91大神

  • 7 Nigerians Reveal How They Discovered Their Queerness

    June is Pride Month 鈥 an annual celebration of LGBTQ+ people from all around the world. Granted, it’s not easy to celebrate in a country like Nigeria, that has its queerphobia boldly written into law. Still, this vibrant community refuses to be silenced. So, to celebrate their resilience, we asked a bunch of Nigerians to […]

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    June is Pride Month 鈥 an annual celebration of LGBTQ+ people from all around the world. Granted, it’s not easy to celebrate in a country like Nigeria, that has its

    Still, this vibrant community refuses to be silenced. So, to celebrate their resilience, we asked a bunch of Nigerians to reveal the moment they discovered their queerness, and what that means to them.

    Titi, 26/Female/Lesbian

    I kind of always knew I wasn鈥檛 straight; I just didn鈥檛 know what I was. When I got to college, I had my first boyfriend and I remember telling my friends that I didn鈥檛 like having sex with him, even though I liked him. 

    He and his friends would also accuse me of talking about girls and looking at them in a way that indicated I was interested in them as more than friends. At that point, I started to realise and accept that I wasn鈥檛 straight.

    I broke up with my boyfriend in 2013, but I didn鈥檛 experience being with a woman until 2015. I came out as bi after being with her. I still dated men and women after that, even though I knew I was really a lesbian.

    In 2019, I met a guy that ticked every conceivable box, but the more serious it got, the more trapped I felt. A few months later, I broke up with him and finally came out as a lesbian to my friends and family. 

    James, 26/Male/Gay

    I was 7 when I first kissed a boy, and I really liked it. At 13, I had kissed more boys and I didn鈥檛 feel like kissing girls at all. I called myself bisexual, even though I knew I wasn鈥檛. I just wanted to seem slightly normal. 

    I was 19 when I finally decided to accept myself and my sexuality. It was right after another one of my failed attempts to 鈥榩ray the gay away鈥. It didn鈥檛 take me long after that to embrace myself fully

    Mary, 25/Female/Bisexual

    I finally realised I wasn’t straight in university. I fell in love with a female friend and I was suddenly very willing to explore for her. The signs of my queerness had always been there, but I just refused to see it.

    I grew up deeply religious, and I think that stopped me from allowing myself to feel those things. When I finally realised I was queer, I struggled with it for a few months. Then, gradually, I began to accept who I am.

    Emeka, 26/Male/Bisexual

    I鈥檝e always kind of known something was different about me. I remember trying to kiss a classmate when I was 10 in boarding school, but he rebuffed my advances. 

    Anyway, I was 22 and visiting New York. I went to a club that called itself an 鈥渆xpressive space鈥 鈥 there were stripper poles on the dance floor and people were dressed pretty interestingly.

    A couple (M/F) walked up to me and we started talking. They seemed really nice and welcoming. After a couple of drinks, we started to dance and, in the euphoria of the moment, the man kissed me.

    I actually kissed him back. It was weird for me, but I enjoyed it. After that night, I did some self-reflection and connected the dots from past experiences. That’s when I came to the conclusion that I’m not straight.

    I鈥檓 still embracing this part of myself. I haven鈥檛 even had sex with a man yet, and it鈥檚 been 4 years since that night. I think I鈥檓 just trying to be careful because of how Nigeria is. 

    Cynthia, 20/Female/Pansexual

    I鈥檝e always been attracted to both boys and girls, but because of the way our society is, I kept mute. I even tried praying it away, but that obviously didn鈥檛 work.

    It wasn’t until I joined social media that I found a bunch of voices in the LGBTQ+ community that made me feel aware that there wasn’t anything wrong with me.

    Then just last two years, I realised that my attraction wasn’t limited to just the binary spectrum and cis-normative. I fully embraced my queerness a year ago, but I鈥檓 not yet out to everyone in my life.

    Timi, 21/Male/Bisexual

    I always just knew I wasn鈥檛 straight. I may not have known the words to define myself, but I can’t remember a time I wasn’t attracted to men. I even had a huge crush on Pat Attah growing up. 

    I always just assumed that something was fundamentally wrong with me, so I never spoke about it to anyone. Later I’d learn from religion that my feelings were abominable. 

    Then I read a religious book that said the feelings were normal during puberty, but with time and prayers, they would go away. Even though I knew puberty wasn鈥檛 the reason, I still held out hope.

    Well, I got older and prayed a lot, but the feelings never went away. I don鈥檛 know that I鈥檝e even fully embraced my queerness. I鈥檓 still not out to my family or any of my real-life friends. 

    I even struggled with answering the sexual orientation question. I have been intimate with women and I feel some attraction for them, but I鈥檓 more attracted to men. I鈥檓 still figuring it out.

    Bunmi, 26/Female/Bisexual

    I鈥檇 say I have known I was attracted to women since I was 5. Whenever we played 鈥榤ummy and daddy鈥, I had to have a wife. So, yeah, I鈥檝e always liked being with girls.

    I was 9 when I had my first kiss. It was with a 13-year-old girl I met at a birthday party. My heart would race every time I saw her. She fully had my mumu button.

    That being said, I never dated women. I avoided that part of myself for so long. For the longest time, I described my bisexuality like it was a bad habit I needed to quit.

    I hooked up with women now and then, but I dreaded any form of emotional intimacy. So, I was very clinical about it. I never slept with a woman more than three times. 

    Well, all of that has changed. I finally met a woman who drives me wild. I love her and, for the first time in my life, I feel fucking free.  I wish I had the courage to own my sexuality sooner.

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