Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it鈥檒l amaze you how similar all our experiences are.听Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here.听
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This week鈥檚 #91大神WhatSheSaid subject is a 23-year-old Nigerian woman. She tells us about discovering her feminism, pansexuality and atheism through books while living with her close-knit conservative family.
What鈥檚 something about your life that makes you happy?
I鈥檓 enjoying being single right now. I don’t have commitments to anybody, and I don’t need to make weird decisions based on what society expects in relationships.
My last serious relationship was in 2018 when I was in year two at university. Right after that, I got into a toxic and demeaning situationship with an older guy, that went really bad. I was 19, and he was manipulative, so it was difficult to get out of it. Those two years were a character development phase for me, and I鈥檝e only been in situationships since then.
Since the first situationship was so toxic, why did you enter more of them?
I’m scared of being in a proper relationship. And this is because I just don’t like most of the people who鈥檝e approached me, or they鈥檙e misogynists. Or I don鈥檛 like them because they鈥檙e misogynists.
How do you know they鈥檙e misogynists right away?
Through conversation? The last time I met someone who wanted to be in a relationship with me, we had a very telling conversation. And I have some red flags that make knowing easier for me. One of them is if you鈥檙e anti-LGBTQ.
For me, feminism and freedom of sexual and gender identity are inseparable. If you claim to be a feminist man, you need to understand people can make choices on who their partner should be too. When you meet some men, they鈥檒l say, 鈥淚’m a feminist, but鈥.鈥 Just know the 鈥榖ut鈥 will reveal how they鈥檙e not feminists because they’ll give an excuse. It鈥檒l be 鈥渂ut you should understand鈥.鈥
No, I want someone who understands the basics of equality.
And the guy you met?
He wasn鈥檛 LGBTQ. He said, 鈥淚 don’t have a problem with them, but鈥.鈥 He might as well have said, 鈥淚’m a feminist, but鈥.鈥 Apart from that, he randomly asked me, 鈥淒o you know how to cook?鈥 I said no, and he was like, 鈥淚t’s a lie because if you grew up in an African home, every mother teaches their daughter how to cook鈥.
He started talking about how he knows it’s not compulsory, but he thinks a woman should know how to cook. Meanwhile, he didn鈥檛 know how because his mom didn鈥檛 teach him, and his daddy didn’t like men entering the kitchen. He was obviously not a feminist. That turned me off immediately.
Understandable. So how do these casual relationships work?
I鈥檓 a fool because I expect exclusivity in them. I think it鈥檚 the boyfriend-girlfriend tag I don鈥檛 want. I just want a go-to person I can see regularly, who鈥檚 not my boyfriend. And I’m terrible at casual relationships for someone who always finds a way to enter them because I always end up catching feelings.
There鈥檚 no avoiding those, I fear
I know. In my last situationship, the person was my G. We were just friends who started liking each other, and something happened. I was scared he would want something serious after that, so I told him I didn鈥榯 want us to continue since I wasn鈥檛 ready for that. He assured me he didn鈥檛 want anything, and that鈥檚 when I caught feelings.
This only ever happens when I know the other person is not interested. Once it looks like the person likes me back, I run away. I don’t even know what my problem is, but I’m not interested in any kind of dating right now. And of all the new people I鈥檝e met, none of them is giving.
What was growing up like for you, considering your progressive beliefs?
First of all, from JSS 1, my parents sent me off to boarding school, and I hated all the flogging and shouting there. But back home on holidays, my family was pretty close. Like most girls in the average Nigerian family, I was an omo get inside. I wasn鈥檛 allowed to go out. Once I’m home for even a midterm break, I’m locked in. I wasn’t allowed to attend my friends鈥 birthday parties. I wasn鈥檛 even given a phone until after I graduated from secondary school.
This is probably why I prefer to stay indoors now; I’m so used to it. I was always monitored, and I was never given a reason why. I got no allowance, so I couldn鈥檛 even sneak out, and if I was caught outside, I鈥檇 be flogged. It was just my siblings and me, reading books and watching TV indoors, all day every day, while our parents went to work. My mom would usually be home earlier than my dad; he was hardly available except on Sundays and some Saturdays. So I wasn’t comfortable with him because he was like a guest in our home.
Were you religious like the average Nigerian family?
Yes. We went to church every Sunday and for some weekday services too. When I was younger, we attended MFM, so we would always go to camp. Then we moved to Redeem and continued the trend. We never missed crossover services in particular.
We always had to go to church to cross over into the New Year and have the pastors pray over water and oil to rub on our heads. My parents would always remind us that God doesn鈥檛 like this and that, you’re supposed to do this as a child, and this is a sin.
And how did you feel about all that?
It felt normal, actually. I mean, I didn鈥檛 know any other way. And it wasn鈥檛 in my face that we were religious or my parents were restrictive. I enjoyed some things about my childhood. Like, on Saturdays, my dad would take us to the tennis club. On Sundays, we would go to restaurants.
We went to Apapa Amusement Park a lot because my dad worked in Apapa. We also visited my extended families, and I enjoyed seeing my cousins and gisting with them. Every December 25, my parents threw Christmas parties, inviting our extended family, and my cousins would stay over for a week or two. I enjoyed that a lot.
So I鈥檓 curious. How did you go from this everyday Nigerian daughter to having the strong beliefs you have now?
It started with feminism. When I was 17, and in secondary school, I read Chimamanda’s book, We Should All Be Feminists. I liked her definition of feminism and understood why 鈥榃e Should All Be Feminists鈥. Growing up, I remember feeling cheated when I heard men say you’re supposed to do this and that.
I think every woman has some gender rules they’re uncomfortable with, but they鈥檝e just gotten used to them. They鈥檇 say things like, 鈥淲hat can I do? It鈥檚 a woman’s place.鈥 Early on, I decided I wouldn鈥檛 accept it.听Feminism formed my understanding of the LGBTQ community and also led me to atheism.
In university, I studied sociology and learnt that society shapes who we are. The kind of family we come from, the environment we grew up in, the religion we were born into and the type of school we went to, all shape us. People aren鈥檛 a certain way because they were born like that; society shapes them. People are different because of how they grew up and the values they picked up as children and adults.
If that鈥檚 true, why didn鈥檛 you remain conservative as your family shaped you to be?
Family is the primary agent of socialisation, but my family sent me to boarding school.
I learnt a lot through books I read in the hostel and when my parents locked me up at home. We Should All Be Feminists was probably the first non-children鈥檚 book I read. Then A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum, and another Chimamanda book, The Thing Around Your Neck, which spoke about how the British colonised us through religion. It鈥檚 one of the vital moments I鈥檝e had when I started asking questions about religion. Why didn’t God help black people when they were mistreated?
Then, I started Googling things. I found out the Bible contained more chapters, and the King James Version was shortened by an actual King James; a British King. I learnt that Christianity was infused with politics; the church was the state, so they made religious decisions and wrote their version of the Bible to take advantage of people.
That must鈥檝e been a lot to discover so young. How did you process it?
As a sociologist, you ask questions like, is this book objective? And you find out there鈥檚 no book in the world that鈥檚 objective. The Bible is an account of people, their ways of life and the ideologies of society in those ancient times. When I read the Bible in secondary school, it was like it was against humanity and was meant to subjugate women.
People give their different interpretations of it 鈥 鈥淣o, it means you should love鈥 鈥 but it鈥檚 clear with words like 鈥榮ubmission鈥, 鈥榮ubjugation鈥, 鈥榓 woman should not climb the pulpit鈥, 鈥榮he should not preach鈥. At that time, I wasn鈥檛 even an atheist. I just thought the Bible was ancient, and the people in it were practising the culture of their time. Times have changed, we’re civilised, so we’re not supposed to follow what happened then.
But as I read more and more about how women were not allowed to go to the market during their period because they were considered dirty, and in the New Testament, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John have different accounts of Jesus鈥 life, I realised the Bible is different people’s biased perspectives. I was about 20 years old when I decided I won鈥檛 take directions from it anymore.
Big decision
Yes, but it was strangely an easy one to make knowing the things I knew. I went to the root of Christianity and how it came from older religions, read about the evolution of religion itself and about our own gods. Then I formed a theory that maybe God exists; people just serve him in different ways because we’re from different societies.
When I read how Chinua Achebe and Chimamanda wrote about traditional prayer in the olden days, it鈥檚 similar to how Christians pray now. So when I see Nigerian Christians pray, I’m like, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e just praying to a foreign God.鈥
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So why did you become an atheist instead of a traditionalist?
Because I realised nobody’s coming to save you.
There were points in my life when I was really down. I was in a toxic relationship, like I mentioned earlier, I was so young, and it was terrible for me. My self-esteem had gone to shit, and I felt very bad about myself.
I prayed and I cried, and nothing happened. Just looking back at my life, secondary school, primary school, I’ve had times when I pray to God for things, and when nothing happened, I’d just say maybe it’s not God’s will. And I realised we keep on making excuses for him.
How did you realise this exactly?
When I was in SS 1, they kidnapped the Chibok girls. I heard the news, fasted and prayed with so much faith because I believed faith could move mountains. I had so much faith that if I fasted as a child, something miraculous would happen, and the girls would be released.
But you know how the story went. Was it that God didn’t want it to happen? Was it not God’s will for the girls to be released? Since I started taking control of my life and decisions, it鈥檚 felt better not to hope for miraculous things. There’s nobody out there coming to save or help you.
And now, you no longer believe he exists?
My atheism is still evolving. Sometimes, I think he exists, but I’m just angry at him. Terrible things are happening in the world, and he’s not doing anything. I wonder why. People are getting killed. Girls are getting abducted, raped. Women are being treated anyhow, and good people suffer a lot in the world. In the Bible, they鈥檒l tell you this is the reason. Sometimes, they鈥檒l just tell you to do things without giving any reason, and I just can’t live like that.
These days, I鈥檓 also discovering things about the universe, how it鈥檚 much bigger than our Milky Way. I think the universe is too big for one person to control. I also don鈥檛 believe there鈥檚 heaven or hell. I鈥檇 rather just be on my own, make my own decisions, live my life the way I want and just be kind to people.
As for feminism, was there a defining moment that made what you read about in books more personal?
My earliest memory of feeling violated as a woman was in secondary school, even though I didn鈥檛 think of it deeply at the time or relate it to feminism. I was walking on the road with my friend, and this man tapped me to ask for my number. I said no. He was a much older man, and I think he was drunk. He was drinking pure water, and he just threw it at me.
I was very scared because I couldn鈥檛 confront him. I thought he would beat me. Things like that make me very sad. I’ve been groped on the road once before. And you just go to one corner and cry because you can’t do anything about it, especially when you’re young. I was sexualised a lot, growing up.
I鈥檓 so sorry
I鈥檝e also seen it happen to others. One time during NYSC, a female flagbearer was marching, and because of the way she moved, a guy just shouted that she鈥檒l know how to do doggy very well. It just gets to me when boys make rude comments about girls and their bodies, especially dismissively.
One other time, we were doing inter-house sports in secondary school, and a boy made a comment about a girl鈥檚 body, that her big bum bum was making her float. I don’t understand why people talk about women like that. It feels weird and wrong, and it makes me upset.
Did you talk about it to your mum or someone close?
No. I’m constantly fighting in my house sef because I have a younger brother who has a free pass to do whatever he wants, and I don’t. Growing up, my brother could go out and visit friends. But my sister and I were always locked inside and constantly harrassed with, 鈥淲here are you coming from? Where are you going to? Who are you talking to? Bring your phone.鈥
One time, my dad checked my phone and saw a text from a guy, and he was very angry. We were always monitored, but my brother didn鈥檛 go through that kind of vigorous training. Till now, I’ll be working, and they’ll tell me to go to the kitchen, while my brother is sleeping.
Do you push back? What鈥檚 your parents鈥 reaction to that?
They鈥檙e always angry, especially my mom, who feels she’s training me to be a woman. I tell them I don’t like it, and I’m not going to change. The only thing I can do is rebel and fight it. My dad, at one point, said my brother is not supposed to wash plates because he has sisters. I told him, 鈥淣o, it鈥檚 not possible. He鈥檚 eating, so he has to wash it.鈥 Sometimes, I鈥檓 sad because I鈥檓 tired of fighting. I just can’t wait to make money and get my own place, but for now, I鈥檓 a struggling youth corper.
And do these fights work to change their mindset at all?
Nope. Sometimes, they’re just tired and they let me be. But of course, their mindsets don’t change at all. My dad is a misogynist, and my mum is a patriarchy princess.
What about your brother?
He’s 20 now and is constantly told the reason he doesn鈥檛 have to do certain things is because a woman will do it for him, so he can just rest. And he believes it; he鈥檚 enjoying that male privilege. I try to have conversations with him, but his mindset is forming. Sometimes, my dad would say something like, 鈥渟he鈥檚 just talking her feminism talk,鈥 and they鈥檇 both laugh at me.
Even my sister who鈥檚 24 isn鈥檛 a feminist. She says the double standard is wrong but still says feminism is extreme. I just think she couldn鈥檛 be bothered to fight or struggle over the injustice. She鈥檚 decided to go with what society dictates because she fears the repercussions and backlash. I’m always ready for the backlash.
How did your interest in the LGBTQ community come in?
It works hand in hand with feminism for me. I鈥檝e always been pretty open-minded, so I鈥檝e always just believed in people鈥檚 freedom of choice. I鈥檓 pansexual myself.
How did you discover your sexuality?
In 2019, I kissed a woman during a game of truth or dare, and I liked it. I’ve never been in a relationship with one, but I now know it’s something I would consider. The experience made me realise my attraction isn’t limited to gender because I’m still very much attracted to men.
How do your parents feel about your atheism and pansexuality?
My mom is always praying. I鈥檓 always fighting with her because I鈥檓 not the average Naija babe who鈥檚 looking for husband and hoping to be a good wife. I’m very vocal about my beliefs. And they just look at me as this weird Gen Z babe.
My dad keeps advising me that my beliefs are wrong; he takes a chilled approach. I can tell they don鈥檛 want to scare me off and lose me to the 鈥榙evil鈥 for good, but my parents no longer force me to go to church. They鈥檝e gotten used to it.
How has being an atheist, in particular, affected your friendships?
Well, first off, I lost a close friend because of it. She became very Christian at the same time I became an atheist. I’m still trying to get over it, but she鈥檚 moved on. Anytime I see her posts with other friends, I get really sad, I feel like crying. Towards the end, we fought a lot, and I would tell her it was because of our differing beliefs, but she鈥檇 deny it. I wanted to keep the friendship so bad I even compromised and started following her to church, but in the end, I still lost her.
How did you two form such strong differing beliefs despite being so close?
It was during the COVID-19 lockdown. It was a very mentally stressful time for everybody. So while I was reading books, she was getting closer to God.
Do you have friends who share your atheist views?
I have one friend who does. And he even helped me strengthen my atheism. Before, I just had these thoughts in my head, but I was surrounded by Christians so I couldn鈥檛 really express it because no one could relate. He could relate, and we had so many conversations in which we exchanged ideas. I asked him questions and we would Google stuff together.
You know when you鈥檙e in the closet and you meet other people who鈥檝e come out of it? My other friends say he changed me, but I had these thoughts way before I met him. He was also the close friend I had a situationship with and ended up catching feelings. Now, we’re just friends.
Does it get lonely having fewer friends and not being close to your family because of your beliefs?
Yes, actually. Sometimes, it does. I haven鈥檛 seen my friends in a long time, and my closest friend doesn鈥檛 care about me anymore. But I don鈥檛 think I鈥檓 lonely because I鈥檓 an atheist or feminist. I think it鈥檚 because I鈥檓 terrible at socialising.
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