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?
Doris: I鈥檇 just moved to Canada for school in 2022 and got this apartment two weeks in. It was a two-bed and she happened to be my housemate. She鈥檇 moved in the day before me. When I came in alone with my luggage, she received me so warmly. She helped me bring my stuff in. Her aunty, who lived in a different province, was there for the weekend, and they both helped me unpack and settle in.
Lase: That long weekend, we talked on and off 鈥 about our plans, short and long-term, and agreed it was wild that we both came from Lagos.
She鈥檚 such an open sharer, and our rapport was great from day one. I knew I was lucky to have her as a housemate. All my friends who鈥檇 japa to different parts of Canada always complained about their housemates. Either they were like ghosts or they were just problematic. That鈥檚 how I was deceived into thinking I wouldn鈥檛 be as lonely in Canada as people warned.
Doris: By Monday, her aunt was gone, we had to start attending classes straight away, and the loneliness set in properly.
Tell me about the loneliness
Doris: We spent most of the day in school, and we weren鈥檛 studying the same course, so we hardly saw each other. Also, we had to find jobs quickly, so we constantly went for open calls and interviews in those early days.聽
Lase: We weren鈥檛 in a popular province, so not many other Nigerians were in school. The other foreigners weren鈥檛 giving “approachable”, so everyone just kept to themselves. You tried to learn what you could from the lecturers and you went to your house; that was it.聽
At home, we were too tired to even chat, especially when we both got jobs the next week.
Doris: We spent most of what we made on bills and groceries/toiletries. So, on weekends, it was more sleep, small gisting and doom-scrolling on TikTok. There was no one to visit, no fun place to go. It was school, work, bed and repeat. The holidays were worse; no school or work.
For several months, we only saw or talked to each other. This was in sharp contrast with my life in Lagos. I still dream about my active social life pre-japa to this day.
Did things ever get better?
Lase: Yes, but I think it鈥檚 because we got used to it, not that things got that much more fun. We go out more now, though.
Doris: We moved down to Alberta in late 2023, after our graduation. That helped us find our tribe and expanded our social activities a lot. Yet we could still go weeks without seeing anyone but ourselves and some work colleagues 鈥 we both work hybrid.
Lase: We got so close, very early on, that we did everything together. As far as 2022, the year we met, we鈥檇 sleep in the same bed just so we could gist longer and escape loneliness. In Alberta, we just continued on with that habit.
When did you realise you liked each other beyond friendship?
Doris: When we started talking about our forced celibacy.
This was still in 2022. We discovered we were both fairly sexually active in Lagos. Having to stay off sex because there was simply no time or opportunities to find love post-japa was jarring.
Lase: Five months in, it suddenly hit me that I wasn鈥檛 having any sex on top of being lonely, and I felt so physically uncomfortable. I鈥檝e never even thought of myself as not being able to do without sex. But I was losing my mind. I think it was the celibacy combined with the loneliness, homesickness and general anxiety about a completely new phase in my life. Talking it out with her really helped me stay sane.
Doris: One day, we started talking about how we weren鈥檛 getting any, and one day again, we tried to make out in bed. It felt good, and we went on from there.
Did you know you were gay before then?
Doris: No.
Lase: Nope.
Doris: I鈥檇 say I鈥檓 sex-fluid.
Lase: If we have to have labels.
We鈥檙e both open-minded, making it easier to notice the attraction between us and act on it.
But it sounds more like you acted out of necessity than attraction
Lase: It seemed platonic at first because that鈥檚 just the default way we鈥檙e socialised to approach people of your gender. But as we got closer and started talking about everything, and sleeping in the same bed even though we had separate rooms, I started to identify that we were getting more romantic and sexual.
If we were of opposite genders, we would immediately know we liked each other once things like that started to happen, so why do we ignore the signs when it comes to the same gender?
Doris: I鈥檇 been attracted to women in the past, but I鈥檇 never thought to act on that attraction until now. So, I guess I see what you mean by necessity. Regardless, the attraction was there. When we made out the first time, it was the most amazing thing ever. It felt like some well-deserved delayed gratification.
What happened after that first makeout? Did you become official?
Doris: No. First, we made out a lot without really talking about why we were doing it and if we should be getting intimate. But we were a lot happier once that started.
Lase: It wasn鈥檛 until we had sex some weeks later that we talked about what we were to each other. We weren鈥檛 really in a hurry to put labels. I think we also didn鈥檛 need to because our individual priorities were to find our feet in this new society we found ourselves in. So we were thinking about passing our master鈥檚, getting a better job and then an even better job to pay for everything we needed to secure our continued stay in Canada.
Doris: So we were just fine with being each other鈥檚 source of companionship and release for the time being. We had the talk and decided we cared a lot about each other, and that was it. We decided to focus on graduating well.
In the meantime, what was your relationship?
Doris: It was a lot of talking, supporting and picking after each other, literally splitting everything down the middle, from bills to food and money in general.
Lase: And lots of sex. It made everything better when we could be home after a long day and give each other orgasms for days.
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What happened after graduation?
Doris: The dynamic changed. So, to begin with, while we were in Aurora (Canada), we hardly went out together. Our relationship was within the confines of our small student apartment. When we moved to Calgary, Alberta, we started going out in the open as a couple, and it felt like this big glare was on us.
Lase: It felt like literally stepping out of the closet.
Doris: We were compelled to come straight with ourselves and decide we wanted to be committed to each other. But that hasn鈥檛 come without its struggles.
Tell me about them
Doris: The major one is that I鈥檓 a thick hot babe, and Lase is quite petite鈥 so there鈥檝e been instances when I鈥檝e been mistaken for her mum. And that鈥檚 just crazy because we鈥檙e the same age. It鈥檚 happened so many times, and it does put a strain on our otherwise perfect relationship.
Lase: Canadian locals are wild because I just can鈥檛 understand how they can all make such a mistake. They see two women looking intimate, and because one is bigger than the other, they just assume she鈥檚 the mum?
Doris: It also doesn鈥檛 help that I鈥檓 much darker.
But how do you handle this assumption so it doesn鈥檛 affect how you feel about each other?
Doris: We actually go out less these days. I know we shouldn鈥檛 hide, but sometimes, it鈥檚 just easier.
Lase: We don鈥檛 talk about it so much because I鈥檓 scared it鈥檚 a sore point for both of us, but for her most especially. I just give her space to express how she feels about it and listen.
Doris: Besides that, it鈥檚 been bliss. We have the coolest small group of friends from our neighbourhood and workplaces. Like I said earlier, we鈥檝e found our tribe, and we鈥檙e all pretty like-minded. I love the freedom we have to love and be present for each other through major milestones.
You haven鈥檛 mentioned much about your family
Lase: You know how alienating Canada can be. I have cousins here, but they鈥檙e all in Toronto and Ottawa. One鈥檚 in Winnipeg 鈥 I mentioned her mum helped me settle in earlier. Doris and I are actually planning a trip to Toronto this summer, so we鈥檒l hopefully get to unite with them soon.
But so far, social media is how I keep up with my family. My parents are in the UK now, and with the time difference, it鈥檚 been hard to keep up regular communication.
Doris: My parents are still in Lagos, but it鈥檚 the same time zone issue. They gave up on me at least a year ago. We try our best to have video calls most important holidays or birthdays. Same with my siblings who are in different parts of Nigeria.
I鈥檝e introduced Lase as my housemate and best friend; they love her.
Lase: Yeah. Nobody knows we鈥檙e dating except our Alberta friends.
for a day of fun, networking and partayyyyy
Do you ever plan to tell your family?
Doris: Honestly, no. Except we have to.
Lase: They鈥檝e started putting marriage pressure on me, but I鈥檝e hinted that I may never get married. And that might be what ends up happening. Because me I don鈥檛 like stress.
Doris: I think we鈥檒l just go with the flow. We鈥檙e perfectly happy the way we are now. But who knows? We鈥檝e started talking about whether we want to have kids or not. We鈥檝e also started thinking about the legal aspects of our relationship. Things like what would happen in the case of emergencies, when we鈥檙e not legally bound?
Lase: We might just elope and have a civil union. Who knows?
Have you had any major fights yet?
Doris: You know what? No.
Lase: Maybe little arguments, but none that I can even talk about because I can鈥檛 remember what might鈥檝e caused them.
Doris: Actually, we had one some days ago.
I wanted to stop by a SubWay outlet to grab some food on my way home, and I asked if she wanted anything. She said yes and told me what she wanted. I got home and gave it to her, and she said she didn鈥檛 want it anymore.
Ah. Explain yourself, Lase
Lase: She went and got food for only me. I asked where hers was, and she said she鈥檇 changed her mind about getting for herself. How would I sit and eat alone? I only wanted it because you said you were getting some. I didn鈥檛 want you eating alone, and I鈥檇 start feeling long throat.
Doris: That鈥檚 still so annoying. Like, I told you I didn鈥檛 know that鈥檚 what you had in mind, and you still didn鈥檛 eat the food.
Do you know that food still sits in our fridge to this day? Which is just a joke because we know trash SubWay doesn鈥檛 last a day.
Lase: This wasn鈥檛 a serious fight sha. Just one of those little arguments.
Doris: Hmm.
Hmm. How鈥檇 you rate your Love Life on a scale of 1 to 10?
Lase: A sweet 8. We could do this forever.
Doris: I can actually see it. Two cantankerous 80-year-old cat ladies still giving each other the best orgasms every night. I鈥檓 dying of laughter.
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For more on public discrimination against one-half of a couple, read this: Love Life: We Strongly Believe in Different Religions



