• Every week, Zikoko spotlights the unfiltered stories of women navigating life, love, identity and everything in between. 

    What She Said will give women the mic to speak freely, honestly and openly, without shame about sex, politics, family, survival, and everything else life throws our way.


    When Rachel* was 17, she followed her father one Sunday morning and saw something she was never meant to see. That moment didn’t just shatter her understanding of the man who raised her; it reframed her mother’s death, her siblings’ constant illnesses, and the fear that had quietly ruled their home for years.

    Now 29, Rachel speaks about growing up with a father whose violence went beyond physical abuse and the spiritual terror that surrounded her family.

    Before everything happened, what was your relationship with your father like?

    It was complicated long before I found out the truth. When I was younger, I was very close to my father. I remember that whenever I fell ill, I would lie on his chest and listen to his heartbeat. He would rub my back until I slept. Those moments made him feel safe, like someone who would always protect me.

    But as I grew older, that version of him slowly disappeared. He became distant and very confusing. He would react violently to the smallest things. Noise irritated him. Mistakes irritated him. Even joy irritated him. He would scream at and sometimes whip you for not doing something, then turn around and do it again because you did that thing. He would viciously and seriously, almost like he believed what he was saying, accuse you of his mistakes, like glasses or drinks he broke. Maybe money he misplaced. There were always very bad consequences. He started pulling away from the family and became increasingly secretive.

    By my teenage years, he was barely around. He was always “working,” always travelling, always stepping out at odd hours. And when he was home, you felt his presence immediately. The house became tense. You had to measure your movements, like the typical strict Nigerian father energy, where the entire atmosphere shifts the moment he walks in.

    Looking back now, I realise I was already afraid of him before I knew I had a true reason to be.

    When did things start to feel truly wrong in your home?

    After my mother started falling ill.

    My mum was the calm centre of our family. She prayed a lot, sang around the house, and somehow managed to soften my father atimes. Then she started getting sick in ways doctors couldn’t explain. She was always tired. Always in pain. Always ‘fading’.

    One day, my grandmother (mumsie’s mum) brought a prophetess to the house. We didn’t invite her. She just arrived. The prophetess wasted no time. She said there was someone in the house who was “eating the light.” She said someone close to my mother was responsible for her sickness. She didn’t mention names, but the message was clear enough to terrify all of us.

    My father stood there quietly while she spoke. He didn’t argue. He didn’t react. He just watched her.

    My mother died a few months later.

    At the time, we didn’t know how deeply connected everything was. We only knew that after her death, the sickness moved to us.

    I am so sorry for your loss. What do you mean, the sickness moved to you?

    I mean, we started falling sick one after the other.

    It began with my younger brother. He was always complaining of headaches and weakness. Then it was me. Then my sister. The illnesses would come and go, but they never fully left us. We were constantly in and out of churches, prayer grounds, herbal homes, and even mosques.

    My father took us everywhere. Sometimes he prayed loudly. Other times, he stood quietly behind us, watching. It was like he was searching for something specific, not healing.

    People in his village whispered about him. There were rumours that he was protected by an old woman there, someone so feared that as long as she was alive, no one could touch him. I didn’t understand what that meant then. 

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    What She Said: I Almost Lost Myself Trying To Keep My Sister Alive


    Can you describe the moment you found out what your father was really doing?

    I was seventeen, almost eighteen. At that point, I was not okay. I had been thinking and thinking about how we would leave, but where would I go? Who would look after us? His siblings were deep in his pockets, and my mother’s side of the family were too scared of him to really do anything. What could I do? I felt hopeless, like I was stuck in this life I could not leave and never chose.

    One morning, he said he was stepping out before church. He used to do this often, like every other week. This time, I followed him without fully understanding why. Something in my body just moved.

    He walked to an uncompleted building behind our compound. I stayed back at first, then moved closer when I heard him murmuring. He was repeating my name. Quietly. Over and over.

    When I saw him, he was crouched on the ground, digging. There was a Bible placed beside him, open, and next to it was a wrapped animal head. I didn’t need to open it to know what it was, but he confirmed it when he opened it to put it in the ground. It was a goat’s head severed so brutally and recently, it was covered in blood. 

    I did not know I was frozen in fear. Not while he lowered the open bible in after or while he covered it with the ground that he had dug up. Not until I realised he was looking right at me.

    When he noticed me, he didn’t panic. He didn’t look ashamed. He just stared at me like he had been waiting for this moment.

    I ran.

    That night, he didn’t confront me. He didn’t shout. He just watched me silently throughout dinner. That silence felt heavier than any beating.

    What happened next?

    I started tiptoeing around him.

    I barely slept. I packed small bags under my bed in case I needed to leave quickly. I stopped being alone with him. I memorised his movements and his moods.

    Then my younger brother died.

    He went to bed complaining of another headache and never woke up. My father didn’t cry. He just sat outside until morning. After the burial, one of his relatives warned me not to be “stubborn” like my mother.

    I didn’t even understand what that meant. That was when I knew I wouldn’t survive if I stayed.

    Was there ever an attempt to stop your father? Did you try to tell anyone?

    Yes. I told my grandmother. 

    She told me to act like nothing had happened. That I should be very quiet and smart so that I would not die like my mother. She said I should leave it to her. She will try and find help. So all I really know about that is that someone outside our immediate family tried to intervene. People believed that if anyone could stop him, it would be that person.

    It didn’t work.

    Instead, the person who tried began falling sick afterwards. Slowly deteriorating. That was when it became clear that whatever protected my father was stronger than anyone imagined.

    That was also when I stopped believing that justice would come.

    How did you eventually escape?

    I actually left quietly. I had waited long enough that I knew he wouldn’t suspect it.

    I waited for him to go on one of his many trips, packed only what I could hide, and left very early the next day with my sister. We moved from place to place until we were safe. My grandmother and her side of the family quietly sent money to us when they could, but they couldn’t house us. They said he would know, and we were better like this.

    In truth, I cannot tell you what those years did to us. Living in constant fear with no real home or family to claim. To be responsible for myself and her. To have countless nightmares about that scene with my father. To have nothing. 

    About four years later, we relocated to a neighbouring country.

    My father never called. Not once. He never looked for us. Sometimes I wonder if he knows where I am. It has honestly been scarier living this way, not really knowing if or when he will come. But at least, we get to do some living. 

    Where are you now, emotionally and spiritually?

    I go to church. Sometimes I go to the mosque. I don’t know what I believe anymore, but I know I’m looking for light. I’m looking for peace. I’m looking for something that feels clean.

    My father is still alive. That knowledge sits with me every day. I don’t want revenge. I don’t want answers anymore. I just want distance. I just want to live.

    Sometimes, surviving is the only victory you get. It is the only one I want.


    Also Read: The Guide to Protecting Your Wig from Snatchers This December

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  • Lagos is hot, the detty December events are calling, and your lace frontal is laid, honey. Everything should be as perfect as it gets in this city. However, there’s a devil in disguise, and it could be riding your delivery bike. 

    Forget unknown and the everyday armed robbers; the latest, most outrageous threat to your dignity and bank account is the Wig Snatcher. They are fast, they are ruthless, and apparently, they’re targeting Lagos baddies from V.I. to Berger.

    Since the government is doing nothing, here is your definitive, slightly chaotic, survival guide to keeping your expensive crown where it belongs.

    1. The Super Glue-Down Method

    You glued the front, you glued the sides, but you forgot the back. That’s amateur hour. Since your entire head is now a target, you need to use a glue that was not meant for human skin.

    Forget your lace adhesive. We are talking industrial strength. Think about using an adhesive for laminate flooring or, better yet, a small amount of wood glue. That wig is now a permanent architectural feature of your head.

    Even if it’s a frontal, glue the front, the back, and the part in the middle that you didn’t think mattered. If a snatcher tries to grab it, you want them to take a piece of your scalp and regret their life choices.

    2. Sew Your Destiny In!

    We know you’re not trying to look like a church matron, but desperation calls for desperate measures. Your wig must be attached to your braids or scalp as if your life depends on it (because your wig does).

    Install those wig combs and pins like you’re putting a security lock on a vault. Use a thread to sew the combs directly to your cornrows in at least four cardinal points. The goal is to make the snatching process so time-consuming that the snatcher will either abandon the mission or get stuck in traffic.

    Better yet, opt for a complete sew-in.

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    Also Read: 7 Creative Things to Do With Your Wig During Sex


    3. You Can’t Snatch What You Can’t Hold

    A flowing, luxurious 30-inch bust down wig is an invitation. It’s an easy target for a thief on a bike to grab and yank. Don’t give them a handle.

    As long as you are on the streets, your hair must be in a severe, low, pulled-back bun. It should be so tight that your eyes water, and your temples are screaming. This gives the snatcher absolutely nothing to grab onto but the very base of the wig.

    4. Wear That Bonnet Instead

    Never, and we mean NEVER, step outside to collect your delivery with your wig on.

    When the app says your rider is “2 minutes away,” remove the wig, throw on a bonnet, a scarf, or an old hairnet.  Accept the delivery, looking like you just rolled out of bed, because at least you’ll still have your wig when the transaction is done. Let the snatcher be confused by the sight of a woman in a bonnet waiting for their ₦10,000 order.

    5. Your Wig is Now Hand Luggage

    If you are going from one location to another (like your car to a venue), treat your wig like an expensive accessory.

    Wear your braids/natural hair out, or a simple scarf, while commuting. Keep your expensive wig in a silk bag, safely tucked away until you are in the parking lot or inside the venue’s restroom. If they snatch the bag, you still have your phone and keys. If they snatch the wig, well, that’s just embarrassing.


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    6. Consider Retirement (The Braids Option)

    Perhaps it’s time to retire the high-maintenance lace frontal for a few weeks and embrace a safer alternative.

    If it must be long hair, opt for a traditional sew-in weave (where the wefts are physically sewn to your cornrows) or box braids. If they try to snatch a fully sewn-in weave, they are taking your head with it. The commitment is higher, but the snatcher-proof factor is unbeatable.

    Or you know, go bald.

    7. Wear a Decoy Wig

    The only thing a thief respects is another thief, or perhaps the unexpected.

    If you’re really committed, buy the cheapest, most ridiculous party wig you can find, maybe a neon green synthetic bob and loosely perch it on your head as a decoy. If they snatch it, you’ve wasted their time, embarrassed them, and you can laugh all the way to your event with your real wig tucked away safely.


    Also Read: How to Get Cute Nails on a Budget, Right From Home

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  • Every week, Zikoko spotlights the unfiltered stories of women navigating life, love, identity and everything in between. 

    What She Said will give women the mic to speak freely, honestly and openly, without shame about sex, politics, family, survival, and everything else life throws our way.


    This week, Amaka*, 38, from Lagos, shares how taking on the role of family caretaker after her father’s death eventually led to severe burnout and a deep personal crisis. She reflects on the shock of her younger sister’s unexpected disappearance, the difficult choice between love and intervention, and how she finally learned that caring for others should not mean losing yourself.

    Can you tell me a bit about yourself?

    My name is Amaka*, I’m 38, and I grew up in Lagos. Though I’ve lived in Kaduna and Abuja at different points in my life. I work in corporate communications. I am the first of three girls, which already comes with a certain kind of responsibility that Nigerian families understand very well. Outside work, I’m still learning how to exist as a person who doesn’t have to be strong all the time. It has taken me years to realise that I don’t have to pour from an empty cup. I’m still practising it.

    What was your childhood like? Tell me how you grew up.

    Dami* and I were the siblings people thought were twins, even though we are four years apart. She is the lastborn, and being the first daughter, I naturally became her second mother from childhood. She wasn’t a spoiled lastborn; she was just deeply loved.

    Growing up in Ojodu, it was always the two of us. We shared a room until I left for university. We wore each other’s clothes without asking, we had the same taste in music, and we created inside jokes no one else understood, except sometimes Nnnena*, our sister, the second. Our house was a comfortable middle-class home. Mum worked at a bank, Daddy was a civil engineer, and there were always books around. Mum’s food, often stew, was the constant smell of evenings.

    Dami was the “sunshine” of the family. Loud, funny, dramatic in the best way. She could make a whole room laugh without trying. She got away with a lot of things our parents may have killed Nnenna and me for. If the house felt dull, everyone knew she wasn’t around. She leaned on me a lot, too. Even as adults, she would call me to follow her to the salon, go to the market with her or sit with her at home if she had a cold. I never got tired of it. I liked being needed.

    Looking back now, I think that is why everything hit me harder. We weren’t just sisters. We were best friends.

    I am very sorry for your loss. What does ‘everything’ mean? What happened? 

    My childhood was peaceful enough. Daddy was mostly quiet but present. Mum was the kind of woman who would fight heaven and hell for her girls. We were loved and protected. Our family wasn’t perfect, but it was stable… until Daddy got sick.

    He had cancer and eventually passed away, which changed everything. I was 22, and Dami was 18. Even though we had months to prepare for the loss, the grief still rearranged our lives.

    After Daddy died, I stepped into full responsibility. I supported Mum emotionally, handled bills when I could, and helped my sisters with school. Nobody asked me to do it; it just felt like the natural thing to do.

    Dami, my baby sister, reacted differently. She didn’t cope well, but she also hid things well. She still laughed, still made jokes, but something in her softened in a way that looked like sadness. She became quieter. It broke my heart. I thought it was grief. It affects us all differently. I thought she would go through it and come out of it. I tried to be there for her as much as I could, but I didn’t understand the depth of it then.

    What do you mean?

    When Dami relocated to Abuja for a job with an NGO about 10 months later, she was excited. She hadn’t started uni yet, but she wanted independence. We all thought it might be good for her. To get some distance from the house and the city that held so much memories of her father. Abuja felt like a fresh start. I saw a light in her eyes I hadn’t seen in so long.

    At first, she would call every evening to give me updates. She sounded happy. Then the calls reduced. Then the time we stayed on the line got shorter and shorter. Then she started replying to messages with one-word answers.

    She said she was tired all the time. She stopped posting her usual jokes on WhatsApp. Even her voice notes dried up.

    When she came home for Christmas, the difference was clear. She looked worse than she did when we first found out he died. She slept a lot. Ate very little. Barely talked. When she talked, she brushed everything aside with “I’m fine” or “Work is just stressful.”

    But I knew my sister. Something was wrong.

    When did you realise it was serious and not just stress?

    After that Christmas, we didn’t see my sister for 2 good years. 

    While retaining her NGO work, she enrolled in a university in Abuja and started furthering her studies. We all thought it was a good sign. She got on video calls, she walked me through everything she needed as she started school, spoke about annoying lecturers, I helped her house hunt and all that. And I thought, okay, maybe school will bring some structure back into her life. Not long after we had started talking about me visiting, I stopped hearing from her. She didn’t take my calls or respond to texts for weeks. We tried to reach her friends, but they all said they never see her for too long and no one really knows where she goes. 

    After about 2-3 weeks of silence, Nnnena and I booked our flight to Abuja. My mother had begun to have restless nights and shortness of breath. It was like she was grieving a child that was still alive. Nothing was okay. We went to her school, her house, her office, everywhere. We did not see our sister. Eventually, Nnnena had to return to Lagos to look after mum, but I stayed behind to look for her. By the time I was ready to go to the police, Dami suddenly called.

    She sounded irritated, almost angry, and said, “I’m fine. Stop stressing me. I’ll call when I can.” And she cut the call. I truly cannot tell you the anger and rage I felt in that moment. But also the relief, quickly followed by fear and worry. Where was my sister? What was she doing? Who was she becoming? 

    We had to move on with our lives. There were bills to pay and milestones to meet. She called occasionally, mostly to ask for money and on rare occasions, she picked up my calls. She never sounded like she was okay, and I begged her to talk to me, to come back to the house. I threatened her, but nothing happened. I let it go.

    After two years, she unexpectedly showed up at a family member’s wedding. It was the most surreal thing I had ever experienced. We couldn’t say or do much, as we couldn’t interrupt the wedding. When we tried to pull her aside to talk, she refused and began to cause a scene. Since she smelled heavily of alcohol, we decided not to risk a confrontation until after the ceremony. Surprisingly, she was well-behaved, and that night she agreed to stay at my place. Nnnena was in the UK at school, so I told Mum to let me take care of her for a while. I asked her to give me time. Dami completely ignored our mother and would not respond to her.

    That night, she woke me up at 2 am, crying uncontrollably. She was shaking and struggling to breathe. It was a panic attack, though I didn’t know that then. I did my best to help her calm down. Telling her to breathe and attempting to hold her. 

    After, she told me she had been having these episodes for over a year now. She said her workplace was toxic, that her supervisor threatened to fire her constantly, that she had fallen out with a close friend and didn’t feel safe with anyone in Abuja. She also admitted she had been isolating herself. No social life. No energy. No joy.

    My sister said she felt empty. And so she started taking drugs.

    I just held her. I didn’t know what to say. When she fell asleep, I called Nnenna. She suggested therapy, and I agreed. I decided to talk to her about it the next day. But the next morning, she acted like the conversation never happened. That was the moment true fear entered my chest.

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    What She Said: I Lost Myself Trying to Be Everything for Everyone


    Can you tell me more about the drug use?

    Yes. So after that conversation, Dami stayed in Lagos for about a month. We never spoke about what she brought up again, because she threatened to leave when I did. She started warming up to Mum as well. So we decided to just watch it. I kept an eye on my sister like a hawk.

    She didn’t tell us about the drug use fully at first. We found out slowly. She kept slipping, and I would keep catching her with weed. She said Abuja can be a lonely place, so she started with sleeping pills to manage the insomnia. Then weed. Then one of her new friends introduced her to something “stronger” to help her “relax.”

    The first time I saw my sister high on something harder than weed, I cried. She looked like a stranger wearing my sister’s body.

    Eventually, she returned to Abuja for her job.

    I am so sorry. What was the final straw? The moment you knew something had to change?

    Two things happened around the same time.

    First, she lost her job because of repeated absences and poor performance. She told them she was sick, which was true, but she was also spiralling.

    Second, something else happened. Mum visited her in Abuja for a weekend and found her unconscious on the bedroom floor. It wasn’t an overdose, thank God, but she was dehydrated and disoriented, and had mixed anxiety medication with alcohol. That shook her. And it shook us.

    At that point, Dami agreed to return to Lagos for a while.

    What happened when she came home?

    The first night, she slept for almost fourteen hours. I kept checking her breathing because I was scared. Over the next days, she looked like a ghost of herself. She barely ate. Barely spoke. Would suddenly cry without reason. She said her mind felt like it was shutting down.

    Mum didn’t even need an explanation. The moment she saw Dami, she started praying from pure fear.

    We decided it was not only time for psychiatric care but also rehab. She resisted at first, saying therapy was for “mad people” and that she was okay, what was wrong with us. We got a lawyer involved and got her there against her will. It is, to date, the most difficult thing I have ever done. 

    She was then diagnosed with severe burnout, depression, panic disorder and substance use disorder. Hearing the words out of a professional’s mouth made everything clearer. It wasn’t stubbornness or bad behaviour. It was an illness she had been carrying alone for too long.

    What did all of this do to your own health?

    Honestly, it broke me in ways I didn’t realise until much later. While trying to keep Dami stable, I stopped paying attention to my own mind. I wasn’t sleeping, I was constantly on edge, and I developed anxiety without having a name for it. I felt responsible for keeping her alive and functioning, and that pressure sat on my chest every day. I also felt a lot of guilt. I kept asking myself why I didn’t notice the signs earlier or why I couldn’t fix things fast enough. It took a toll on my self-esteem and the way I moved through life.

    When did you start your healing process?

    After Dami got into rehab, everything I’d been ignoring caught up with me. I realised I was burnt out. A friend was actually the one who suggested therapy for me, not just my sister. I started going because what else could I do? Nnnena had been on our necks for it for months now. The self-awareness that came with it helped me separate myself from the role of “fixer.” I learned that supporting someone doesn’t mean losing myself. Now I take breaks, I set boundaries, and I allow myself to rest without feeling guilty.

    And Dami’s healing process?

    Slow, hard and hopeful. Rehab helped, medication helped, but the biggest part was the daily work. Even after she was released, we created routines at home: morning walks, breakfast together, journaling, limiting screen time, and talking. On some days, she came home from therapy lighter. On some days, she came home drained.

    There were weekends she didn’t leave her room. I would sit on her bed and keep her company. Sometimes we watched old Nigerian films just to fill the silence.

    Healing wasn’t linear. She relapsed into silence several times. She cancelled therapy appointments. She doubted herself constantly. But she kept trying.

    Eventually, she resigned from her Abuja job completely, which bruised her confidence, but it gave her space to breathe again.


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    What moment made you feel like your sister was coming back?

    The first time she made us laugh again. Real laughter. We were watching a ridiculous telenovela, and she mimicked the actor so well that Mum choked on her tea. The house suddenly felt like home again. I felt like my sisters and I were between the ages of 14 and 18 again.

    Another moment was when she said she wanted to volunteer at one of the many NGOs mum had her hands in. She said she didn’t want to advise anyone, but she could help sort files or arrange chairs. That told me she was reconnecting with the world.

    Where is everyone now? How are things today? 

    Mum now fully understands mental health and the problems that can come with not looking after your own. It’s not just prayer and church. She even reminds us of therapy appointments. That is growth.

    Dami is a decade and some years clean. After finishing school, she started working remotely as a program officer for a different NGO in Abuja. My sister journals, meditates, goes to therapy consistently and takes her health seriously. She has bad days, but she doesn’t hide them anymore. She lets us hold her.

    Nnnena has a thriving job and family in Manchester. We visit sometimes. So does she. I am happy she got to escape the bulk of the problems.

    As for me, I am good. Truly good. I sleep. I laugh. I have a relationship that doesn’t drain me. And I no longer describe myself as the strong one. I am just a woman learning to live.

    Looking back, what did this whole experience teach you about love, family and womanhood?

    Strong women break too. That love cannot replace professional help. That caring for someone, even your sister, should not mean losing yourself. That sometimes the loudest people are carrying the heaviest pain. And that healing is slow, messy and absolutely possible.

    If you could say one thing to another Nigerian woman caring for a struggling sibling, what would it be?

    You are not a saviour. You are a sister. And you deserve softness too. Get support. Rest. Let people care for you. Get your sibling the professional support they need. There are so many free and discounted options out there today. 


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  • Every week, Zikoko spotlights the unfiltered stories of women navigating life, love, identity and everything in between. 

    What She Said will give women the mic to speak freely, honestly and openly, without shame about sex, politics, family, survival, and everything else life throws our way.


    This week, Crystal*, 27, from Port Harcourt, shares how giving too much of herself in university left her emotionally, financially, and physically drained and how hitting rock bottom forced her to rebuild from nothing. She reflects on people-pleasing, boundaries, queerness, and the lessons she wishes she could tell her younger self.

    What was university life like for you? Who were you then?

    Back in university, I was that person who liked to help in any way I could. I opened my home to people who needed a place to stay. I wasn’t an introvert or extrovert, just somewhere in between, an ambivert who could blend into most spaces. Football connected me to even more people. I formed the first female football team in ABSU, and before I knew it, I was coaching girls, organising training, and being the person people gravitated toward. That’s how I became a bit popular.

    That sounds nice and fulfilling. 

    It was. I was the dependable friend. The one everyone came to with their crises, their financial troubles, their heartbreaks, even their exam panic. I didn’t think of it as a burden at the time. I thought that was what made me good. I was young, queer, still figuring myself out, and I felt like being useful made me worthy.

    Then what happened?

    Something slowly started happening. A friend would ask me to explain a course to them. Another would need money. Someone else would need emotional support. Before I knew it, I had become the person everyone came to for everything. It started to feel like I didn’t have the option to stop.

    It clicked when one girl made herself my best friend. She drained me emotionally, financially, and academically. We were in the same department, and during exams she would sit by me, distract me, and rely on me to carry her through. Outside of exams, she always wanted to move as a pair. Then there was the money—small, small things that added up. She would guilt-trip me into helping. I didn’t realise how much it took from me until much later. She sold me this idea of keeping my mysteriousness if I wanted, but that I should learn to have fun, like, “Let’s loosen you up.”

    Not long after her, everybody came to me. If they needed money, they came. If they needed a place to sleep, they came. If they needed emotional support, it was me again. But when I slipped into depression, when I genuinely needed someone, not one person showed up.

    I’m sorry. What was happening with you at that point?

    I started drinking too much. People judged me. They criticised me so badly that I eventually saw a therapist and a psychiatrist. It was very bad, emotionally, psychologically, and financially. I didn’t even recognise myself.

    Do you know why you stepped so deeply into that caregiver role?

    It was how I was raised. I grew up being the person who did everything. From cleaning, caring, and fixing everything. I react badly to dirt, so even in the hostel, people used it against me. They’d do everything and leave the work for me. I was raised to care about everyone’s feelings first. So in school, that translated into becoming the one who always sorted things out.

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    What She Said: I Dropped Out of School to Japa, Then My Brother Snitched


    At what point did it stop feeling like helping and start feeling like a trap?

    When people started expecting it. When it became my reputation. “Go to Crystal, she’ll solve it.” One girl had lost her accommodation after graduating, and people told her, “Just go to her. She’ll house you.”

    For once, I couldn’t come through; they labelled me everything under the sun. I was suddenly stingy, wicked, or acting brand new. I realised I had been boxed into a role I didn’t even know I was playing.

    Did you stop being a “Yes woman”?

    I was scared that if I stopped, people would say I’d been fake all along, that I only helped to be liked. So I kept going, even when it was killing me.

    At some point, they actually created a WhatsApp group just to talk about me. An association of bad friends gathered to drag me. That broke me.

    What did overextending yourself do to your own life?

    It destroyed it. I wasn’t looking after myself. I lost focus. I went from an A student to a B, then a C, then a D. I remember one day thinking, Crystal, you’ve lost yourself. My self-esteem dropped. I was stressed, burnt out, and academically gone. I thought I was impacting lives, but looking back, those people weren’t worth it. That realisation pushed me into human rights work later, but at the time, it was just pain.

    Did you ever warn yourself, even a little?

    Yes. I prayed about it. I talked to myself. I felt something was wrong, but I still kept going because it was all I knew.

    What was the lowest point for you?

    When drugs entered the picture, my so-called friends introduced me to smoking. I lost focus, abandoned my studies, and my finances scattered. Then my rent expired, and I had nowhere to go.

    Funny enough, people I’d housed before had empty beds, but they refused to help. Some even wanted me to beg and grovel. These were people who’d eaten my food, worn my clothes, and slept in my room. Instead of support, they judged me. Again.

    When did it finally hit you that you were truly alone?

    When I couldn’t get food. Not even food. I realised I had mingled with the wrong crowd. That was my awakening. From there, I started rewriting my story.

    How did all of that make you feel?

    Angry. Embarrassed. Foolish. Betrayed. All the bad emotions you can think of, and eventually, severe depression followed. I wasn’t myself for years.

    I’m sorry. How has all this changed your approach to friendship?

    Now, I’m sceptical. I’m scared to invest in anyone. I’ve seen shege. I know what neglect feels like. I value friendships, yes, but I need proof that it won’t end the same way.

    If you could rewrite anything, what would you do differently?

    I would have invested in myself. All the money I spent fueling friendships, I should have used to look good, eat well, enjoy myself, book a hotel room and rest, anything. I would’ve closed my doors more. I would’ve chosen quality people. I regret wasting my time on people who added nothing to my life.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    How did all this shape your life at the time?

    It changed my whole life trajectory. Academically, emotionally, and financially, everything took a hit. I entered adulthood empty. I was doing anything just to survive. I finished school but owed tuition, so I couldn’t go for NYSC. I watched my peers move on with their lives while I was stuck with no job, no support system, no money, no direction. I was alone. Completely.

    How did you eventually begin climbing out of that place?

    I changed my circle. Completely. I started following changemakers in the queer community, people who were doing the kind of work I admired. I learnt digital skills. I built capacity. Then I started an online consultancy for NGOs, small businesses, and startups, helping them build trust and visibility with clear, authentic communication. Storytelling, social media strategy, creative campaign ideas, all the things I’m naturally good at.

    This December makes it a year. And honestly, it has given me visibility and credibility I didn’t expect. I volunteer now as a Communications person for a queer organisation. I’m a poet, a facilitator, a queer advocate. I’m not where I want to be yet, but I’m not empty anymore.

    What boundary is hardest for you now?

    Access. People having free access to me, using friendship to exploit me. Even family. The hardest boundary was saying no and not becoming the yes-person again.

    Did your queerness affect the kind of relationships you had?

    Yes. Most people who did this to me were queer too. Because as a masc-presenting woman, you know the struggles, family issues, money, and shelter, so we leaned on each other a lot. My queerness shaped how much I gave, because community felt like survival.

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

    When you look back at university, to the girl who gave and gave and gave, how do you feel toward her now?

    I feel sad for her. She thought love was earned through labour. She thought saving other people would save her, too. If I could speak to her now, I’d tell her, “No one is coming to save you but you. Be there for yourself first. You are enough. Stop breaking your back for people who won’t lift a finger for you. You’re brave. You can do anything. Wealth is calling your name.”

    And what would you tell young queer women who are giving too much of themselves?

    Look for the warning signs early. Check your circle often. Don’t let people overuse you. Build relationships that bring peace, money, joy, and boost your self-worth. Sieve your circle. Protect yourself. You deserve that.


    Also Read: We Opened Our Relationship. Then He Had a Problem With Me Kissing a Man

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  • If you’ve spent any time on Nigerian Twitter, you know the men who treat women’s misfortune as entertainment. They don’t organise. They don’t have meetings. They don’t wear matching jerseys. But somehow, they always move like a team. Over the years, people started calling them “banger boys, not because they’re clever or insightful, but because they’ve realised that tweeting incendiary things about women is the fastest way to go viral. They treat harassment like a hobby, misogyny like a personality trait, and violence like an engagement strategy.

    Every few months, like clockwork, a woman’s name trends for the wrong reasons. Trace the threats, the sexualized rumours, the photoshopped screenshots, the dogpiling, and it almost always leads back to the same type of men. 

    Earlier this month was no different. 

    When decade-old tweets by Ezra Olubi resurfaced, we saw something predictable happen. The tweets, posted between 2009 and 2013, contained sexually explicit comments about colleagues, references to minors, and other disturbing content. Paystack immediately suspended him, barring an investigation, and this week, fully terminated his contract. The conversation should have been about accountability.

    Instead, a familiar group of men immediately shifted their focus to the feminist women around him. Kiki Mordi. Ozzy Etomi. Uloma. Women who didn’t write those tweets. Women who condemned them. Women who, in some cases, had distanced themselves from him years ago. None of that mattered.

    All these men needed was an opening, and they rushed in. Suddenly, these women became the villains in a story that wasn’t theirs. Screenshots, real or manufactured, resurfaced. Threads full of half-facts and full confidence circulated.

    The goal wasn’t accountability. It was retaliation. A man was accused of harm, and their first instinct was to harm the women standing near him.

    If anyone needs convincing that this is a pattern, the receipts are right there:

    The Omoloto Harassment

    Men fabricated a story about Omoloto being pregnant for a “banger boy,” added lies about abortions, and circulated it until it became “truth.” The goal? Humiliate her into silence. It worked. She disappeared from the timeline for months.

    The Asherikine Date Girl Doxxing

    A harmless date video went viral. Within hours, these men turned an ordinary interaction into a scandal, dug up the woman’s identity, attacked her body, her family, and her hometown. 

    The Faree Harassment Campaigns

    During a disagreement between two male influencers, they somehow moved the conversation and laser-focused on Faree. Called her slurs. Circulated rumours. Used misogynistic tropes, “industry babe,” “runs girl,” “clout chaser”, until it escalated into doxxing and actual threats.

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    Also Read: “I Woke Up to Something Poking Between My Legs”- 6 Women on Being Violated By People They Least Expected


    Ayra Starr’s Harassment

    Even women who aren’t in the spotlight for activism or feminism aren’t safe. Take Ayra, for example. Banger boys repeatedly spread rumours about her, telling everyone her breath “stinks,” attacking her appearance, and turning personal traits into public ridicule. This harassment wasn’t random; it was organized, repetitive, and designed to humiliate.

    This month, the abuse escalated. Trolls didn’t just insult her body; they digitally stripped it using AI, creating a fake nude image from one of her photos and circulating it widely. The image-based assault sparked another coordinated smear campaign, reviving claims about her “bad breath” and supposed hygiene issues. The account responsible was eventually suspended, but the damage was already done: the smear became content, the fake image travelled faster than any correction, and her dignity was publicly violated. What started as “banter” became a full-fledged digital attack.

    Any Woman With a Voice Becomes a Target

    The attacks aren’t reserved for card-carrying feminists. They’re for any woman, period, but more specifically for those who dare to be visible, successful, or opinionated. If you’re a woman online, your existence is up for debate, your choices are ammunition, and your achievements are suspicious.

    Celebrities making personal choices: When Temi Otedola took her husband’s surname after marrying Mr Eazi in 2025, it should have been unremarkable. Instead, men turned it into a weapon. They didn’t just celebrate her choice; they weaponised it against other women. Suddenly, she became the “good wife” in their manufactured morality play, proof that feminists were “doing it wrong.” These Banger Boys used one woman’s personal decision to shame every woman who chose differently. It was never about Temi. It was about creating a standard they could beat other women with.

    Women in entertainment: Female musicians, actresses, Nollywood stars, and content creators, the moment they achieve visibility, the questions start. Who is she dating? How did she afford that? She must have “helped” someone important. Body commentary. Outfit policing. Accusations of “sleeping their way to the top.” The more successful the woman, the more convinced these men are that she couldn’t have earned it.

    Professional women: Female tech founders. Women in executive positions. Creative directors. Entrepreneurs. A woman builds something, and instead of acknowledging her work, they start asking questions: Whose idea was it really? Who funded her? Which man is behind her success? What did she really do to get there? They can’t fathom that competence might be the answer, so they invent stories that centre on men and sex.

    Women with opinions: You don’t even need to be famous. A woman tweets something that goes viral, maybe it’s funny, insightful, controversial, and the banger boys descend. If they can’t attack the argument, they attack her appearance, her relationship status, her follower count, her past tweets. They’ll find a photo, a screenshot, an old post. They’ll make her regret being smart in public.

    Feminist activists: And then there are the women who actually name the problem. The ones who call out misogyny directly, who organise, who refuse to be quiet. They get the full treatment: ashawo, hypocrite, fake activist, bad mother, bitter, “no husband energy,” “you just need good dick.” It’s a script so tired you can predict the insults before they type them. But they never get tired of performing it.

    The underlying message: Stay small. Stay quiet. Don’t achieve too much. Don’t have opinions. Don’t make choices they don’t approve of. And definitely don’t call them out. Be a good “traditional” woman.

    Even then, you’re not safe. Because the truth is, there’s no “right” way to be a woman online that protects you from their violence. Traditional or modern, married or single, successful or struggling, feminist or apolitical, they will find a reason. The target isn’t feminism. The target is women. Feminism is just the most convenient excuse.

    Here’s the thing about the banger boy playbook: It hasn’t changed in a decade.

    • Sexualize the woman.
    • Question her morality.
    • Manufacture evidence if you have to.
    • Doxx her.
    • Attack her family.
    • Call it “bants.”
    • Repeat.

    Nothing about this moment is new. What is new is the speed and precision with which they rewrite the narrative every time. A woman becomes a trending topic, and within hours, a full ecosystem of men reorganises the internet around her humiliation. They don’t need a reason; they only need an opportunity. Whether it’s a resurfaced scandal, a viral tweet, a celebrity’s wedding, a feminist critique, or a woman simply existing too loudly, they activate the same machinery with the same intention: shut her up.

    In Banger Boys’ hands, the internet becomes a weapon, and women become the battleground, our names dragged, bodies dissected, histories distorted, successes questioned, safety compromised. And they do it with the confidence of men who believe there are no consequences, because most times, there aren’t.

    What gets framed as “banter” is actually gender-based digital violence. It is coordinated, strategic, and deeply misogynistic. It follows women across platforms, across years, even offline. It ruins reputations, threatens safety, actively harms mental health, and pushes countless women into silence.

    The names change. The hashtags rotate. The victims shift. But the cruelty, the entitlement, the misogyny, the weaponisation of visibility stay exactly the same.

    The real story is not the trending topic or the latest scandal. It is the ecosystem that allows coordinated harassment to thrive unchecked. Platforms, bystanders, and users cannot stay silent. Women deserve safety online. Misogyny should not be normalised as “banter.” And until those in power enforce consequences, these men will continue to find new victims, while the rest of us watch.


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  • Every week, Zikoko spotlights the unfiltered stories of women navigating life, love, identity and everything in between. 

    What She Said will give women the mic to speak freely, honestly and openly, without shame about sex, politics, family, survival, and everything else life throws our way.


    This week, Amanda*, 28, shares her story of marriage, betrayal, and finding herself again. From blind trust to realising the signs were there all along, her story is raw, unfiltered, and full of lessons every woman navigating love needs to hear.

    Can you tell me a little about yourself outside marriage — work, family, who you were before him?

    Before I met him, I was running my small online business. Nothing big, but it paid my bills and kept me comfortable. I was living in a room, a self-con, and my parents weren’t rich, but we were okay. I’m the first child, with three younger siblings. I’ve always been an easygoing person with no friends and not the type to tell people what was going on in my life. I lived far from my family, but we spoke often. I just kept things to myself.

    How did you meet him, and how did things start between you two?

    We met through a mutual friend, but we didn’t date until three years later. For those three years, we just viewed each other’s WhatsApp status and said “hi” once in a while. He would randomly pop up after months of no conversation, tell me he had been crushing on me, that I was hardworking, and that he wanted us to date. I wasn’t seeing anyone, and I wanted to give love a chance again. He also looked responsible, always posting about how men who treat women badly were terrible. So I believed he understood women, and that he was a good man.

    What was the beginning of the relationship like?

    It wasn’t smooth, but it wasn’t rough either. We didn’t live in the same state, and he said his job kept him very busy. The first day I accepted to date him, he borrowed ₦30k from me. That should have been the biggest red flag, but I told myself his bank app not working could happen to anyone. He said he’d send it back at midnight when the network was back. Till today, I have never seen that ₦30k again. In fact, that was the beginning of me borrowing him money constantly, even after marriage, it increased to ₦500k and ₦1m at a time. I gave because I believed love was about giving.

    Looking back now, when did you start noticing signs?

    Honestly, the signs were there from the beginning. Our conversations were always about him needing money or being broke. The first monetary “gift” he gave me, he borrowed 70% of it back three days later and never paid it back. But because he was a health professional and always said he was busy, I excused everything. I showed up for him with the little profit from my business.

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    What She Said: At 40, I’m Still Under My Brother’s Thumb


    When and how did he propose? And why did you say yes?

    We had been dating seriously for a few months at that point, and one day he just told me he wanted us to get married. He made it sound very responsible, very thoughtful,  like he had our future all planned out. I felt like I could trust him.

    I said yes because I wanted love to work. I believed in giving it a chance, in sacrifice, in making a home together. At that time, he looked so composed, so like the kind of man who respected women, and I wanted to believe in that. I also thought that if marriage were like my parents’, love would mean showing up for each other no matter what. It felt right in my head and my heart, even though some things didn’t sit perfectly. 

    I did start to have serious doubts 3 weeks before the wedding. All his red flags played over and over again in my head. 

    What stopped you?

    I thought I was pregnant. I also didn’t want to disappoint my parents and everyone excited about the wedding. I’d spent so much, sold my things, leased out my apartment, so I felt too deep into it to turn back.

    To me, love was sacrifice. I believed marriage meant showing up for each other, no matter what. My parents aren’t perfect, but what they have is real. I thought every marriage could be like theirs if you put in the work. Someone once told me, “What if your parents’ marriage isn’t as beautiful as it looks?” I didn’t want to fail at something they succeeded at. That belief made me stay.

    So you married him?

    Yes.

    What changed after the wedding?

    Everything. He started hanging out with a friend I didn’t know existed until after the wedding. At first, it was, “Let’s go to his place together.” Then it turned to him sleeping over there, sending his friend money for food while I stayed at home hungry. One day, I checked his phone while he was bathing and found out that all the times he claimed he was at work, he was actually at that friend’s house, living like a bachelor. He didn’t wear his ring except when he was near the house or at the gate. I would see him take it off when he stepped out of the house, and sometimes, from our bedroom window, I would see him put it back on, on his way in. 

    Even though I had moved to his city to live with him after the wedding, five months in, we were practically living apart for about eight months. During that period, he ghosted me. No messages, nothing. When he did reach out, it was just to fight, insult, and then block me again.

    What was it like being alone in a new city while he stayed out?

    At first, I tried not to take it to heart, even though it hurt. I knew no one in that city, no friends, no family. So when he said he was working, I felt helpless. I remember one night, I was very sick and bleeding heavily. I called him, and he claimed he was at work, but I could hear music and his friend’s voice in the background. I cried the whole night. I loved him too much to see what he was doing to me.

    What did relocating away from your job and family do to you mentally?

    It broke me. I hid everything from my family, so nobody knew what I was going through. At some point, I even blocked everyone because I didn’t want to break down and reveal the truth.


    You’ll Like: “Women are More Intense” — 9 Bisexual Women on Dating Men Versus Women


    What happened next? 

    I had a three-year-old daughter when I met him. She didn’t live with me, and I didn’t pay her bills; her father did, but I told everyone, including him, that I had a child. He said he didn’t mind. Later, he started telling me I couldn’t leave him because people would insult me for being a single mum twice. His words stayed in my head. I would imagine what people would say, and it scared me. I started having anxiety whenever I even thought about leaving.

    I’m sorry. What do you remember most vividly from those early months?

    The way he shut me out. The way he talked to other women while I was there. The names he called me. Even when I apologised for things I didn’t do, he didn’t care. He wanted me beneath him.

    They told me pregnancy would change him. One time during a fight, he called me a “useless woman who can’t get pregnant.” I fasted and prayed just to conceive. Two years into the marriage, I finally did. I was excited. He didn’t react, but I told myself men rarely show emotion.

    Weeks later, he stopped coming home. Completely shut me out. My blood pressure got high, and the doctor said I needed a CS. Till the day I gave birth, he didn’t speak to me. He dropped me off at the hospital and went back to his friend’s house. I had to sort baby things and hospital bills myself.

    How were you coping day-to-day when he would disappear for weeks or months?

    I coped with neighbours and friends outside. But once I got home, I cried. I was always hungry. At times, while I was pregnant, I survived on only water.

    What was the moment you realised the marriage was truly a mistake?

    When people around him, not even my own friends, started telling me to leave. They pointed out patterns I couldn’t see because I thought I was in love.

    Before I walked into that wedding, I wish someone had told me that I didn’t need to rush. We dated for only a few months. I wish someone had told me to take my time and get to know him properly.

    How did you leave?

    The day I decided to leave, we didn’t have a fight; he just woke up and stopped talking to me. Then I realised the pattern. He does this whenever he wants to leave home for months and doesn’t want to be called or questioned about his whereabouts 

    I called my brother to get me an apartment, picked up my child and moved out. He started threatening me, begging and threatening me again. But I’ve left, and I’m never looking back. 

    It has been almost 6 months since I left, and I’m doing much better. He randomly reaches out to send money, but that’s just it, in his words, “he sends those small small change so in the future I won’t tell the child I did it all”.

    What did those four years teach you about yourself?

    The four years I spent with him taught me that I can become anything. I went from a woman who could barely feed herself to someone who now helps other women make millions.

    Healing looks like sleeping peacefully, not worrying, and making my own money. Just living life the way I want.

    Love isn’t begging for respect. I recently started talking to someone, and I realised you can be angry at someone and still show up for them. You can still care. That alone shocked me.

    Finally, what would you tell another woman who sees the signs but is scared to leave?

    People will talk, but people will talk either way. Leave if you need to.


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  • For many bisexual women, relationships with men and women feel very different. Not always because of attraction, but because of how intimacy shows up in their relationships. With some partners, there is care, trust, and the freedom to be vulnerable. With others, there is caution, testing, and walls that never come down. It is the difference between feeling truly seen and feeling like you always have to perform or protect yourself. 

    We asked nine bisexual women: What does it feel like to date women, and how is it different from dating men? How does intimacy change when the gender of your partner changes, even though your capacity to love stays the same?

    Bisexual Women

    1. “With women, the baseline is already care” — Mimi*, 25

    Women are generally more gentle, even during intimacy. What men do and call the greatest acts of love is what women call the basic standard. It is not even a competition; the bar for men is so low that when they do the bare minimum, we are expected to throw a parade. But with women, the baseline is already care, thoughtfulness and showing up fully.

    With women, you have to put more effort, but you want to, and it feels easier because of the understanding and the love. There is no pretending or performing a version of yourself that you think they want to see. You can be vulnerable with ease because if it is genuine, it will be matched. Band for band. Energy for energy. Women are a lot easier to love because the love feels mutual and reciprocal in a way that does not require convincing or decoding.

    You can easily tell when a woman wants you. The mixed signals are a lot with men, the hot and cold, the I’m not ready for a relationship, but let me act like your boyfriend, all that confusion. With women, there is clarity. When she is interested, you know. When she cares, you feel it. It is not a guessing game.

    2. “Dating women is a lot more intimate and intense” — Layo*, 22

    I feel truly seen when I am with women. With men, everything I do feels like a test to see if I am truly wife material. It is all performance. The most common thing a lot of women would relate to is being asked what they can cook. When men ask that 95 per cent of the time, they are sizing you up for a long-term girlfriend or a quick smash. If a woman asks me, it is genuine curiosity wanting to know more about you and evaluate shared activities.

    I used to label myself as bisexual in uni, but that does not fit me anymore. I also cannot call myself a lesbian because I still find a few men attractive, so I stick to queer. With men, sex always feels like a threat, and I cannot wait for it to be over. I can count the number of times guys have made me cum on one hand. With women, I am more present, feel loved and cherished and reciprocate that even to masculine women. Romance with ladies feels divine. I find myself anticipating holding hands.

    3. “I mostly date men because it is easier socially” — Amina*, 28

    I have always been attracted to women, but in my twenties, I found it simpler to date men. Society made queer relationships harder to navigate; my bisexuality often felt invisible or complicated. With men, dating followed the expected script: family approval, public outings, and Instagram-friendly appearances. It was not that I preferred men; it was just easier to be seen and accepted.

    Even though I would prefer to explore my attraction to women, I value safety and predictability. I notice the men who are genuinely attentive and emotionally available. They are rare, but when they exist, they make me feel cherished in ways my experiences with women have not always allowed.

    4. “One lacks emotional safety, the other is rooted in it” — Semi*, 30

    The difference between dating men versus women is clear: one lacks emotional safety, the other is rooted in it. My last relationship with a woman, despite being short, was the most I ever felt like a woman in a relationship. The thoughtfulness, the gentleness, the safety, it was everything I had not found in a man. Some may think I have the tendency to cheat because I am attracted to both genders, but it is not the case. I am polyamorous, bisexual, not a cheating one.

    If I had to summarise dating men versus women in a sentence, one is like eating an apple, the other is a juicy pineapple. You gerrit?

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    Next Read: 9 Nigerian Women on Navigating Gender Roles in Same-Sex Relationships


    5. “It is like having a best friend you can also make love to.” — Hope*, 31

    Dating men is like walking a landmine. You are waiting for him to inevitably say something stupid or misogynistic. I have not dated a man in a long time because I am tired of them. Some barely hide their dislike for women while claiming to love them.

    With women, it is consuming. Our capacity to love and be empathetic makes romantic relationships deeper from the start. Being with a woman is delicious, it is like having a best friend you can also make love to. Nobody can love a woman like another woman. This is true even for non-romantic relationships, which is why it feels like death whenever it ends. Just search WLW breakups on TikTok. It’s a universal experience.

    The first time I kissed a girl versus a boy, I felt a clear difference. I catch the ick quickly with men and cut them off. I forget them or block them immediately. With women, I am softer, more willing to be vulnerable, protective. Masc or femme does not matter; that is still my girl. I can cuddle for hours and show affection without overthinking.

    6. “Dating men allows me to avoid constantly explaining myself or worrying about judgment.” — Chiamaka*, 35

    I am attracted to women and men, but I often date men because it is less complicated socially and professionally. Growing up in Lagos, queer relationships have always needed secrecy. Dating men allows me to avoid constantly explaining myself or worrying about judgment.

    With men, I can experience care and attention without having to decode mixed signals or fearing societal scrutiny. I enjoy affectionate gestures, shared routines and knowing my partner is protective and supportive. I also enjoy sex with men just as much as I do with women. However, it is not that I prefer men, but the stability they give allows me space to navigate my identity with less stress.


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    7. “We both just equally fall into this rhythm of over-loving” — Starr*, 26

    There are differences beyond them being men or women; there’s also the difference of whether they’re bisexual, lesbian, straight, or just individual differences. I wouldn’t say there’s a stark difference between men and women strictly. 

    Generally, dating queer people, especially bisexual people, is easier. You feel normal with them. It’s more open. You share so many things, especially community, which is very important for queer people.

    With men, I feel like I am doing too much, giving too much. Most men are not in tune with emotions or vulnerability, which builds walls. With women, we fall into a rhythm of over-loving. We are besties, lovers, family. I’m not out, but she is close to my family, and I know hers. It feels like sharing a life force. Fights rarely destroy the relationship. Even after separation, there is care. With men, breakups need someone to be at fault. With women, those are my shawties, my ride-or-dies.

    I have been misunderstood because of my bisexuality. A man once accused me of cheating just because I was affectionate with a female friend. Focus on me, not the labels or expectations.

    8. “With men there is always this wall I keep up” — Wunmi*, 19

    I have only been with one woman, but I loved it way more than with any other gender. The difference was immediate, night and day.

    I used to send nudes freely to her, whereas with men, I cringed at the thought. It was not about the nudes themselves; it was trust. With men, there is a lingering discomfort of feeling objectified. With women, there is no fear of weaponisation.

    I was more emotionally available with her. Vulnerable and intimate conversations were not forced; they were natural. People have misunderstood my bisexuality. A boy laughed when I told him I was bi-, it felt dismissive. With women, I can just be.

    9. “Things changed when she found out I was bi. She feared I could leave her for a man.” — Tomi*, 29

    I prefer women, but have only been with one so far. Earlier this year, I liked a girl who assumed I was a lesbian. Things changed when she found out I was bi. She feared I could leave her for a man. We had many conversations, but we eventually stopped talking. I understand her reservations. I had only dated men before being single for years, and had only one woman in my life. I probably seemed like a bi-curious girl looking to play, but I genuinely liked her and saw potential for long-term. That ship has sailed, but I still think of her.

    Loyalty is packed into my psyche. I live for love. I cannot betray or cheat anyone I love. Once I commit, I see it through, whether man or woman. Many past relationships should have ended long ago, but I held on because of the depth of my feelings.


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  • Talk True is a Zikoko limited series for medical myth-busting. With each episode, we’ll talk to medical professionals about commonly misunderstood health issues to get the actual facts.


    As a child, I had very clear skin. When my older cousins started breaking out, I was sure it would never happen to me. And for a while, it didn’t, until 17, when I woke up with half my face covered in painful cystic acne. I tried everything: pharmacy prescriptions, black soap, toothpaste, lemon juice, Cacatin, shea butter; if someone recommended it, I used it. Nothing worked.

    My skin didn’t start healing until I simplified my routine and stopped following every “skincare rule” I thought I knew. Looking back, I realised most of what I grew up believing was just bad advice.

    It made me curious about the myths other women also had to unlearn. So I asked 16 women to share theirs and got Dr Olufolakemi Cole-Adeife, a consultant dermatologist, to debunk them.

    1. “If you have oily skin, you don’t need moisturiser”— Chioma, 32, Marketing Executive

    Growing up, my older sister told me that putting cream on oily skin was like adding fuel to a fire. So for years, I’d wash my face and leave it bare, thinking I was doing the right thing. My skin was constantly shiny by midday, and I’d blot with tissue paper every hour. It wasn’t until a dermatologist explained that my skin was overcompensating for dehydration that everything clicked. Now I use a lightweight gel moisturiser, and ironically, my skin produces less oil than it did when I was avoiding moisturiser completely.

    Expert Opinion: Moisturization helps control oil, and when the skin is dehydrated, it may cause it to produce more oil. For oily skin, choose a lightweight, non-comedogenic formula that is more water-based or a gel formula.

    2. “Higher price means better product. Expensive cream = clear skin” — Aza, 27, Content Creator

    Good old YouTube and social media are where I learned this skincare rule from. I’d watch these beauty influencers with glowing skin use ₦50,000 serums, and I genuinely believed that was the secret. It worked at first, or at least that’s what people around me were saying, then my face went back to its usual rough, black, spot-ridden self. I kept buying really expensive toners and serums, thinking I just needed to find the right one. Instead, I broke out in fungal acne and had the dullest skin of my life. My bank account suffered too.

    The turning point came when I started investigating the actual ingredients in products rather than just the price tags. I realised there’s more to skincare than just having one particular skin type. When I saw no improvements for months despite spending so much, I knew something was wrong. Now I know that expensive doesn’t mean it’s good. I’ve also learned that results aren’t as immediate as the YouTube girlies make them seem. It can take time, and that’s fine. Less is more. I buy smaller sizes to test things out first, which saves me from wasting money and having regrets.

    Expert Opinion: The price doesn’t always correlate with efficacy. Sometimes all you are paying for is the brand name. What really matters is proven, science-backed ingredients and formulations.

    3. “No need to go to a dermatologist, just know your skin type and find products that have the skin type tag” — Ngozi, 45, School Administrator

    My mother taught me this skincare rule, and I passed it on to my daughter before I knew better. The logic seemed sound: figure out if you’re oily, dry, or combination, then buy products labelled for that skin type. I never thought I’d need a doctor for something as simple as skincare. But over the years, I developed hyperpigmentation that wouldn’t fade no matter what ‘for dark spots’ cream I bought. Then came the psoriasis. It started small, just a few patches I thought were dry skin, but it spread. That’s when I finally went to see a dermatologist. I cried in that office when she showed me what years of using the wrong products had done. Now my rule is simple: anywhere it hurts, go to who knows best, doctors.

    Expert Opinion: Skin concerns are more complex than “types”, and we all have unique concerns that transcend skin types. A dermatologist consultation will address real issues with evidence-based solutions in a personalised way.

    4. “You only need sunscreen on sunny days” — Folake, 29, Graphic Designer

    Lagos’ weather is unpredictable; one minute it’s sunny, the next it’s raining. I only wore sunscreen when I knew I’d be under direct sunlight for extended periods, like on beach trips. Regular cloudy or rainy days? I didn’t bother. I couldn’t understand why my dark spots weren’t fading despite using all the brightening products. A dermatologist friend finally explained that UVA rays can get inside a building as well. I was getting sun damage while sitting by my office window every single day. Now my sunscreen sits right next to my toothbrush; it’s that non-negotiable.

    Expert Opinion: Ultraviolet B rays are low on cloudy days, but UVA rays are present even on cloudy, rainy, and indoor days (UVA can penetrate glass). UVA is a major trigger or aggravator of hyperpigmentation, so please use sunscreen every day!

    5. “Drinking lots of water hydrates your skin enough” — Amaka, 35, Pharmacist

    You’d think that as a pharmacist, I’d know better, but even I fell for this skincare rule. I drank at least three litres of water daily and genuinely believed my skin would be plump and hydrated from the inside out. Don’t get me wrong, I felt great internally, and my body appreciated it. But my skin? Still dry and flaky, especially around my nose and forehead. I finally accepted that while water is essential, my skin barrier needed direct, topical help. Adding a good moisturiser to my routine made all the difference. Now I do both: hydrate from within and nourish from the outside.

    Expert Opinion: Water is great for overall health, but the skin still needs topical hydration and moisturisers for the best results.

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    You’ll Also Enjoy: 10 Nigerian Influencers Share the One Skincare Product They Swear By


    6. “Natural ingredients are always safer or better, and gentler than clinical treatments” — Temi, 38, Small Business Owner

    I was that person who swore by everything ‘natural’ and ‘organic.’ Chemical-free this, plant-based that. If it came from the earth, it had to be better than something made in a lab, right? I made face masks from ingredients in my kitchen: turmeric, honey, raw tomatoes, you name it. Then I tried raw lemon juice as a toner because someone on Instagram said it would brighten my skin. I got burns. My face was red, stinging, and peeling for weeks. That’s when I learned that natural doesn’t automatically mean safe. Now I look for products that have been properly tested and formulated, whether they’re natural or not.

    Expert Opinion: Some natural products can irritate the skin, too. Isn’t poison ivy or “werepe” natural? Safety comes from proper testing, not just from being “natural” or unprocessed.

    7. “Black/darker skin doesn’t need sunscreen” — Jennifer, 42, HR Manager

    I genuinely believed melanin was enough protection. I’d hear about sunscreen and think, ‘That’s for oyinbo people.’ Why would I need it when I’m already dark? But after a beach vacation where I thought I was immune to sun damage, I came back with dark patches that took months to fade. The sun doesn’t discriminate. Now I wear SPF 50 every single day, rain or shine. My skin has never looked more even.

    Expert Opinion: Darker skin can burn, tan unevenly, and is prone to hyperpigmentation from the sun’s rays. Sunscreen is more important for lighter skin tones to prevent skin cancer, but it is important for darker skin as well to prevent hyperpigmentation and premature skin ageing.


    You’ll Love: Why Nigerian Women Still Need Sunscreen, According to Olapeju


    8. “Your skin gets used to a product, so it stops working” — Blessing, 31, Software Developer

    I had this amazing serum that cleared my breakouts within weeks. I was glowing. Then, about three months in, I started breaking out again. Immediately, I assumed my skin had ‘gotten used to it’ and the product stopped working. I switched to something else, then something else again when that ‘stopped working’ too. I was cycling through products every few months, spending so much money. Turned out, I’d been slacking on my routine during a stressful work period, and I’d also been eating terribly. The product was fine, it was me. 

    Expert Opinion: Other factors may be involved in the recurrence of breakouts while using a product, like the level of consistency or changes in diet and environment. It may not be related to the product. Also, beware of imitation products, which are quite common in our environment these days.

    9. “Exfoliating every day makes skin clearer and smoother”— Hauwa, 26, Journalist

    I read somewhere that exfoliation was the key to smooth, glowing skin, so I thought more must be better. I exfoliated every single day, sometimes with a physical scrub in the morning and a chemical exfoliant at night. For a week or two, my skin felt incredibly smooth. Then it started stinging whenever I applied anything, even water. My face was red, sensitive, and breaking out in places I’d never had acne before. I’d destroyed my skin barrier trying to make it perfect. 

    Expert Opinion: Exfoliation is great for the skin, but over-exfoliation damages the skin barrier. Two to three times a week is ideal.

    10. “Retinol thins the skin permanently” — Funmi, 51, University Lecturer

    When I started noticing fine lines in my late forties, a colleague recommended retinol. But another friend warned me that it would thin my skin permanently and make me look older in the long run. I was terrified and avoided retinol for two years. Finally, at a conference I attended for work, I learned the truth: retinol thickens the skin over time. I started using it properly, with sunscreen during the day, and the results have been incredible. My skin looks firmer and healthier. I wish I hadn’t wasted those two years being afraid.

    Expert Opinion: Retinol can cause temporary dryness, but it actually thickens skin over time by boosting collagen production.

    11. “Home/DIY hacks (toothpaste, lemon, baking soda) will clear pimples and popping them helps them heal faster” — Chiamaka, 21, University Student

    TikTok convinced me that toothpaste would dry out my pimples overnight. I also saw videos of people using baking soda as an exfoliant and lemon juice to fade dark spots. I tried all of them. The toothpaste burned my skin and left dark marks. The baking soda was so harsh that my face felt raw for days. And the lemon juice? Let’s just say I learned about photosensitivity the hard way when I stepped outside after applying it. As for popping pimples, I thought I was helping them heal faster. Instead, I spread the infection and now have scars on my cheeks that I’m still trying to fade. I’ve learned to leave the DIY hacks alone and use actual acne treatments from the pharmacy or a dermatologist.

    Expert Opinion: Most DIY hacks actually burn or irritate the skin. Popping pimples can spread infection and worsen scars. 

    12. “Coconut oil or heavy oils are safe for everyone” — Ivie, 28, Fashion Designer

    Coconut oil was my everything. I used it on my hair, my body, and my face. Everyone online was raving about how natural and moisturising it was. But my face started breaking out with these deep, painful cysts that wouldn’t go away. I couldn’t figure out what was wrong because I was using something ‘natural’ and ‘healthy.’ When I finally stopped using coconut oil on my face, the cystic acne cleared up within weeks. Not everything that works for everyone will work for you.

    Expert Opinion: Coconut oil or heavy oils are often comedogenic and clog pores for many people. They may be okay for some, but they can trigger breakouts in those with acne-prone skin.

    13. “Products sold in stores or markets are automatically safe” — Maryam, 44, Civil Servant

    I used to buy my skincare products from the market near my house. They were cheaper than pharmacy prices, and I assumed that if they were being sold openly, they must be safe and approved. I bought a cream that promised to clear dark spots in two weeks. Within days, my face started peeling and burning. I showed my sister, who’s a nurse, and she was horrified. The cream contained steroids and mercury, ingredients that are banned but still make their way into products sold in unregulated markets. I had to see a dermatologist to repair the damage, and it took months. Now I only buy from trusted pharmacies and verified retailers, even if it costs more. My skin is worth it.

    Expert Opinion: Hmmm… not always. Some are unregulated, fake, or harmful. Always buy from trusted retailers.

    14. “Bleaching creams recommended by friends/influencers are harmless” — Adanna, 33, Banker

    I had a friend who went from dark-skinned to significantly lighter within months, and everyone kept complimenting her. When I asked what she used, she recommended a cream she got from an influencer. She looked happy and confident, so I thought it must be safe. I used it for about six weeks, and yes, I got lighter. But then my skin started developing strange discolouration patches that were lighter than others, and some areas that looked almost grey. My skin also became extremely sensitive; anything I applied would sting.

    I went to a dermatologist who told me the cream contained steroids and hydroquinone at dangerous levels. She warned me about the long-term damage: thinning skin, increased risk of infection, and permanent discolouration. I’m still dealing with the aftermath years later. I wish I’d loved my original skin tone enough to never touch that cream or skincare rule.

    Expert Opinion: Bleaching creams are never harmless! Most contain steroids, mercury, or hydroquinone and cause skin damage, discolouration and increase the risk of skin infection. Avoid! All skin colours are beautiful!

    15. “Dark spots will go away if you scrub harder or use strong acids frequently” — Bongee, 25, Entrepreneur

    I learned from my mum to scrub hard to remove dark spots. I have sensitive skin plus aquagenic pruritus, so I was always scratching or slapping my body and dealing with wounds. My mum would tell me to scrub harder during baths to ‘remove the dead skin’ and make the dark spots fade. I used rough sponges and harsh black soap, thinking that was the solution. It only made things worse; my skin was constantly irritated, and the dark spots got darker from all the inflammation.

    When I moved out and started bathing myself gently with just mild soap, I noticed my skin didn’t fall apart like I thought it would. In fact, it started healing. I’ve learned that less is more. My skin can’t handle harsh products, even black soap, so you’ll find me shopping in the baby section now. Gentle care has done more for my dark spots than years of aggressive scrubbing ever did.

    Expert Opinion: Hard scrubbing just creates more inflammation and results in darker spots. Gentle, consistent care with twice- or thrice-weekly hydroxy acid washes or creams works best.

    16. “You must lighten your skin to remove acne marks quickly. Fairer skin is more beautiful anyway, so good!” — Zainab, 60, Retired Teacher

    In my generation, fair skin was considered the standard of beauty. When my daughters were young, I encouraged them to use lightening creams because I genuinely believed it would make them more beautiful and help fade their acne scars faster. I used those creams myself for decades. Now, at sixty, I’m dealing with thin, fragile skin that scars easily and has uneven pigmentation that no amount of makeup can hide. My daughters, thankfully, didn’t listen to me for long. They embraced their natural skin tones and treated their acne properly with dermatologist-recommended products.

    Watching them now, confident and glowing in their natural complexions, I realise how wrong I was. Skin health has nothing to do with being light or dark. Beauty truly does come in every shade. If I could go back, I would tell my younger self that my deep brown skin was already beautiful, and that treating acne marks doesn’t require changing your skin color. I share my story now so other women don’t make the same mistake I did. Love your skin at every shade, it’s the only one you’ve got.

    Expert Opinion: Skin health is not about skin colour. Light skin does not equate to healthy skin. If you do not treat the underlying causes of acne, the dark spots will persist. Treating acne marks doesn’t require lightening your skin tone. Beauty comes in every shade!


    Dr. Olufolakemi Cole-Adeife is a consultant dermatologist and one of Nigeria’s most passionate voices for healthy, beautiful skin — backed by science, not hype. She combines clinical expertise with public education to empower people with accurate skincare guidance, especially for African skin types. From research to community advocacy to content creation, she champions safe, inclusive skincare for everyone. She is an award-winning doctor recognised globally for her impact in dermatology and public health, and was recently honoured with the ILDS Young Dermatologist International Achievement Award for the African region. She regularly engages and educates her online community on skin health as Foladermadoc on Instagram and TikTok.


    Next Read: The Real Cost of Clear Skin for Women in Nigeria

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  • Every week, Zikoko spotlights the unfiltered stories of women navigating life, love, identity and everything in between. 

    What She Said will give women the mic to speak freely, honestly and openly, without shame about sex, politics, family, survival, and everything else life throws our way.


    Adanna* is a woman in her early 40s who has spent most of her life under the oppressive control of her older brother, Effiong*. From opening a roadside bar she couldn’t truly call her own, to controlling every aspect of her life, his grip on her seemed inescapable. 

    When she finally found the courage to leave, her body began to fail her in ways she still doesn’t fully understand. Now, after a life-threatening illness and a surgery she couldn’t afford on her own, she’s back where she started, under his thumb. This is her story.

    (*Names changed for privacy)

    Trigger Warning: This story contains descriptions of domestic abuse, emotional abuse and medical trauma that some readers might find distressing.

    Let’s start from the beginning. Tell me about your family.

    We are seven children. Four boys, three girls. I’m the second to last. Effiong is the oldest; he’s 52 now, so he’s a bit over ten years older than me. We grew up very, very poor. Our parents couldn’t really take care of all of us, so we had to raise ourselves, you understand? Na so life be.

    When did things start to change between you and Effiong?

    When he started making money. Serious money o. He became very rich, richer than all of us, and that’s when he started acting like he owned everybody. Especially me.

    Why, especially you?

    Because I had my first child at 15, a useless street boy, he just deceived me when I was that young. Nobody was even looking after us then. When he heard I was pregnant, the boy just disappeared. Him dey fear Effiong. Everybody in that area dey fear am.

    Wow. Then what happened?

    After three years, he came back saying he wanted to take responsibility, talking about marriage and all those things. That same year, when I turned 18, I got pregnant again. He was 27 by then. When I told him, he just ran away again. We didn’t hear anything about him until we heard he had died.

    He died?

    Yes, about five years ago. They said he was Ghanaian, that he went back to his country. I no know o. When he died, his family members reached out, saying his things would go to his children, but after the burial, we no see shi shi. Not his people, nothing.

    So, you had two children by the time you were 18?

    Yes. I had five children total. But one of them died, my last son, one year after I had him. So now I have four. The first two get one father, the last two another.

    Every single day of my life, Effiong used this against me. The fact that I had children as a small girl, that I needed help, gave him power over me. He opened a roadside bar for me, but it was his property. I would stock it, work it, make money from it, but the bar was never mine. When business was bad, he would restock for me, but it always came with insults. Sometimes, when he was very angry, small beatings dey follow.

    He beat you?

    Yes. Not all the time, but when he was angry enough, yes.

    I am very sorry. Where were you living during this time?

    In one small one-bedroom that he owned. My five, then four children and I. We just managed. Later, he took the children to live with him in his big house for many years. Throughout their secondary school and even university for some, they lived with him. So, it was just me in that one room.

    Oh yes o. He lived in a mansion with his own four children. His wife was there too, for some time.

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    What She Said: My Ex Tried to Pull Me Into a Threesome. Then Sued Me for Defamation


    What happened to her?

    She ran away. Two times, but she came back because of money. After she had the fourth child, she couldn’t take it anymore. She just left. We haven’t seen her since. Look at what he was doing to me, imagine what he was doing to his wife. The woman tire. Who no go tire?

    What was your daily life like during those years?

    I would go to his house to cook for him, clean for him, take care of his children, and take care of my own children when they were there. Then I would go to the bar and work. He controlled everything about my life. Everything. He was paying for my children’s school, so that gave him even more power. Anything he said, that’s how it would be.

    That sounds exhausting.

    My sister, it was like slave work. That’s the only word for it.

    What made you finally leave?

    I was hearing things. People were saying that Effiong’s hand was not good. That he joined cult. That he was a ritualist. I even started thinking maybe him dey use my star, my destiny. But the real reason was that my last child, my son, had finished secondary school. I had been saving small small for years quietly. One morning, very early, before neighbours would see me or my other brothers would catch me, I just packed my things and left.

    Where did you go?

    I rented a place on the other side of town. Very far from where he could just reach me easily.

    Did he come after you?

    No. He didn’t chase me. He just swore that I would suffer more than anything I had ever seen, and that I would come back.

    And did you? Suffer?

    After some time, yes. I just been dey weak. I no fit get job. My body just dey spoil, spoil.

    What was happening to your body?

    When I reached the hospital, the doctor say the thing wey dey my womb don start to rot inside me and cause serious infection. Plus, another swelling dey my ovary. My friend gather small money for me, but treatment cost pass us. I just returned home, and everything began to worsen.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why.

    How bad did it get?

    It got to a point where I could not walk. My body started to smell, especially my vagina area and I couldn’t control it or manage it. I was just there, suffering slowly. Na that time I know say the thing don pass me.

    Who helped you?

    My children called their uncles: my brothers. They were the ones who went to beg Effiong on my behalf.

    What did Effiong say?

    He insulted me first. Insult upon insult. Even in that condition, he still cursed me. But after all that, he took me to the hospital. That’s how he is; he will shame you, then help.

    What happened at the hospital?

    The doctors examined me and told him everything. They gave him more information about my body than they even told me. I didn’t fully understand what was happening. The only question they asked me directly was whether I wanted my ovaries removed.

    And you agreed?

    Dem say e go better for me if I remove am, so I agree. I dey suffer well, well. I no fit manage am again. The surgery cost over one million naira. Na my brother pay.

    How do you feel about that?

    Wetin you wan make I feel? 

    I’m grateful to be alive, yes, but it also means I’m under his control again. Everything he said would happen… happened. I suffered, and I came back. E pain me, but na the truth.

    Where are you living now?

    I’m in a bigger house now with one of my brothers and one of my sisters. It’s one of Effiong’s houses that he gave the siblings to stay in. It’s better than the one-bedroom, at least.

    And you’re back at the bar?

    Yes, but a different location. Still his property.

    How does he treat you now?

    It’s the same. Maybe he’s slightly calmer sometimes, but he’s still controlling. Whatever he says is final. The insults haven’t stopped.

    What about your children? How do they feel about all this?

    Dem no dey go near the uncle at all. All of them except my first daughter. She dey try, she dey come see me once in a while, and she too go chop insult. She don marry sef. The other ones, dem just dey avoid all of us. I no dey even see them.

    That must hurt.

    E dey pain me. But I understand them.

    Do you still believe he was using your “star”? Did he do something to you?

    (Long pause.) 

    Wetin concern me? I no dey go anywhere. This is my life now. At least him dey give me money sometimes.

    How is your health now?

    Much better than before. I can do most things. But sometimes I feel sharp pain around where my womb used to be and down my left leg. On those days, I can’t move much. And I still no really understand wetin happen to my body. Dem no really explain everything to me.


    Also Read: 5 Women on Living With Men Who Eat Without Consideration


    Do you need follow-up checkups?

    Yes, but I can’t afford them. 

    Is there any hope for you to leave again?

    (She laughs bitterly.) 

    Leave go where? To go suffer again? To go die? No o. This thing don be like say na permanent. Nobody dey come help me. Na so my life be.

    I am sorry. If you could say anything to Effiong right now, what would it be?

    For what? He won’t listen. He’s never listened.

    What about to yourself? To the 15-year-old Adanna?

    (Long silence.) 

    Hmm…

    I no know o. Maybe… “I’m sorry.” I’m sorry you ended up like this. But wetin we for do? what choice did we even have from the start?


    If you or someone you know is experiencing abuse, please reach out to:

    • Mirabel Centre (Lagos) – Sexual Assault Referral Centre: +234 815 577 0000 (mirabelcentre.org)
    • DSVRT (Domestic & Sexual Violence Response Team, Lagos) (nomoredirectory.org)
    • Safe Haven Foundation – Legal and psychosocial support (safehaven-foundation.org)
    • National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) – Rights complaints and support (nhrc.gov.ng)
    • WARIF (Women At Risk International Foundation) – Helpline: 0809‑210‑0009 (nomoredirectory.org)
    • CEAF (Comfort Empowerment & Advocacy Foundation) – Counselling and legal support (ceaf.org.ng)

    Next Read: “I used to think I was a lesbian because I didn’t like sex” — 7 Nigerian Women on Living with a Low Libido


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    You only need to give us a few minutes of your time and participate in this quick survey. It’s 100% anonymous too!

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  • Earlier this week, finance professional Max Obae publicly accused Paystack co-founder Ezra Olubi of manipulation, abusive behaviour, and misconduct during their past relationship. In a detailed public disclosure, titled My Piece”, Max outlines what she describes as patterns of control, emotional detachment, and mistreatment, not just toward her, but toward others within Ezra’s orbit. She spoke about these issues in a now-private X Space session, where she discussed the relationship and her experiences.

    Max’s disclosure is a mix of a personal reflection with a call for public accountability. She says the relationship started remotely in September 2023 and became physical in December. She claims that what she witnessed, including alleged interactions involving a junior employee, compelled her to speak out after months of concern about Olubi’s behaviour. Though the relationship ended in June 2024, she decided to make these events public now to alert others to what she calls “the depth of the depravity” surrounding Olubi.

    Paystack’s Response

    Shortly after Obae’s post gained traction, Paystack issued an official statement confirming that Ezra Olubi has been suspended from all duties pending a formal investigation. In a statement reported by TechCabal, the company said:

    “We take matters of this nature extremely seriously… Effective immediately, Ezra has been suspended from all duties and responsibilities pending the outcome of a formal investigation.”

    The statement did not address the allegations in detail, but it reinforced the seriousness of the situation and the company’s intention to investigate the claims.

    Public Reaction and Resurfaced Tweets

    The news of Max Obae’s post quickly started a surge of conversation across social media. Many users pointed to decade-old tweets from Ezra Olubi, dating back to circa 2009–2013, which have resurfaced online. These posts include sexually explicit jokes about colleagues, references to minors, and comments about wanting to photograph a coworker’s thighs. One widely cited tweet from May 23, 2011, read:

    “Monday will be more fun with an ‘a’ in it. Touch a coworker today. Inappropriately.” — @EzraOlubi

    Olubi’s X (formerly Twitter) account has since been deactivated following the resurfacing. Users have been actively collecting, sharing, and archiving these tweets, with some calling for a public repository. As Unkle Ayo (@UnkleAyo) posted:

    “Ezra Olubi has deactivated. Please reply and quote this tweet with screenshots of those diabolical tweets. We need a GitHub repository.”

    The public conversation around these posts reflects both outrage and attempts to contextualise the behaviour. Some users focused on patterns of entitlement in tech culture, particularly the male-dominated fintech space:

    “But sorry, why is there so much depravity prevalent with ‘tech bros’?” — @SkinwithLolami
    “Because last last, they are still men. Men with more money than most. People also need to remember how weird early gamer/nerd/internet culture was and how perverse and bullying the space used to be. Edgelords etc.” — @Jollz

    Others offered a counterpoint, emphasising Olubi’s professional accomplishments and contributions to fintech:

    “The man is a model, he’s successful, he’s smart, and he’s very good at his work. He even co-founded an app that changed how people do business.” — @TheHN1C

    Additionally, some users highlighted alleged broader ethical concerns involving Olubi. Oyinyeola (@oyinyeola) tweeted:

    “This Ezra guy was also the person who helped Femco syphon the Bitcoin donations during EndSARS.”

    Collectively, these posts show how social media users are both documenting and debating Olubi’s behaviour, reinforcing the point that digital footprints are lasting and public accountability can arrive long after the fact.

    Digital Footprints and Public Consequences

    This moment extends far beyond one individual or one company. Tweets and online behaviour that might once have been ignored are now being scrutinised, archived, and shared widely. For women in male-dominated spaces, especially in tech, this isn’t just gossip; it’s a glimpse of what it’s like to work in spaces where money, power, and gender collide.

    The resurfacing of decade-old posts shows a simple truth: what you post online can follow you forever. Even founders who seemed untouchable now face public consequences, and the court of social media can act faster than formal investigations.

    Culture, Power, and Women in Male-Dominated Spaces

    Nigerian tech is still overwhelmingly male, and very few women hold leadership roles. HR frameworks are still evolving, and in many startups, the founders themselves shape the culture.  When people at the top behave badly, it often goes unchecked, and women often have to navigate these spaces carefully.

    The Olubi suspension puts this into focus. It’s not just about one person’s actions; it’s a reminder that who’s at the top sets the tone, and that a company’s culture is shaped by their behaviour. Women watching this story unfold are left asking: are Nigerian tech companies ready to protect employees and take misconduct seriously, or do power and privilege still decide what gets addressed?


    Also Read: Regina Daniels Is Not Your Perfect Victim. So What?


    Why This Matters

    The Ezra Olubi case is more than a tech controversy. It is a cultural checkpoint for Nigerians in tech and for anyone navigating workplaces where power is unevenly distributed. It demonstrates that digital footprints are lasting, that public accountability is possible, and that women’s voices, in Obae’s words, can compel conversations that demand attention.

    For Nigerian tech, the message is clear: founders are no longer beyond scrutiny, and past behaviour, online or offline, can define professional and personal credibility. But are Nigerian tech companies ready to move beyond scrutiny to actual structural change? They can start by implementing independent, third-party investigations when founders or executives are accused, not internal reviews that protect the brand. They need clear reporting channels that bypass leadership entirely, so employees aren’t forced to report misconduct to the very people who benefit from silence. And they need transparent outcomes: public accountability for what was found and what actions were taken, not just vague statements about “taking matters seriously.”

    Until these mechanisms exist, every suspension feels performative, and every investigation feels like damage control. For women, vigilance and community support remain crucial in spaces where privilege and power are still disproportionately concentrated because the systems that should protect them are still being built, or worse, still being ignored.


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