Love Life is a 91大神 weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.

What鈥檚 your earliest memory of each other?
Tade: We’ve been family friends since before I can remember. We lived in the same neighbourhood, had our clique of friends and our families attended the same church.
Sonia: The nostalgia! We played with my dolls on weekends. Both the boys and girls. We鈥檇 all sit on the floor in my living room, playing pretend in the afternoons.
Were you guys close then?
Sonia: No. We didn鈥檛 have a bond until she transferred to my school in JSS 3. I was the only person she knew, so she gravitated towards me and my group of friends. We got closer because we had inside jokes most of my friends didn鈥檛 understand.
Tade: We had so much fun in secondary school. We became so close that our classmates, mostly boys, used to tease us and say we were dating. Look at us now.
Let鈥檚 get into how that happened
Sonia: I wasn鈥檛 thinking about relationships in secondary school. I didn鈥檛 even have crushes. But I knew I had a special bond with Tade. I had a best friend, but even she knew Tade and I were closer than we were.
Tade: We were by ourselves a lot, talking about TV shows, clothes and our plans for the future. When she entered the boarding house in SS 1, we drifted just a little because we spent less time together. But we still had stuff we could only talk about with each other.
During the holidays, we鈥檇 hang out in church, participating in dramas and dance performances. A lot of our childhood friends had left by then, but they were replaced over time with other kids.
When did you realise you liked each other beyond friendship?
Tade: After high school graduation, she went to the US for uni. Meanwhile, my parents had started having issues in their marriage, and my brother and I were collateral damage. Things got so heated that they couldn鈥檛 agree on what university I should attend.
The result? I ended up spending three years at home before I moved to Cyprus to study mathematical engineering.
Sonia: I was sure she鈥檇 make a new life and forget about me. To begin with, the time difference was even crazier to keep up with than when she was in Nigeria.
Tade: But somehow, we managed to stay in touch through that and the craziness of studying for exams and term papers. The turning point for us was when we both swindled our parents into paying for me to attend her graduation in 2016.
Don鈥檛 ask how we managed it, please.
I have to
Tade: We lied. Do you want people to call the police?
Sonia: She told her parents two different stories about how she had to pay for a special course, and they both sent her money. I told mine that there was a graduation fee.
Tade: I actually think back now and feel bad we made our parents cough out money so suddenly. I don’t think I can do something like that again. But I don’t regret it.
You lied, and then, you saw each other again鈥
Sonia: For the first time in almost five years. I remember us dancing, crying and jumping in the middle of the arrival hall at the airport. People must鈥檝e thought we were crazy.
Tade: It was during this visit we had our first kiss.
Details, please
Tade: We kissed on the second night.
It was the night before the ceremony. We lay in bed after a long evening out with her school friends. We couldn鈥檛 sleep, but we were also too wired to talk. It felt like the most natural thing to lean into each other and kiss.
Sonia: She stayed for a couple of days in my little apartment, and we had to share my small bed. I wanted to do so much more, but we chose restraint.
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Why? Was it awkward?
Sonia: A little. It was a little kiss, no tongues or anything. It鈥檚 crazy that I can remember it like it was yesterday. We were both so nervous with each other. We didn鈥檛 want to mess things up. I don鈥檛 know how we kept from going all out actually. Maybe because the feelings were new, and we were overthinking trying to understand them.
Tade: We must鈥檝e known without even having to discuss it that our love was becoming different. There was this new energy between us. I wanted to hug her all the time and for much longer than normal, but I just didn鈥檛.
Sonia: I kept thinking about the fact that she鈥檇 leave soon, and it made me almost depressed. I wanted her energy around me for the foreseeable future. So the visit was rather bittersweet.
Tade: We even briefly talked about her coming back to Cyprus with me. But I think we both decided that wouldn鈥檛 be wise. In the end, I had to go back sad and alone.
Did you make any decisions about your relationship before you left?
Tade: Not really. A lot was left unsaid. We just focused on celebrating her milestone. I still had about two years of school left. We were so young. We had nothing figured out.
Sonia: I threw myself into job hunting and a master鈥檚 programme. And we went back to finding time to talk to each other over FaceTime.
Tade: For the next two years, things were dry and uneventful鈥 except when she helped me write my thesis.
Pardon
Tade: I鈥檓 exaggerating, obviously. We didn鈥檛 even study the same course, but she鈥檚 great with academic writing so she offered to help. She also had better access to research papers and better methodologies based on the American curriculum. It made everything faster.
Sonia: She got into a couple of relationships though.
Tade: More like flings.
With girls?
Tade: Yes. I鈥檇 pretty much figured out that I liked women.
Sonia: I was too busy having anxiety over my career and future to have 鈥渇lings鈥. People tried to get with me, mostly guys, but they never worked out because I was always too impatient and most black guys in the States are arrogant.
Tade: After I finally graduated in 2018, I moved to Georgia on a work visa. Three months later, she got a new job in DC, and we moved there together. We鈥檝e been inseparable ever since.
Were you official at this point?
Sonia: Yes. I don鈥檛 know how it happened, but it happened.
Tade: I think it became clear when she invited me to move to the US and move in with her, and I actually did it. I was scared AF because I had zero plans. My parents wanted me back in Nigeria, but I didn鈥檛 want that. I had to get uncles and cousins to chip in on the travel and visa payments.
Sonia: I offered to give her some money too, but she refused.
Tade: It was bad enough I鈥檇 be living in her house with no job for some time.
When I got here, the first thing we did was make out for hours. It was pretty clear we were official.
So how鈥檚 the last five years been together in DC?
Sonia: Everything from the shootings to the pandemic, inflation and job insecurity has tested us. But it鈥檚 been great having each other to fight the battles with.
Our relationship has been a dream. There鈥檚 no anger or depression that can鈥檛 be solved with kisses and cuddles, just lying under our thick bed covers in each other鈥檚 arms, crying, ranting, laughing or whatever.
Tade: Something we picked up recently has been spending Saturday evenings in bed, watching old black and white movies until we fall asleep.
Do your families back home know about you two?
Tade: No.
Sonia: Nope.
Tade: It鈥檒l probably stay that way for a while.
Sonia: None of our siblings or relatives know either. We don鈥檛 entertain people like that.
Tade: We don鈥檛 hide it from the public, but our life has been pretty insulated. We mostly hang out with work friends and a few people from Sonia鈥檚 universities or our secondary school. Most of them know about us.
Sonia: My high school bestie teases us all the time like, 鈥淚 knew. I just knew it!鈥 I鈥檓 like, girl, chill.
Tade: We still get side looks from the Naij folks, though. It can be funny at times. Other times, it鈥檚 really annoying.
Tell me about that
Sonia: It’s mostly the newly born-again guys. Everyone is finding Christ afresh and getting so religious these days. I wonder if it鈥檚 something in the air. But I think they mean well. They try to preach in the most polite ways.
Tade: But it鈥檚 still disrespectful.
Sonia: One time, we were hosting in our apartment because I just got a long-awaited promotion, and we invited up to 15 of our friends. Tade and I were in the open kitchen at some point. She wanted to get some more drinks from the fridge. I followed her and we hugged and kissed a little.
I turned and saw this babe giving us a strong stank look. Tade didn鈥檛 even notice. But then, the next day, we were talking to the girl on the phone, and she said, 鈥淵ou know you guys can invite me to things, but you don鈥檛 have to make out in my face when you know I love the Lord.鈥
Tade: I was so angry, I just told her she doesn鈥檛 have to come to our house anymore then.
I鈥檓 screaming. Have you guys had a major fight?
Tade: For sure. We had this major major one recently that made me scared I鈥檇 ruined our relationship for the first time. It was over money.
One of the major aspects of our lives is budgeting. You have to budget well to survive in this country. We budget for all the little things, but we also do it for vacations, major purchases and all.
Sonia: This was in 2022.
We鈥檇 been planning to move to a two-bed for some time. When we鈥檇 had most of the money together to move, renovate and so on. Tade took most of it to replace her computer and buy some other gadget. I get it was an emergency, but I went crazy because she didn鈥檛 even talk to me first.
Tade: My stuff got wrecked, and I was in the middle of this important project. I鈥檇 even lost some of my work in the process. I thought she鈥檇 understand.
Sonia: The shock was mind-blowing because I was already dreaming of our new space. We had our biggest fight ever, and I won鈥檛 forget it any time soon. I finally understand why people say proper communication is so important. If she鈥檇 only spoken to me before making that decision with our money, maybe I鈥檇 have understood or come up with an alternative.
How did you get past that?
Sonia: By talking. She slept on the couch for some days though.
Tade: She made me cry and beg. She only forgave me after I went on my period, and she saw me suffer through my cramps.
Sonia: I couldn鈥檛 stay angry with her while she was in pain. But then, mine started like two days later. It was such a funny, painful mess.
What does the future look like?
Tade: The usual. Marriage. Kids. Not sure how involved our families will be in all that, but we鈥檝e made a pseudo-family here.
Sonia: There鈥檚 my career mentor. She and her husband are like parents to us now. We vacation with them a lot. And we have lots of friends turned siblings who鈥檝e been willing to sacrifice large amounts of money, time and favours to help us in so many ways.
Tade: But it鈥檚 not one-sided. We鈥檙e there for them in many ways too.
Are you saying your biological family hasn鈥檛 been?
Sonia: Mine have tried their best, and I鈥檒l always love them for it. I send stuff back home all the time.
But they aren鈥檛 here. They don鈥檛 do much for me in terms of companionship. I have sisters in Atlanta and my brother is in Dallas, but we haven鈥檛 seen each other in years. I respect it. They鈥檙e building their own families too.
Tade: We鈥檙e completely estranged. My brother, father, mother and I 鈥 we all live separate lives. Besides the occasional WhatsApp call with my brother, I don鈥檛 feel much like we鈥檙e connected in any way.
My father has a new wife with kids. My mum also remarried.
Sonia: But it鈥檚 fine. Everyone gets to find their tribe. We don鈥檛 have to be restricted by blood ties. And in the end, what matters most is finding your soulmate and making the most of it.
True. And how would you rate your Love Life on a scale of 1 to 10?
Tade: 10. 100 even.
Sonia: 10. I actually can鈥檛 imagine doing this life without you.
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