• Working from home is cool and all, but sometimes, you get tired of staring at the four walls of your house every day. To add a little spice to your work life, try working from any of these locations instead. 

    The beach

    Sometimes, work makes you doubt why you’re alive. So go to the beach and observe the ocean and sunset. It’ll remind you there’s more to life than work, and you have things to live for. 

    Bukka

    The bukka not only provides a change of scenery but a change of smell too. Aren’t you tired of smelling yourself 24/7? Try hot amala, jollof rice and sweat. Sure, you might also add a little weight, but all of that won’t matter in heaven. 

    RELATED: 5 Nigerian Women Talk About Working From Home

    Church

    When your manager sends you a foolish message, you can just mute your laptop and put their name on the altar. Fire for fire. 

    Forest 

    If you always feel sleepy because you’re working from home, this would cure it. Between killing mosquitoes and watching for wild animal that want to eat you, you’ll be very alert. 

    RELATED: How Are Young Nigerians Breaking the Monotony of Working From Home in 2022

    On an okada 

    How else will you prove you can work under pressure and in a fast-paced environment?

    Your secondary school

    Remind yourself where you’re coming from and let it motivate you to keep pushing. Life’s tough, but you’re tougher. 

    Filling station

    Buy fuel and knock some tasks off of your to-do list. It’s killing two birds with one stone. 

    RELATED: 8 Things You Can Relate to if You Work Remotely From Your House

  • The house I grew up in is the oldest memory I have of home and loneliness. It was a three-bedroom flat in a small white duplex in Evboutubu, Benin City. Our neighbours called it “white house” and used it as a landmark to describe other places. It had a rusting green roof I looked forward to seeing on my way from school. Adorning the low fence was a burst of red and green flowers I plucked for the play soups I cooked in the backyard when no one was looking. 

    Behind the house was a stretch of land with trees every foot. I remember running around those trees with my brothers and the neighbour’s kids on Saturdays. The guava tree was just behind our flat, the one from which the canes my siblings and I were flogged with were plucked. It was also the only one I ever climbed. 

    The mango tree was next to the orange tree which was at the extreme end of the compound, where weeds often grew. There was a coconut tree which was the tallest in the yard. My mum warned about snakes so we kept our games around the avocado tree which was next to the poultry the landlady owned. 

    My two brothers played rough, and I’d gotten to the stage when everybody reminded me that I’m a girl so I can’t play with the boys. My sister was too little to be my friend. I was almost always alone except for when I was running errands.

    During my first term in boarding school, I would fall asleep crying and dream of going home to the house with the trees in the backyard. In my dreams, I would run around the trees with my siblings, but whenever I came home, I was still lonely as ever. 

    I don’t remember much else from that time except for reading a lot of books. I learnt how heavy the word “lonely” is from a book. I liked how it distinguished itself from the word ‘alone’ by describing a deep emptiness felt even in the company of friends and family. As an adult, learning that loneliness can be an emotional response to perceived isolation validated my childhood experience. 

    As a child, I looked forward to the days my dad spent at home, away from work. On those Saturday mornings, he would drive me and my siblings to Agho junction where he bought his weekend paper. The rides were always a fun experience. I would sit in the front seat beside my dad, listening to Bob Marley, Buju Banton and Gregory Isaacs with the glasses wound down. Till today, it’s my favourite way to ride in a car. 

    For lunch on Sundays, he’d take me, my siblings and my mum to Matice, Mr Biggs or Kaydees. Every Christmas holiday was spent in our village, in proximity to members of the extended family. Those days started and ended with cousins, distant relatives and friends of the family flocking in and out of our house. No matter how early or late it was, my dad would always welcome them with the same enthusiasm — introducing everyone to each other even though we’d already met. For him, home is family. 

    We moved out of the house with many trees, into a duplex my parents built. I was grateful to have a pink room with only one roommate, my sister. Every day, a technician or the other was in the house fixing something. One of them attached a full-length mirror to our wardrobe. Another one fit a water heater in our bathroom. 

    When armed robbers broke into my bedroom one Sunday morning, my first instinct was that it was the plumber holding a plunger, not a man with a gun pointed at me lying in bed. That robbery incident ended with my dad being kidnapped, and until he returned, my mum, my siblings and I slept in one bed for fear of the incident repeating itself. 

    He returned with scars all over his legs, saying the robbers assured him they won’t come back, something about a network of other robbers. He paid for the neighbourhood security service and had the local police squad stop by our house every evening for a couple of months. Despite our best efforts to safeguard ourselves, two years later, robbers broke into our home again. This time, I was a university student and was only at home because of the ASUU strike. 

    When the strike ended, I went to school and stopped going home so often. And that’s how that house stopped being home for me. When I gained admission to the university, my parents got me a small self-contained room in an apartment block off-campus. I was often too afraid to be by myself, so I spent most of my nights with my best friend at the time who lived in a shitty hostel in school, where girls bathed outside, pooped in black cellophane they tossed over the fence and denied all of it when they were asked. 

    During this time, home meant a lot of things. On some days, it was my father’s house. On other days, it was my best friend’s room in hall two or her parent’s house. Whenever my best friend and I fought and I had to spend the night at my house, I wouldn’t be able to sleep through the night. The room didn’t even smell familiar. The next day, I’d try to reach her so I can do whatever it took to return to normalcy. 

    At some point, we started fighting a lot. We were learning that we were very different people after two years of living within an inch of each other every given minute. I learnt that I didn’t really like boys or care what they thought about me the way she did. I didn’t want to be a popular girl, fake smiling at people she hated. I wanted to date girls and I did. 

    So I would cancel our plans to hang out and either spend time with my girlfriend or be alone in my room writing. It was during my alone time I learned to roll joints.

    I didn’t notice when my room became home, but when I needed to be alone, I came to appreciate it was the last room on the block. Around this time, I dropped out of school because I was tired of lying to myself I could graduate with good grades studying a course I didn’t care for. 

    My move to Ilorin in 2016 was abrupt. I had been planning to go to Ghana for school after I dropped out. When my dad told me that couldn’t happen anymore because he couldn’t afford it, I knew I still had to leave Benin. There was nothing there for me. I had stopped sleeping at home again. Most of my nights were spent in clubs or with a friend. 

    I picked Ilorin when my dad asked where I wanted to go because it was far from everything and everyone I knew. When I arrived there and saw the rams, goats and chickens living amongst people, I was so sure I had found home. Tall trees littered the streets. Nobody was in a hurry to get away from anything. Above all, it reminded me of my father’s house in the village, with the red sand, the cool air and the trees. I fell in love immediately and the city held me. I remember how light I felt the next day, grateful to have left my trauma behind.

    But what they don’t tell you is that trauma doesn’t forget. 

    The first time I called a person home, it was because of how safe she made me feel. I could talk to her about anything without feeling judged. We smoked joint after joint together and listened to sad girl music. With her, I could be whatever I wanted. We loved each other so much until we didn’t. 

    Something they don’t teach you, something I wish they did, is that home is a shapeshifting concept. Home can be a person or a place. Home isn’t static. It is whatever you want it to be. Same way you can call a place home is the same way you can declare it unsafe and move on. 

    If I had known this, maybe I wouldn’t have spent all those nights crying, begging my girlfriend not to leave me alone. I wouldn’t have done the things I did in a bid to keep her. When our relationship ended, I was moving into a new house with a friend — one without scars of the lives lived before I moved in, one who didn’t have memories that choked me in my sleep. 

    That house became home for a year until the red walls started peeling and black insects gathered at the side of my bed, leaving me with a litter of scars all over my butt and thighs. When I moved into a bigger apartment, I started to look for the things that would make it home for me. 

    Aside from the furniture and kitchen utensils. I wanted to feel safe wherever I called home. Then, there’s comfort. What’s home without some form of ease? Since that move, I’ve found more homes than I can count. Homes in houses, places, food and people. 

  • Have you ever wondered what women are up to when they’re just in their homes alone and nobody is watching? Well, here are eight of the things they get to do when they’re free from judging eyes.

    1) Put their breasts on the table

    When they are working on tables and there’s nobody to be a monitoring spirit, they plop their breasts on the table for extra support. Life is hard, and carrying breasts on your chest every day doesn’t make life any easier.

    2) Wear the comfy and unattractive underwear

    Not all the time laces and strings. When nobody’s around, they wear cotton underwear that probably has bleach stains and holes. It’s about comfort, not style.

    3) Drink wine straight from the bottle

    Glasses are for people trying to pretend they’re in a civilised society. When it’s just you and your house, the wine is straight from the bottle.

    4) Scratch and sniff

    Vaginas can be very weird and funny, so sometimes sniff checks are necessary. It’s not because you’re dirty. Sometimes, you just want to know what is going on in the body system. So, the scratch and sniff is very useful. You might even be able to tell what time you are in your cycle by how you smell.

    5) Use their breast as a heaters for their palms

    When women are cold and in the comfort of their own space, they tend to be as comfortable as possible. Who has the strength in this economy to try to turn on heaters or wear gloves because your palms are cold? Especially when you’re already comfortable on the bed. Why not just use the heaters on your chest?

    6) Pick nose

    We all do it. So nobody even has to pretend. When nobody is watching, you can finally get rid of all those boogers that have been making you sneeze. Go ahead.

    7) Wear THE Shirt

    The shirt is the most comfortable piece of clothing a woman owns. It’s not just any shirt, it is THE shirt. They will wear it about six days out of the week, and it’s only worn in situations of maximum comfort. It might be an ex’s shirt or their dad’s, but nothing can separate a woman from THE shirt. It might have holes and stains, but it’s with them for life.

    8) Be naked

    If they’re not wearing the shirt. they’re stripping to their birthday suit where their body can just breathe without the need to live up to societal standards of beauty. Just them, their fupa, stretch marks, and vibes.

  • You probably see these household items every day. Do you think your memory is sharp enough to recognize them?

    Take the quiz:

    Let’s start easy

    Petroleum jelly

    Pen, shaving stick, etc.

    It should be taken hot

    Body lotion

    Electric iron

    Liquid soap

    This one is easy

    Could be condensed or evaporated

    Removes 99.9% of germs

    Detergent

    Sweetner

    Bonus question

  • 1. When you leave small food in the pot so you don’t have to wash it.

    No time, abeg.

    2. When your mum shouts at you for not doing the dishes, and you go to the sink and see:

    Are you kidding me?

    3. When your mother uses all the pots in the kitchen to cook one meal.

    It’s because you’re not the one washing, abi?

    4. Your parents, when you go to sleep with dishes still in the sink:

    You people should chill small na.

    5. When you’re already standing by the sink with a sponge and your mum says, “Remember to wash those plates.”

    Do you think I want to eat the sponge?

    6. When you’re doing the dishes and your mother starts complaining that you’re wasting water.

    Should I use my saliva?

    7. The STRUGGLE of washing stew out of this:

    The absolute worst.

    8. You, after washing plates with dried eba stains on them:

    The struggle is too real.

    9. How the sink looks when you’re not around:

    Be waiting for me oh!

    10. When your parents make you do the dishes at someone else’s house.

    So, I’m now house-help for rent?

    11. When you tell your mother that dish-washing liquid has finished and she just pours water inside.

    If you can wash well with diluted morning fresh, you can do anything.

    12. When you break a plate while doing the dishes.

    It’s all over.

    13. When you’re almost done and someone drops another plate in the sink.

    Are you not wicked?

    14. When your mother is doing the dishes and you try to add your own.

    Sorry ma.

    15. You, acting like you didn’t see that dirty pot on the cooker:

    I’ve tried, abeg.

    16. Mother: “Why didn’t you wash the pot?”

    The ultimate excuse.

    17. When you finish and your mother complains that you didn’t dry the sink well.

    Hay God!

  • 1) The sheer creativity.

    Do you sit or stand?

    2) Perfect description of working from home in Nigeria.

    Trash.

    3) This person is clearly going through things.

    Say a prayer or two.

    4) The only thing kids are good for tbh.

    Put your back in it. Just a little more,

    5) I demand an explanation.

    Where do I sit?

    6) The Laundry basket can’t even get a break.

    7) Chairman!

    Standing ovation.

    8) I prefer not to speak.

    So many questions.

    9) Explain the thinking pls.

    When the water finishes, what next?

    10) Brb. Going to find a chair to match the height.

    My back hurts from seeing this photo.

  • Independence.

    From the moment it dawns on you that people don’t remain their parents’ responsibility forever (more on this later), you begin to crave that life of your own – one where you’re in complete control of your affairs.

    You dream of it – and mumble it under your breath when they get you angry. It’s only a matter of time – you’ll get a place of your own and your actual life will finally begin.

    Bitch you thought!

    The thing is, even if you’re one of those people they have to chase out with prayer and death threats, no-one ever tells you what to expect when you eventually decide to move out.

    No-one ever tells you how you’ll pay through your nose for that independence you’ve been crying for.

    You see, dreams come true, but no-one ever talks about the price tag.

    These are just 5 of those things you should prepare for as you decide to move out.

    TOTAL PACKAGE

    The first thing that drops on your mind when you’re moving out is the cost of rent.

    What you should be concerned about though is a little something called total package – the cost of rent PLUS commission, agreement, legal fees and a sum of other excuses for the landlord to bleed you dry.

    By the time all of this comes together, you’re looking at an amount that is almost twice the cost of rent.

    Guess where you don’t have to even pay half package? Your father’s house.

    BILLS

    The first bill I ever got after I moved out was for electricity. As I stared at the 16,000 naira written at the bottom of the sheet, I suddenly remembered that our forebearers lived without electricity and they didn’t die.

    Moving out means you are responsible for yourself and you have to pay for all those trivial things you always thought God gave everyone for free, like water.

    LONELINESS

    Alone is my best friend.

    I have a theory that Akon recorded that Lonely song after he made small money and finally moved into his first big house.

    Living with a family means there’s almost always someone to talk to, even when you think they’re pestering you.

    When you move out, except you have a PlayStation 4 Pro and an unlimited supply of small chops, you’ll find that it is each man to his tent and more often than not, you’ll be all by yourself.

    Sing it with me one time: “Lonely, I’m Mr Lonely, I have Nobody, ON MY OWWWWNNNN”

    SPELLS OF POVERTY

    broke moving out

    When you move out, one of the biggest things you lose is your safety net. Remember all those times when you would hit a rough patch and you’d run a quick errand to con your parents out of some quick handy cash. Look at that time in the rearview mirror. Once you move out, your financial security is all in your hands. God forbid you have to go back home to beg for money. You’ll probably meet your father at the bus stop with a placard that reads “Told You So”.

    Of Course, It’s Up To You To Decide If Moving Out Is Worth All This Stress.

    If you need some help, the cast of Nigerians Talk shares their thoughts on Moving Out in the new episode. Watch that here and please, choose wisely. Total package is expensive af.

  • 1. When people think they can just come and visit you during working hours.

    2. When your parents send you on errands anyhow since “you are at home anyway”.

    3. When you can no longer separate your work and home life.

    4. When NEPA misbehaves and your work is being affected.

    5. When work connects ask for a meeting at your office.

    6. When you forget yourself, relax too much and have to catch up on all your work.

    7. When people are rude about your work because you work from home.

  • 1. When you remember you don’t have to set an extra early alarm, you’re like:

    Lucky me!

    2. When your mates are sitting in traffic during rush hour, you’re like:

    It sucks to be you guys! Sorry!

    3. When your bed doubles as a desk and working space.

    Multi-purpose piece of furniture.

    4. When you’re saving money on transport and take away for lunch, you’re like:

    Life is great!

    5. When you have to leave the house for outside meetings, you’re like:

    What kind of stress is this?

    6. When people are sweating in three piece suits in their office, you are working in your jalabia like:

    Freedom is life!

    7. When you are tired of working and your bed is close by.

    Isn’t life fantastic!
  • 1. When it’s time to pay bills you’re like:

    I’m not on seat oh!

    2. When you aren’t feeling well and your parents come and take care of you.

    The best guys!

    3. When you don’t want to go out with your friends so you use your parents as an excuse.

    “My dad said I cannot go out after 7pm.”

    4. When there is always food at home.

    Yes!

    5. You can see your family anytime you want!

    Family is best!