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
How market now?
My sister I day o. Market isn鈥檛 booming right now but in all things we thank God.
How bad is it?
Things have even started to pick up now. But you see that March and April, it was a real struggle. Those were the hardest months I鈥檝e had in many years. Even people that had already dropped their cloth with me were not calling me anymore. I was the one chasing people to come and collect their cloth so I can collect my balance, but they weren鈥檛 answering me. I鈥檒l call and call from morning till night they won鈥檛 pick their calls. The ones that managed to pick, told me to hold their cloth till further notice, that where are they wearing it to.
Sounds like tables turned?
But you know me now, I鈥檓 not that kind of tailor. See I can鈥檛 lie to you, everyone lies, but in this life, I can never ignore you. It鈥檚 very bad for business. A customer cannot be calling me from morning to night and I won鈥檛 pick their calls. It鈥檚 even risky. It鈥檚 that type of thing that used to make people come to your shop with police. And I don鈥檛 like wahala.
When you say everyone lies…
I used to lie because customers don鈥檛 like to hear the truth. I鈥檒l tell you that the cloth you want to sew will take two weeks, you鈥檒l tell me you want to wear it in two days. When you know that no one can sew that kind of cloth in two days. Then I鈥檒l tell you what you want to hear that the cloth will be ready in two days. So that one I can confess to you, I usually lie, even you sef you know. But it鈥檚 still better for you to lie than to ignore the person completely. At least you will know that I鈥檓 working on the cloth and I haven鈥檛 run away with your money.
I鈥檓 curious, what鈥檚 the worst lie you鈥檝e ever told a customer? Do you remember?
There was one that I did last year, that I had to call the customer鈥檚 sister to help me beg her. See what happened. She brought one style that people usually use crepe to sew for me to sew with lace. As she brought it I told her sister they don鈥檛 use lace for this thing. She now started getting angry that if I don鈥檛 want to sew for her, I should give her her cloth let her be going. In this life that鈥檚 one thing you must never do, it鈥檚 like throwing money away.
Do everything to keep your customers coming back. So when I collected the cloth, I thought to myself, I can still use trial and error to get the style. Only for her to call me two days later that the lace is 70,000 naira and I should make sure I don鈥檛 waste it. My sister, I didn鈥檛 cut the cloth again o. Anytime I want to cut the cloth I鈥檒l remember I don鈥檛 have 70,000 naira to give anybody. But I couldn鈥檛 just call her to come and collect her cloth, so I started posting her. The bad thing I now did was that I鈥檒l be telling her it鈥檚 almost ready. Until she came to carry her material back.

But how does that help you keep a customer?
It鈥檚 better for the customer to think I didn鈥檛 have time to sew her cloth than for her to think I don鈥檛 know how to sew. If I had cut the cloth and sewn rubbish in this life, she鈥檒l never come back to me again. But as I didn鈥檛 sew it, she鈥檒l see my number on her phone one day when she鈥檚 looking for a tailor and remember that she hasn鈥檛 tried me yet and then bring cloth for me to sew. It had happened many times. This particular customer I鈥檓 talking about, she still came back almost a year after. She鈥檚 a regular customer now.
How did you start sewing?
I came to Lagos as a house girl in 2008. My madam, may her soul rest in perfect peace, asked my elder sister for someone to help her clean. By that time my elder sister was already in Lagos working with another madam, so she sent for me. When I entered Lagos, we negotiated salary she told me she would either give me 5,000 Naira a month or give me 2,500 Naira and put me somewhere to be learning trade or to be going to school. So I told her she should give me the 2,500 that I want to learn to sew. It鈥檚 not as if I even had an interest in sewing before then, it was my madam that really took out time to explain all the things I can learn and I chose to sew. So she took me to her tailor to learn. Her tailor wasn鈥檛 one of those pangolo tailors, she was a big madam with plenty machines. I learned how to do everything there up to embroidery. I stayed with my madam and the woman for 7 years until I met my husband.
What came next?
By that time I had already finished learning work. I went to my madam and I told her that I wanted to marry and I didn鈥檛 want to keep doing house girl work inside the marriage. She told me she understands that she won鈥檛 even let me. Then I now told her that I even wanted to do freedom from my sewing madam and start my own shop. My madam carried this thing on her head, she helped me do freedom party and was even the one that helped me pay half of the money for my first shop in Pako. After I left all her daughters cloth, she鈥檒l be bringing them for me to sew. Before she died, I had started sewing her own cloth too.
What has been your biggest challenge with your business over the years?
I鈥檝e not had many stumbling blocks in life. God has been good to me, always sending me a helper at every turn. The only stumbling block I鈥檝e had in life was my husband. Two years after I got married, he started displaying madness. I was going up and down looking for customers for my sewing business. Looking for money to expand my shop and he was telling me to sit at home. I told him I can鈥檛 sit at home, that it was not as if he was even making enough money to take care of both of us. That was how he started telling everyone that I鈥檓 a useless woman, that I was disrespecting him in his own house. House that I even paid the rent for the year he threw me out.
Before then if I came back late from work he will lock the door and tell me to go back to where I was coming from. I鈥檒l start trekking from Bariga back to my shop in Pako to sleep. Sometimes I鈥檒l sleep before I wake up he would have taken all the money that was inside my bag. So I started hiding my money in the shop. One day we had a very serious argument, and I really gave it to him hot. He threw all my things out on the road, but even if he didn鈥檛 throw me out, me sef I鈥檒l have left that day. I was tired. I slept in my shop for four months before I got one small self-con.

That must have been very hard
It was very hard, I will arrange all the material inside the shop on one bench to sleep. Till today I thank God that he didn鈥檛 give me any child inside that marriage because my suffering would have been double.
Did you want children?
I did o. We tried and tried, but I wasn鈥檛 getting pregnant. That was one of the things that used to contribute to our fights. He said I was preventing myself from getting pregnant because I wanted to focus on my business.
Are you still at the shop at Pako?
Ah I鈥檝e left there since it鈥檚 entering 5 years this year. I now have another shop in Sabo it鈥檚 three times the size of the Pako shop. I only had one machine in Pako. That time, if I wanted to do embroidery, I鈥檒l leave my shop. If I wanted to do hemming, I鈥檒l leave my shop. There were even some materials that if I used my machine to sew, it would spoil them. Let鈥檚 just thank God for God. I have one small land in Ikorodu that I鈥檝e put foundation on so they won鈥檛 steal it. When I finish building it, I鈥檒l rent it out, because I can鈥檛 move there. My business is here.
What鈥檚 next for you?
I want to continue expanding my shop. I have two girls that are helping me now. When they came they didn鈥檛 even know the difference between chiffon and silk. Now they can almost sew as well as me. So I want to get a bigger shop where I鈥檒l be doing proper training for people that want to learn to sew. This my shop is too small for that.
And your personal life?
I鈥檓 happy with my life like this o. Since I left my husband I鈥檝e not faced man at all, I don鈥檛 have the energy. When I want to play with children, I collect my sister鈥檚 children. If God wants to drop husband in my life, my hand is open but I鈥檓 not going to look for.




