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?
Ene: We met through a women-only LGBTQ+ support group exactly ten years ago. I鈥檇 just joined the community through an invitation from someone I met at work, and they hosted a book club meeting about a month after. I love to read so I happily attended.
I sat beside Nduka; her big smile and nice scent caught my attention. We became fast friends.
Nduka: I remember we discussed “The Goldfinch” by Donna Tartt, and she made a joke about how hard it was to get copies of new foreign books. She鈥檇 read a pirated ebook online, and it turned out more than half of us in that room had done the same. We exchanged numbers and email addresses because I wanted to send her some other books I liked.
When did you realise you liked each other?
Ene: The group organised hangouts at least once a month, and we鈥檇 always chat each other up to check if the other person was attending. She lived not too far away from me at the time, so we started attending together. I don鈥檛 usually like going to places where I don鈥檛 know anyone, so I鈥檇 have stopped going to those things if not for her.
By the third time we did that, we鈥檇 formed a bond outside my usual friend group. She became the only person I could talk to about anything remotely queer; all my friends leaned toward homophobia.
Nduka: I鈥檇 been part of the community for about a year then, and had made many friends. But with her, I drifted apart from the other girls. Something about her being new to the whole lifestyle made her really attractive to me, so I did all I could to support her without being pushy.
I knew I liked her the first day we went for a games night together in the same cab. I wanted to kiss her many times, but I held back.
What was the turning point from all that holding back?
Nduka: Months after we met, she asked me if we could be friends outside just meeting because of the community.
Ene: I liked her a lot, but we only ever talked or hung out when there was a community activity. I wanted more than that. She said, 鈥淥f course,鈥 but between work and the fact that I was paranoid about being outside together, we still only hung out with the community for months.
Nduka: Then one Sunday, I just called and asked if I could come to her house. She still lived with her parents, so her 鈥測es鈥 was hesitant. I came anyway, and we stayed in her room the whole day talking and reading.
Our relationship shifted to something beyond friendship that day. We kept looking at each other and our conversation was strongly flirtatious.
Ene: I was so shy and was constantly blushing.
Walk me through how you started dating
Nduka: After that day, we started having these long phone calls. But we also missed several community hangouts.
Ene: I think we were scared to be together in public. I was probably the scared one.
Nduka: No, I just knew I鈥檇 try to kiss or constantly hug you. And I don鈥檛 think you were ready for that.
Ene: The founders kept calling me to make sure I was fine. I wanted to tell them I think I鈥檝e fallen in love with another member, and I don鈥檛 know how to act.
If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill out this聽.
I feel you, girl
Ene: Thank you.
Nduka: Anyway, during those phone calls, I鈥檇 sneak in that all I wanted was for her to be my girlfriend. And she鈥檇 find a way to sidetrack. It was so frustrating.
Ene: I didn鈥檛 want to read too much meaning into anything. And I鈥檇 also never dated a girl. I really didn鈥檛 know how to act.
Nduka: One day, I landed in her house once more. It was a Saturday, and it was just her mum who was home and in the living room. I kissed her, we made out for a bit, and I looked her in the eyes and said, 鈥淧lease, be my girlfriend.鈥 She shook her head but still said yes. That鈥檚 how I knew I was in for a rollercoaster.
Scrim. What happened?
Nduka: Our relationship for the next year or so was just her sneaking into my house 鈥 I鈥檇 moved out of my parents house and only had a roommate 鈥 and us making out, sometimes, having sex. That was it. I tried for a little romance. We鈥檇 buy each other gifts all the time, but we could never go out, and I couldn鈥檛 even hold her hand at community hangouts.
Ene: I was shy and scared.
Nduka: At first, it was fun showing her all the ways queer sex is better for women. But after a while, I wanted more.
Don鈥檛 get me wrong, we also had very beautiful conversations. We鈥檇 open up to each other about everything and I鈥檇 feel so connected to her. So I told myself to be content with that.
Did you talk to her about wanting more?
Nduka: I brought it up. But I was also scared of pushing her back into the closet, so I treaded carefully.
Ene: She鈥檚 a really affectionate person. I kept thinking we鈥檇 be in public and she wouldn鈥檛 be able to help getting close to me and patting my hair out of my face or something.
I also knew my friends wouldn鈥檛 accept her because she鈥檚 always been so openly queer. Yet I admired that about her. How boldly she鈥檚 who she is.
How has your relationship evolved since then?
Nduka: We鈥檝e come so far, and it really just took us getting comfortable with each other.
There were times when I thought I鈥檇 leave her for someone else. But I knew the other people wouldn鈥檛 be as open and sincere as her. I鈥檇 been with like four people before her and the relationships were always shallow and sexual. Not with her.
It was jarring to accept that I鈥檇 fallen in love with Ene at some point.
Ene: She was patient with me.
I remember when we went on our first date in 2018. I was like, what was I so scared about. It was a lovely dinner at a restaurant, and it felt good to be with her in the open. We didn鈥檛 overthink or talk too much about it beforehand. It was just time.
Nduka: In 2019, we talked about getting married. But it was a funny conversation because we weren鈥檛 even discussing marrying each other. We were talking about if she鈥檇 have to marry a man. Her mum had suddenly started asking her about it, and it was the first time we addressed the fact that we couldn鈥檛 even get married. What did that mean for our commitment to each other?
Ene: I decided I didn鈥檛 want to marry anyone if I couldn鈥檛 marry her, so we moved in together soon after.
How does not being able to wed really feel?
Nduka: It sucks.
Ene: It makes me feel vulnerable, and sometimes, insecure about our relationship.
Nduka: After so long together, it鈥檚 something we can comfortably ignore. We focus on what exists: the love between us, how important we are to each other. Everything else is just semantics.
After so long together, do your parents, family or friends know?
Ene: I came out to my parents finally in 2021. And it was the scariest experience ever. I don鈥檛 know how I did it. I think they were so shocked they just pretend I never existed.
Nduka: I mean, they still check in on you from time to time.
Ene: My eldest brother heard and kept saying, 鈥淏ut you鈥檙e both so feminine. How does it work?鈥 He was just laughing at me. It felt invalidating. I don鈥檛 know which would鈥檝e been worse, what I got or anger.
Nduka: My mum knew I was queer from my uni days. But she鈥檚 prayed against the 鈥渟pirit in me鈥 to this day.
I think what鈥檚 surprising, though, is how our families still quietly support us despite their differing beliefs. They still check in on us. My elder sisters are always in my house wanting to hangout. Most of my friends are open minded. But we had to lose most of her friends.
How did you feel about that, Ene?
Ene: Sad.
But I never felt truly accepted among my friends, so I don鈥檛 let myself get too sad. This one 鈥渇riend鈥 actually started telling everyone, spreading gossip and lies about our relationship. It was toxic. Those weren鈥檛 really friends.
Nduka: We鈥檝e made so many new healthy ones together.
Ene: The community has been the perfect support group. Our friends there are some of the best people I鈥檝e ever known.
What does the future look like for your relationship?
Ene: We鈥檝e been talking about children. I鈥檝e always wanted kids so it鈥檚 been a major topic between us for the last couple of years. We鈥檙e still torn between getting a sperm donor we know or using a sperm bank for the IVF.
Nduka: We鈥檝e been visiting fertility clinics, and they鈥檝e been surprisingly homophobic.
Ene: We realised it鈥檚 smoother to approach them as a single mother than as a queer couple. And that鈥檚 been heartbreaking because it鈥檚 not like they particularly support an unmarried woman wanting kids either.
Nduka: Adoption was ruled out for obvious reasons. Crazy, but IVF is actually cheaper too.
Interesting. What about the pushback you may get while raising children as a queer couple in Nigeria?
Nduka: We鈥檝e thought about it. But society has already taken the option to marry away from us. We won鈥檛 let them take this too.
Ene: I know it鈥檒l be drama, especially when they start going to primary and secondary school. I guess we鈥檒l cross that bridge when we get there. I鈥檓 scared, but not scared enough to not at least try.
Fair. What was your first major fight about?
Ene: We fight about money a lot. She鈥檚 too extravagant with her spending, especially on gadgets and appliances.
Nduka: Or you鈥檙e too thrifty. She鈥檚 saving for the apocalypse or something. She can go days without spending a dime, which is a skill that鈥檚 thankfully rubbed off on me.
Ene: A little.
Anyway, I wouldn鈥檛 call them major fights. Don鈥檛 think we鈥檝e had a major fight.
Nduka: No.
On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?
Nduka: 8. Nigeria should let us marry in peace.
Ene: Yes, 8. When it鈥檚 just us, it鈥檚 perfect. But once the world comes in鈥
Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories聽here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up聽.
READ THIS NEXT: Love Life: I Met Him Through a Radio Show as a 40+ Single Mum



