91大神

  • Love Life: We Found God Together

    Jamal (25) and Tomi (24) met at a party two years ago when they were both non-religious. On this week鈥檚 Love Life, they talk about struggling to commit, feeling empty in their individual lives and deciding to root their relationship in celibacy and faith.

    Written By:

    Love Life聽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?

    Jamal: I first saw her at a party鈥攐ne of those loud, flashy ones in Lekki in 2022. I wasn鈥檛 really into all that stuff, but my boys dragged me there. She was wearing this neon green outfit that just stood out in the crowd. I remember thinking she was way too cool for me. I didn鈥檛 talk to her that night, but I stalked her Instagram for days after.  

    Tomi: Funny enough, I don鈥檛 even remember seeing him at that party. I only knew him from the DMs he sent after. I wasn鈥檛 going to reply at first because, you know, typical Lagos guys just want vibes. But he asked me what I thought about one weird, deep quote I posted. It wasn鈥檛 the usual “hi dear” stuff. I thought, 鈥淢aybe he鈥檚 not like the others.鈥

    I’m guessing he proved you right?

    Tomi: In some ways, yeah. 

    He wasn鈥檛 the typical guy I was used to. He wasn鈥檛 all about popping bottles or showing off. I mean, he did some of that at first, but deep down, he had this soft side, always asking questions about life and meaning. But it wasn鈥檛 all perfect; there were moments he鈥檇 still act like the Lagos boy鈥攇host me for a few days and then come back like nothing happened.  

    Jamal: Okay, to be fair, I was figuring myself out back then. I didn鈥檛 want to mess it up, but I also didn鈥檛 know how to be fully honest with her at the start. Lagos dating is a game, you know? You鈥檙e either playing or getting played. 

    But with her, I had to stop playing and start being real.

    How did you transition to 鈥渞eal鈥?

    Jamal: That was like two years ago. Feels longer though, with everything that鈥檚 happened since. We started off just chatting and hanging out, nothing too deep. But by the end of that year, things started getting serious.

    Tomi: Yeah, it was around December 2022 when we really clicked. I remember it was the 鈥淒etty December鈥 period鈥攑eople were going crazy with parties, but we were chilling, just talking about life, God, and everything in between. It was the first time I actually felt like a relationship could be more than just 鈥渧ibes鈥 and drama.

    Were you both religious before that?

    Tomi: No. I mean, I grew up in a Christian home, but I wasn’t serious about it. Church was just something I did on Sundays to make my mum happy. 

    At that time, I wasn鈥檛 even thinking about God like that. I was more into finding myself, trying to live my best life, you know? Like most of our generation, I was questioning everything鈥攊ncluding religion.

    Jamal: My family is Muslim, but I wasn鈥檛 deep into it. Religion felt like something our parents’ generation cared about, not ours. I used to think, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the point?鈥 I was more focused on hustling, trying to secure the bag. But after a while, everything started to feel empty. I was partying, making money, but it wasn鈥檛 hitting like I thought it would. 

    When we got closer, we started having these deep conversations about faith and what it all means. It wasn鈥檛 planned; it just kind of happened.

    Is that how the relationship started?

    Tomi: Honestly, those conversations changed everything. We鈥檇 talk for hours, late into the night. At first, it was just about random stuff鈥攍ife, why people do the things they do, Lagos madness. Then, somehow, it shifted to deeper questions about purpose and spirituality. 

    I didn鈥檛 expect it, but those talks made me see Jamal in a different light. It wasn鈥檛 just about the attraction anymore; it was like we were building something more meaningful together.

    Jamal: Yeah, those convos are what made me realise she wasn鈥檛 just another girl. We were both going through a phase of questioning everything and instead of drifting apart like a lot of people do when it gets that real, we got closer. 

    Tell me how that happened

    Jamal: I remember one night we were sitting in a lounge at the mall. After we鈥檇 had this heavy talk about the future, she just looked at me and said, 鈥淒o you even believe in anything?鈥 That hit me. We were connecting on a spiritual level, which is wild because I never thought I’d be that guy.

    Tomi: It wasn鈥檛 like we were 鈥渞eligious鈥 overnight or anything, but those conversations led us to start exploring faith together. And honestly, it was part of what sealed the relationship. I didn鈥檛 just want a relationship that was all vibes or built on physical stuff. I wanted someone who was on the same wavelength as me, someone I could grow with spiritually.

    So when did you become official?

    Jamal: Man, becoming official was messy at first. We鈥檇 been hanging out for months, and I knew she wanted to make it official, but I wasn鈥檛 sure if I was ready. I was still one foot in, one foot out. But after one argument where she basically told me she couldn鈥檛 keep doing this 鈥渟ituationship鈥, I knew I had to step up or risk losing her. So, I asked her out properly. We had a real conversation where I told her I wanted to be with her, no games.

    Tomi: Yeah, we had been in this grey zone for months, and it was frustrating. One day after we鈥檇 had a great weekend together, I straight-up asked him where this was going. I was tired of playing cool and acting like I didn鈥檛 care about a title. I remember being ready to walk away if he didn鈥檛 want something serious, but he surprised me. He finally said he wanted to be with me officially.

    When did you realise you loved each other?

    Jamal: When she called me out on my nonsense and didn鈥檛 let me off the hook. 

    I had a habit of disappearing when things got too serious鈥擨鈥檇 just ghost for a bit. One time, I went MIA for like a week, and when I finally reached out, she didn鈥檛 just take me back. She told me straight up, 鈥淚f you鈥檙e serious about this, you need to act like it.鈥 No one had ever held me accountable like that before. It wasn鈥檛 just love, it was respect.

    Tomi: For me, it wasn鈥檛 one big moment; it was little things adding up. 

    Like, he鈥檇 stay up late talking to me about stuff that wasn鈥檛 even his vibe, just to understand me better. Or when he started randomly praying for me. One day, I was having the worst day, and instead of just being like, 鈥淪orry babe, it鈥檒l get better,鈥 he actually prayed with me. I don鈥檛 know if that sounds cheesy, but that was real for me. I鈥檇 never had someone care for my soul like that. That鈥檚 when I knew it wasn鈥檛 just infatuation鈥攊t was something deeper.

    Was this before or after things became official?

    Tomi: It was after we became official. By then, I think we both knew we were onto something deeper, but I didn鈥檛 fully realise I loved him until we鈥檇 already put labels on it. 

    We made things official around mid-2023. I remember because it was after some serious back and forth. You know how Lagos dating can be鈥攅veryone鈥檚 afraid of getting played, so we were both a bit hesitant at first.

    Jamal: The moment she called me out for ghosting and held me accountable was a couple of months in. We had the whole boyfriend-girlfriend thing going, but that鈥檚 when I knew it wasn鈥檛 just a title or a phase. Before that, we were just figuring each other out and trying to see if we could trust the situation.

    Got it. So what was the relationship like once you got serious?

    Tomi: We were both going through different stuff鈥攔elationship issues, career stress, just trying to figure out life. And we both felt like something was missing. 

    So I suggested we start going to church, but not just because it鈥檚 what our parents did. I wanted to see if there was something deeper for us. We started going together, and for the first time, I wasn鈥檛 just going through the motions.

    Jamal: I wasn鈥檛 really on that level at first. I went to church a few times just to make her happy, but eventually, I started feeling like maybe this was what I needed too. 

    Lagos life has a way of making you feel like you鈥檙e chasing stuff that doesn鈥檛 matter鈥攎oney, parties, whatever. It鈥檚 all a distraction. But when we started talking about God, praying together, and going to church, I realised I was tired of pretending like I had it all figured out. It was less about religion and more about finding something real, something that could give our relationship meaning beyond just us.

    Did you feel like you needed to find God to be together?

    Tomi: It was more about finding a purpose together. And I think doing it together made it even more special. We held each other accountable and grew spiritually in ways I didn鈥檛 even think were possible before.

    Jamal: I wouldn鈥檛 say we needed to find God to be together, but it felt like the missing piece. Before, our relationship was good, but it was like we were coasting: Having fun, going out, doing what couples do. But after a while, it felt shallow. We started questioning if there was more to it. 

    Finding God gave us a deeper foundation. It made us think about what we wanted long-term, not just for ourselves but for the relationship.

    And what did you discover?

    Tomi: We could鈥檝e kept going without bringing faith into it, but honestly, I don鈥檛 think we would鈥檝e lasted. The relationship was good, but along the way, I realised I wanted to grow with someone spiritually, too. 

    Jamal: I think God helped us realise we didn鈥檛 just want to be another couple with good vibes but no depth. It made us more intentional, more grounded. So, in a way, finding God together felt necessary for us to really thrive as a couple.

    Did it change anything about you as individuals?

    Tomi: Yes. I didn鈥檛 know how much until everyone noticed and mentioned it to me. 

    I was always the “let鈥檚 go out, let鈥檚 have fun” type, so when I started skipping events or saying, 鈥淚鈥檓 going to church,鈥 my friends were like, 鈥淭omi, are you okay?鈥 They didn鈥檛 understand it at first. I lost a few friends who thought I was trying to be holier-than-thou, but the real ones stayed. My mum was happy, though. She鈥檇 been praying for me to get serious about God for years, so she saw this as an answer to her prayers. And she loves Jamal for it.

    Jamal: My friends clowned me at first. I鈥檇 say I couldn鈥檛 come out because I had Bible study, and they鈥檇 be like, 鈥淥mo, Jamal has joined the 鈥榗hurch boys鈥 now.鈥 It was jokes for them, but after a while, they noticed I was serious about it. Some respected it, some didn鈥檛. 

    As for my family, it鈥檚 mixed. My dad was confused because we鈥檙e a Muslim family, so he didn鈥檛 get why I was going to church. My mum was more chill about it鈥攕he just wanted me to be at peace. It took time for them to understand it wasn鈥檛 just a phase.

    So, what鈥檚 a 鈥済odly鈥 relationship really like in your experience?

    Tomi: A 鈥済odly鈥 relationship isn鈥檛 perfect, first of all. People think because you鈥檙e trying to do things God鈥檚 way, everything鈥檚 smooth, but nah. We still argue, and we still get annoyed with each other. The difference is, we don鈥檛 walk away from tough conversations. We鈥檝e learnt to check our pride at the door and pray through the challenges.聽

    That鈥檚 a huge shift from my past relationships, where I’d bounce if things got too hard. Now, I鈥檓 more committed to working things out because I know there鈥檚 something bigger holding us together.

    Jamal: Yeah, in my past relationships, if it鈥檚 working, it鈥檚 working, and when it stops working, you move on. There wasn鈥檛 any real purpose beyond enjoying the moment. 

    But with Tomi, we鈥檙e not just dating for dating鈥檚 sake. We see this as something that could lead to marriage, so we鈥檙e more intentional. We try to apply what we learn in church or from the Bible. For example, forgiveness is big for us. I used to hold grudges for days, but now, we don鈥檛 let things fester. We pray, we talk it out, and move on.

    That鈥檚 a good plus

    Tomi: And being 鈥済odly鈥 also means setting boundaries that most people in our generation might not get. 

    We don鈥檛 have sex, and that鈥檚 something that shocks a lot of people. They think we鈥檙e being unrealistic or 鈥渢oo deep,鈥 but it鈥檚 a choice we made because we believe it keeps our relationship focused on the right things. In a time when everything is so physical, being intentional about emotional and spiritual connection first makes us different.

    Jamal: We鈥檙e not trying to impress anyone. And honestly, that鈥檚 freeing. We鈥檙e focused on growth. It鈥檚 a different vibe from what most people our age are doing, but it鈥檚 working for us.

    Neat. How do you keep the faith strong?

    Tomi: By making it a priority in our relationship, not just something we do on Sundays. We pray together almost every day鈥攕ometimes it鈥檚 a long prayer, sometimes it鈥檚 just a quick, 鈥淕od, help us today.鈥 But we make sure we stay connected spiritually. We also talk about our faith a lot鈥攚hat we鈥檙e struggling with, what we鈥檙e learning, how we鈥檙e growing. It keeps us accountable.

    Jamal: Yeah, the prayer thing has been huge for us. It wasn鈥檛 natural for me at first, but now, I can鈥檛 imagine our relationship without it. And we attend a church where we actually connect with the messages and people. We do Bible studies together, too, and we have debates about different topics. 

    It鈥檚 not always easy because we鈥檙e still young, and Lagos has a lot of distractions, but we try to stay focused on what matters.

    Like what?

    Tomi: Setting boundaries that align with our faith. As I said earlier, we鈥檝e chosen to wait until marriage to have sex, and that decision keeps us focused on building a solid connection instead of being driven by physical attraction.聽

    Jamal: And we remind each other why we鈥檙e doing this. There are days when we get tired or frustrated, and that鈥檚 when we have to refocus. Whether it鈥檚 through prayer, reading devotionals, or just talking about our faith, we make sure to keep God in the centre. It鈥檚 not always perfect, but we know the foundation we鈥檙e trying to build.

    How do you handle temptation, if any?

    Jamal: Honestly, temptation is real, especially since everyone鈥檚 just doing whatever they want. There鈥檚 always going to be someone or something trying to pull you away from what you鈥檝e committed to, whether it鈥檚 other people, social media, or even just the culture. 

    But I don鈥檛 put myself in situations that will make me act out. If I know going out late to certain places with certain people will mess with my head, I avoid it.

    Tomi: I鈥檝e had to cut off some friends or situations that weren鈥檛 healthy for my faith or our relationship. It鈥檚 not easy because people don鈥檛 always get it鈥攖hey think you鈥檙e trying to be better than them or that you鈥檝e 鈥渃hanged too much鈥. But it鈥檚 about knowing what I鈥檓 working towards. I keep my circle tight and surround myself with people who support our choices, not question them.

    That鈥檚 important 

    Jamal: And let鈥檚 be real, the sexual temptation is the hardest part. We decided to wait, but that doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 easy. We鈥檙e human. 

    So we鈥檝e put boundaries in place鈥攍ike, we don鈥檛 spend the night at each other鈥檚 places, and we try to limit being in situations where it鈥檚 just us in a closed space, especially late at night. That helps keep us accountable. It鈥檚 not foolproof, but it works most of the time.

    Tomi: Also, when we do feel tempted, we talk about it. We don鈥檛 pretend we鈥檙e not struggling or act like we鈥檝e got it all figured out.

    Jamal: At the end of the day, it鈥檚 about discipline. You can鈥檛 rely on willpower alone. That鈥檚 where the faith comes in鈥攊t gives us strength to stay on track, even when it鈥檚 tough.

    Got it. What was your first major fight about?

    Tomi: It鈥檚 linked to what Jamal mentioned earlier. It was when we were still figuring out where we stood. In the first few months of our official relationship, I felt like Jamal wasn鈥檛 serious鈥攈e鈥檇 go days without reaching out, and I鈥檇 see him on Instagram living life like I didn鈥檛 exist. 

    I remember calling him out on it, and he got defensive, saying he wasn鈥檛 used to people 鈥渄emanding鈥 so much attention from him. It felt like I was asking for too much when all I wanted was basic communication.

    Jamal: Yeah, I was definitely in the wrong. I wasn鈥檛 used to being accountable in relationships. I had a 鈥渄o what I want when I want鈥 mindset, and that clashed with what Tomi needed. She wanted stability and consistency, and I wasn鈥檛 giving that.

    The fight got really heated because, for the first time, someone was calling me out for treating them like an option. It felt uncomfortable, but it was necessary. We didn鈥檛 talk for a few days after that, but it pushed me to be more serious about us.

    How did you show you were serious, Jamal?

    Jamal: I had to change the way I moved. First, I stopped ghosting. That was the big thing. I made sure I was more consistent with communication鈥攏o more going MIA for days and expecting her to be cool with it. 

    I also started being more intentional about spending quality time with her, not just the casual 鈥淟et鈥檚 hang when I鈥檓 free鈥 kind of vibe. We鈥檇 plan proper dates, even if it was just chilling at her place and talking. I made an effort to be there, physically and emotionally.

    Tomi: It was a turning point. It wasn鈥檛 enough to just say we were official; it was about showing up for each other in real ways. It wasn鈥檛 easy, but looking back, it was what we needed to really start building something solid.

    Right

    Jamal: And I made the relationship public. I know that sounds small, but I posted her on my socials, which was like me saying, 鈥淚鈥檓 serious about this girl.鈥 It wasn鈥檛 just for show; it was about being open with everyone, including friends, that I was committed.

    Tomi: We鈥檝e even started talking about the future now. Even though we鈥檝e agreed we should wait another year or two to be properly ready for the commitment of marriage.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your Love Life?

    Tomi: I鈥檇 say it鈥檚 a solid 8. We鈥檝e got the love, respect and commitment down, and we鈥檙e both working on ourselves individually. 

    The only reason I鈥檓 not giving it a 10 is because we鈥檙e still figuring out certain things, especially around balancing our faith and the pressures of modern relationships.

    Jamal: Yeah, I鈥檇 give it an 8 too. The love is there, and it鈥檚 real, but like Tomi said, there鈥檚 always stuff to work on.

    About the Authors

More By This Author

91大神 amplifies African youth culture by curating and creating smart and joyful content for young Africans and the world.