I was looking to speak with people who ran away from home to pursue their dreams when I found Josephine* (25).
She talks about her stormy relationship with her mother and running away from home at 16 after almost getting raped by her stepfather.
TW: Attempted rape.
As told to Boluwatife
Image designed by
My life changed forever on the night of March 11, 2012. That was the night my dad died while trying to cross the road, unaware that he was walking directly into the path of an okada with no headlights. My housemistress told me the news the next day at school. I was 13, and I was shattered.
I was a proper daddy鈥檚 girl. Of my parents鈥 two girls, I was the one who looked most like him. I was also the only child for the first ten years of my life. There are stories of how, as a toddler, I鈥檇 follow my dad everywhere, even to the toilet. I rarely let my mum pick me up. It was always 鈥渕y daddy鈥.
I think my mum started to resent how close I was to him. As I grew older, I began to call my dad 鈥渕y love鈥 because that鈥檚 what he called me too. My mum would make offhand remarks about how I was ganging up with her husband against her or how I came to steal her husband, and my dad would laugh over it.
Most times, the remarks had a tense undertone. Especially when she tried to flog me whenever I was naughty, and I鈥檇 run to my dad for help. He preferred to punish by taking away my toys and talking things over. To my mum, he was just spoiling me, and they clashed over it regularly.
Maybe he did spoil me, but I preferred hanging out with him. I even used to run away from the sitting room once I heard my mum returning home from her shop because she always seemed angry. When she gave birth to my sister, it was like they divided the children among themselves. I was daddy鈥檚 girl, and my sister was mummy鈥檚 girl. So, it all worked out.
Then my dad died, and it felt like my person had left. I didn鈥檛 really have a relationship with my mother, so I couldn鈥檛 process my grief with her. I鈥檓 not even sure how she processed hers. She just cried for a few days and kept to herself. When the relatives and mourners finally left our house after the burial, all that was left was empty silence. My sister was three years old and didn鈥檛 really understand what was happening.
Thankfully, I didn鈥檛 have to navigate the silence for long because I returned to boarding school. But whenever I was home, the silence was there. When we weren鈥檛 silent, she was scolding me for one thing or the other. I either didn鈥檛 sweep well enough or didn鈥檛 mop the way she would have.
I finished secondary school in 2014 and returned home to pursue a university admission. 2014 was also the year my mum remarried. Two months before the wedding, she called me and my little sister to the sitting room and told us we鈥檇 have a new daddy soon. I鈥檓 not sure I felt anything about it.
We met the man that week, and he seemed nice enough. The only thing on my mind was gaining admission and leaving them to it.
But admission didn鈥檛 come easy. I failed JAMB and had to wait an extra year at home. While I waited, I attended tutorial classes from morning to evening, and by the time I returned home at 6 p.m., it was usually just me and my mum’s husband. That was when he鈥檇 return from work, too, while my mum stayed at her shop till around 9 p.m. My sister鈥檚 school bus would drop her at the shop, so they always came home together.
The arrangement worked at first. I鈥檇 return home, cook dinner and serve her husband before going to my room for the rest of the night. But he started dropping comments like, 鈥淲hy are you running to your room? Come and spend time with me.鈥 Other times, he鈥檇 encourage me to greet him with hugs since 鈥淚鈥檓 like your dad.鈥 I found the whole thing weird and just kept my distance.
I finally gained admission in 2015. A week before I had to resume at the university, this man tried to rape me. That day, when he returned home from work, he tried to get me to hug him as usual, but I politely laughed it off and returned to my room.
A few minutes later, he called out to me to pick something from his room. I actually thought he was outside, but I entered the room, and he suddenly appeared from behind the door. It鈥檚 still a bit triggering to think about how he tried to pin me down and cover my screams with his lips and whispers of 鈥淒on’t be a baby, now.鈥
I鈥檓 not sure how I managed to escape. I must鈥檝e kicked him because, one minute, he was on top of me, and the next, he was on the ground. I ran out of the house to our street junction to wait for my mum.
When I eventually saw her, I ran to her and narrated the whole thing. She was visibly shocked and even started crying. She led me back home and confronted her husband. The man denied the whole thing and claimed I ran out of the house because he caught me with a boy. He swore up and down that he鈥檇 never try such and I was just making things up.
My mum believed him. There was nothing she didn鈥檛 say to me that night. How I didn鈥檛 want her to enjoy her home. How I鈥檇 never been in support of her marriage. How I鈥檇 grown to be a liar and prostitute.
To this day, I don鈥檛 know if she truly believed I was capable of such a lie, or was simply choosing to make herself believe what she desperately wanted to be true.
I decided to avoid her husband as best as I could while I counted the days before I could leave for uni. The plan was to stay out all evening till my mum returned at night. But the first day I did that, he reported me to my mum, saying I didn鈥檛 cook his dinner. She warned me to never let that repeat itself, and that鈥檚 when I knew I had to find a way out.聽
We brought back three couples we interviewed in 2019 to share how their relationships have evolved in the last five years.
This is the first episode.
The next day, after they鈥檇 gone out, I took some clothes, my school documents and the 鈧68k my mum hid somewhere and travelled to the state my university was located. It was about three days to resumption, and I didn鈥檛 have a plan or anywhere to stay.
But I got to the university in the evening and met some fellowship people on campus who were trying to mobilise fresh students. I told them I didn鈥檛 have anywhere to stay. They let me sleep in the fellowship hall for two days before their other members resumed, and I went to stay with one of them at their hostel.
My mum called me the day I left, screaming and calling me a thief. That went on for about two minutes before I ended the call. She didn鈥檛 even bother to ask where I was, and she never called back. Maybe she thinks I followed my imaginary boyfriend.
I haven鈥檛 seen or spoken to her since 2015. I survived the years at school with the fellowship鈥檚 help and the little money I made from making people鈥檚 hair, a skill I learnt in boarding school.
I found my sister by chance on Facebook in 2023, and reached out. Our first call was so awkward because we had almost nothing to say. I wasn鈥檛 surprised to hear that my mum had fed her with stories of how I stole her money and ran away to destroy my life. We chat occasionally.
At least, I know my mum is still alive and married to that man. But she鈥檚 dead to me. I鈥檓 not sure if we鈥檒l ever unpack everything that went wrong between us or if I鈥檒l ever be willing to do so.
I don鈥檛 even know how to ask my sister if he ever tried to abuse her too. I feel like I abandoned her, but I also know there wasn鈥檛 much I could do but save myself. I consciously try to push the whole experience to the back of my mind. I鈥檓 not sure I鈥檒l ever be ready to work through it.
*Subject鈥檚 name has been changed for anonymity.
NEXT READ: I Had a 鈥淪poilt鈥 Upbringing, by Nigerian Standards




