwide.

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    AND NOW: We Ranked Nigerian Bread Pairings From Worst To Best