Today鈥檚 Abroad Life is about Alafia Olutimehin (Aly), a 24-year-old consultant living in America. She went to uni in North Carolina with the belief she鈥檇 return to Lagos to work after school. Nigeria changed, she changed and one lunch granted her access to working in corporate America. Here鈥檚 how it happened:聽聽

When did you move to America?
I moved here seven years ago in the summer of 2012 for undergrad. Before then, I lived in Lagos. When I finished undergrad, I got admission into grad school and started working afterwards. I鈥檝e been working for about two and a half years in America.
Yooo. Slow down. In seven years, you went from being a student to being a member of the working class in a foreign country?
Hahaha. I know, it鈥檚 ridiculous how quick time flies. I can鈥檛 believe it鈥檚 been seven years already!
So was this always the plan? Leave Nigeria for America, start with school and then go on to get a job?
When I was leaving, I definitely didn鈥檛 think or know I was going to stay long term. I was 17 when I moved and in my head, I was going to return to Nigeria. But Nigeria just kept breaking my heart day by day. Midway through undergrad, I started to ask myself, 鈥淲here am I really going back to?鈥 I realised that I definitely wanted to work in America where the job market seemed very promising. So I started looking for internships here. By the time I graduated, I had made up my mind about not moving back. I was like, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not me and them, I鈥檓 not doing.鈥 And as each day goes by, I’m less likely to move back home. Not until I have the option of coming back when I want to.
I see you sis. That鈥檚 like the plan of every other lazy Nigerian yoot living in Nigeria or that has gone abroad. The Nigerian dream is to japa. What was it like leaving for America at such a young age?
I was excited to leave home. It didn鈥檛 dawn on me until a semester after that I was in a fucking different country. I didn鈥檛 realise what I was getting into. After my first semester, I went back home for the Christmas break and I was around for about three weeks. When I was returning, I was like hay, I鈥檓 going back to the cold.
Other than just wanting to leave, the move was easy for me because my sister was an alumnus. So I didn鈥檛 really have the international student experience at my school, a small private school in North Carolina 鈥 I had the answers to all my questions through my sister.
It however got difficult when I realised how alone I still was. My school was also not very diverse.

Ooh. So like no fellow Nigerians? Africans? Black people?
I was actually the only international student from Nigeria in my school. From Africa, we were like five or six. The larger population of international students were from Asia 鈥 about 200 of them. I think there were 5% black students across the whole school out of about 5000 students. My first year at the school marked 50 years since since the school got integrated. Which is wild considering these numbers.
So was racism an issue?
It鈥檚 crazy but before I moved to America, I was very ignorant about racial relations in America. I was one of those people who thought racism was just a thing in people鈥檚 heads. But going to school in the south helped me to see differently because I also became a minority. I thought I was an international student from Nigeria, but when people saw me, they saw that black student in their class. There were occasional stupid remarks; the microaggression you had to deal with every now and then, nothing major. I had a good experience there.

Do you still live in North Carolina?
Yes, but in Charlotte which is a bigger city. It is a lot more diverse than uni.
So you applied for internships and got them when you were in uni. How did that even happen? Tell us your secrets please.
So interesting story: I wasn鈥檛 into accounting or anything related when I was in school. When I moved here for undergrad, I got a very random email from a random woman from the business school saying, 鈥淗ey, if you want to learn about the different majors we have, I鈥檇 like to get lunch with you and talk.鈥 I was like NOPE, thank you, I鈥檓 good please. The plan was to major in chemistry or ECON. But she persisted, so I went to lunch with her. She told me about the business school and the different majors. From there, I met the company that I currently work for. A bunch of different interactions encouraged me to try out accounting.
So in my sophomore year, I took accounting and I fell in love with it. From there, I got an internship with the company I work for now. I got another internship for the summer, another internship for the winter鈥 and then after grad school, they gave me a full time offer.聽
I鈥檓 just wondering how this story would鈥檝e been different if you never responded to that email, or ignored that woman鈥檚 persistence.
I actually always wonder about this. Because I鈥檝e realised that my experience is very different from the experiences of several international students. If I had studied ECON, I鈥檇 probably be back in Lagos. It would have been difficult to find jobs that would be willing to help me figure out the immigration process especially with the current process and given what鈥檚 happening now with the current president. It鈥檚 my company that鈥檚 helping me with the immigration process. I think it was a combination of luck and responding to the email from that woman.
What鈥檚 work for you?
I work in consulting. When I started, work was scary because I didn鈥檛 know what I was doing, I felt like I was messing everything up. But I鈥檓 learning and gaining new experiences everyday. The coolest thing is looking back at my projects and seeing how much I鈥檝e grown. I鈥檝e been lucky to have a good mix of local and international projects. I like my coworkers and It鈥檚 a good working environment. They鈥檙e compensating properly, but they could really step it up. Hahaha.
I know you said that it鈥檚 very very unlikely that you鈥檒l move back to Lagos, but I鈥檓 just wondering is there something that can provoke you to want to move back?
The cold is so uncomfortable. It鈥檚 currently got very cold. Thankfully, my current project is pretty flexible, so I can work from home. I only need to go in when I absolutely need to. If you see me outside once it reaches 50掳贵, then something must be wrong. I really don鈥檛 like it. Seasonal depression is real.
Secondly, no matter how comfortable life here is 鈥 I mean, I鈥檓 not dealing with the incompetence of Nigeria all the time 鈥 it鈥檚 not home. Your entire life in a different country sometimes feels like you鈥檙e not your complete self: You have to adapt to the environment that you鈥檙e in. I have to adapt to be the best version of Aly that can work in corporate America. When I鈥檓 working with my coworkers, I can鈥檛 talk the way I鈥檓 talking right now.
I really look forward to being back home every year, even though I know that I鈥檒l complain two weeks in about the traffic in Lagos. But I know that in Lagos, there is no filter.
That makes me wonder about the Nigerian community in Charlotte.
You know how Nigerians are everywhere? Yeah, they are here, but very few, so the Nigerian community is almost nonexistent. It鈥檚 not prominent in the way it is in Atlanta and Houston where you can basically build your life around other Nigerians. We don鈥檛 have this thriving big community. The only time I鈥檝e seen a lot of Nigerians at once was when I went to Redeemed church.

So you want to eat Jollof rice or pounded yam now, where do you go?
Mehn, I鈥檓 suffering in this city. Anytime I鈥檓 in DC, Houston, that鈥檚 when I get to eat Nigerian food. I mean there are a few places here, but they鈥檙e not that good. The other alternative is to go to the store, get my ingredients and cook for myself. I鈥檓 really suffering.
So how do you cope in Charlotte? No good Jollof rice lurking in the nearest restaurant; no community; December when you鈥檒l return to Traffic land is still far away. How do you have fun?
When I want fun, or community or food 鈥 if I can afford to, I park my load and I鈥檓 off to DC or Houston. Charlotte is a good city if you鈥檙e working in finance. It鈥檚 a good career city. It鈥檚 not very expensive. You can live very comfortably here. But it鈥檚 not the place you鈥檙e coming to for excitement except you鈥檙e white.
Honestly sha, I am tired of having to buy a ticket anytime I want to have a good time.

Are you open to moving?
I鈥檓 very open to moving elsewhere. I鈥檓 still in my 20s, I should enjoy myself a little.
Speaking of moving, when you first decided to stay back in America, what were your parent鈥檚 thoughts? I mean you were pretty young.
My parents don鈥檛 force down their opinions on me or my siblings. Initially, they wanted me to work in America for a couple of years and then return. But seeing how Nigeria is going, they are less likely to push for that. In fact, If I say I鈥檓 coming back to Nigeria today, they鈥檒l come and check if I鈥檓 okay.
Hahaha. Hilarious, but true. The life of the average Nigerian girl is quite linear in the eyes of their parents: finish uni, do NYSC, get married, have kids. Are there any expectations from your parents?
Definitely not my parents. If they鈥檙e thinking about it, then they are not telling me. Maybe family members who joke about the fact that they were married around my age. Remember that Redeemed church I said I went to?
Yeah?
I met a Nigerian woman who considered all my accomplishments and said the next step was marriage. Seriously?
Nigerians Eh. Smh.
My parents are pretty conservative and my family is pretty traditional, but I don鈥檛 get a lot of that. Maybe it鈥檚 because I have older unmarried cousins they鈥檙e still bothering, so my time has not come yet. And I鈥檓 grateful for that. Please I have not enjoyed my life yet. So I鈥檓 not settling down soon.
Dating scene in Charlotte?
Nonexistent for me tbh. Tears.
What鈥檚 your advice for Nigerians in American schools right now, or about to start?
Pick a field/major that have companies filing for their international employees. Like finance or accounting. It鈥檚 key because if you don鈥檛, staying back in America would likely not work out. You鈥檙e allowed to stay only a year after your degree and the only way to stay in America is through employment.

What鈥檚 the future like for you?
I think I鈥檓 definitely going to be here for the next couple of years. When I get my green card, which is soon, thanks to my company, I can be pretty flexible with where I want to live. So I鈥檓 not leaving until I get my green card and even then, I still need to maintain residency in America for a bit. And man, I need a second passport in my life. The Nigerian passport will disgrace you.

AH LMAO. What鈥檚 the worst thing that has happened to you because you have the Nigerian passport?
I had to renew my passport in the embassy recently, and let me just tell you; all of them are mad. First they were out of booklets. Booklets o. As if it鈥檚 natural resources that are scarce Next thing, the printer was not working and they were calling Abuja. And I was like what the hell is Abuja supposed to do? I鈥檓 tired of the disrespect.
But that鈥檚 not even the experience. I鈥檓 supposed to go to Thailand for a wedding. It鈥檚 super easy to get a visa if you鈥檙e from any other country. But if you鈥檙e Nigerian, you have to get a clearance from NDLEA. So me that I鈥檓 gainfully employed with proof of that, I鈥檓 a drug dealer abi? I sha somehow got it, thanks to my parents. But that鈥檚 not all, you鈥檙e also supposed to take that clearance to the ministry of foreign affairs to get it authenticated. Then you鈥檒l take it to the Thai embassy in Abuja, before flying that paper to America. For what? I told my friend about the process and she was shocked. I was like you dunno my life, sis.
We are rooting for you Aly. Get that green card, and live your best life!
Want more Abroad Life? Check in every Friday at 9 A.M. (WAT) for a new episode. Until then, read every story of the series .




