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  • Love Life: We Married in Secret to Avoid Drama

    In 2020, Dayo (35) and Amaka (32) met at a mutual friend鈥檚 wedding. On this week鈥檚 Love Life, they talk about only realising their different backgrounds when family came into the picture, eloping when their families disapproved of their relationship and how moving in together made them question their compatibility.

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    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?

    Amaka: Honestly, I was so embarrassed the first time we met. I spilt wine on his suit at our friend鈥檚 wedding. I expected him to get mad, but he laughed.

    Dayo: I think it was funny because it was one of those lowkey 鈥渟ocial distance鈥 weddings. She was trying so hard to apologise, but I was more interested in how she handled the awkwardness. There was something about the way she spoke that I can鈥檛 explain.

    Amaka: He was like, 鈥淚t鈥檚 just fabric, not the end of the world.鈥

    What happened next?

    Amaka: He slid into my DMs the next day. I was surprised because we didn鈥檛 even talk much after the wine incident at the wedding. But he found me through the wedding hashtag and sent a message that said, 鈥淚 think I owe you a drink for ruining my outfit.鈥 It was cheeky, but I liked it.

    Dayo: We started talking online. It was easy. No pressure. We clicked over photography and random memes. I wasn鈥檛 even thinking about dating at the time.

    Amaka: We kept it simple, but I always had this quiet vibe that we鈥檇 be more than friends. Neither of us pushed it, though, which was probably the best part.

    Why was it the best part?

    Amaka: This was in August 2020. I鈥檇 just gotten promoted at a time when a lot of people were getting laid off, so I was really focused on my career. I鈥檇 also been single for about a year after a messy situationship, and honestly, I was happy on my own. Relationships felt like unnecessary drama at that point.

    Dayo: It was right in the middle of the pandemic. Everything was crazy, and I was working from home full-time as a software engineer. I鈥檇 gotten out of a serious relationship a few months earlier, so I wasn鈥檛 in any rush to jump into something new either. 

    My last relationship ended because we wanted different things鈥攕he wanted to move abroad, and I was committed to staying in Lagos. So, when I met Amaka, I was honestly just chilling, not expecting much to come out of it. 

    Neat

    Amaka: Yes. It made the whole thing feel less forced. When we did fall in love, it was just good vibes, no baggage from our past creeping in.

    About a month after we met, we met up in person for the first time. Dayo suggested getting the drinks he said he owed me, and I was a bit hesitant. I wasn鈥檛 sure if I wanted to take it offline so soon, but something about him felt easy. So, we met at this quiet caf茅 in VI near my office鈥攁 safe, neutral territory.

    Dayo: It wasn鈥檛 one of those grand, romantic first dates; we just talked. I ordered the most basic thing鈥攂lack coffee鈥攁nd she made fun of me for it. But that鈥檚 when I knew I liked her. There was no pretense. No one was trying to impress the other.

    Is that when the relationship started?

    Amaka: Not really. It wasn鈥檛 about sparks flying everywhere; it was more like slipping into something comfortable. I didn鈥檛 even realise three hours had passed that night until they were closing the caf茅. We walked around for a bit after, and it felt鈥 nice.

    Dayo: We started talking about a relationship two months in, but it wasn鈥檛 a 鈥淒TR鈥 (define the relationship) moment. It was more like, “Okay, we鈥檙e clearly on the same page here. Let鈥檚 stop pretending this is casual.”

    Amaka, what was your response to this?

    Amaka: I don鈥檛 remember. We never had that awkward 鈥淲hat are we?鈥 conversation. It just evolved naturally. 

    I think the first time it felt serious was when he met my mum that Christmas. That was a big deal for me because she鈥檚 super protective, but he handled it well. After that, we kind of just knew we were in it for the long haul.

    What was the relationship like once it started for real?

    Amaka: Our dating period was very… simple, in the best way. There were no flashy date nights or grand gestures. It was more about the small things, like when I鈥檇 come home exhausted, and Dayo would just show up with shawarma or my favourite street suya without me asking. 

    Dayo: I think people sometimes over-complicate relationships. For us, it was the everyday moments that made it work. 

    I remember she鈥檇 make these fire playlists for me when I was coding late at night (she doesn鈥檛 anymore sha). I鈥檇 just have my headphones on, listening to whatever she put together while working, and it made those stressful nights easier.

    Sounds like things got serious soon after this?

    Amaka: It started feeling more serious when we both realised we were thinking long-term without even talking about it. 

    One Sunday, just after Valentine鈥檚 Day 2021, we were strolling around the area after lunch in a restaurant when I asked him, “Do you ever think about where this is going?” 

    I wasn鈥檛 trying to make it a deep conversation, so I didn鈥檛 expect much from the question. But Dayo stopped and looked at me like I鈥檇 asked the most obvious thing in the world. When he said, “It鈥檚 already going somewhere special,” it hit me that we were both on the same wavelength without needing to define anything.

    Dayo: I wasn鈥檛 really the type to plan out everything, but with Amaka, I could just see it. I knew she was it for me, and that moment felt like we鈥檇 acknowledged what was already happening. We didn鈥檛 rush anything, though. Over the next year, we just kept building, letting things evolve naturally. No pressure, no big talks about timelines.

    What was the next big milestone in your relationship?

    Amaka: One evening in 2022, we were sitting on my balcony. It was one of those quiet moments when we didn鈥檛 need to fill the silence with small talk. He casually pulled out a ring and slipped it onto my finger, saying, “This feels right. Let鈥檚 do life together.” My heart stopped for several seconds. I was so shocked.

    There was no dramatic proposal, no crowd. It was just us, exactly how I always imagined it would be.

    Dayo: It wasn鈥檛 planned at all, to be honest. I didn鈥檛 even think about getting down on one knee or anything like that. I just knew that there was no one else I wanted to be with. I didn鈥檛 need to make a show of it because our relationship wasn鈥檛 built on shows. It was built on these small, quiet moments, and that鈥檚 how I wanted to propose鈥攊ntimately, just between us.

    It wasn鈥檛 planned, but you had a ring?

    Dayo: Months before that, my brother dragged me ring shopping for his girlfriend. And I saw one that I knew Amaka would love. I think that鈥檚 when I knew for sure I wanted her to be my wife. I carried it around in my pocket for months with no plan.

    So, what was the engagement period like?

    Amaka: It was awkward. 

    We hadn鈥檛 really talked in detail about our families or backgrounds. I think we both just liked keeping things light. It wasn鈥檛 until we got deeper into the relationship鈥攎aybe around the time we started talking about marriage鈥攖hat we realised how different our upbringings were. 

    I grew up in a very middle-class, 鈥渃omfortable鈥 home. My parents are civil servants, nothing flashy but stable. We didn鈥檛 struggle, but we didn鈥檛 live large either.

    Dayo: My family鈥檚 wealthy. But I never really carried that on my sleeve, especially when I started dating Amaka. I didn鈥檛 want it to become this thing where people saw me differently or assumed I was entitled.

    Amaka, you didn鈥檛 know he was rich?

    Amaka: I had no clue. I just thought he was this humble tech guy, and that was part of what I liked about him. 

    But when he invited me to his parents’ house after the engagement, I almost choked. I remember sitting there, trying to act like I wasn鈥檛 intimidated, but it was a lot. His family was polite, but there was this unspoken vibe that felt like I didn鈥檛 exactly fit in.

    Dayo: I think that was the first time it really hit both of us how different our worlds were. 

    My family… They weren鈥檛 hostile, but they made a few comments about Amaka鈥檚 background, and it was obvious they had concerns. They were expecting me to marry someone inside our circle. I didn鈥檛 tell her right away because I didn鈥檛 want her to feel weird about it. But yeah, it wasn鈥檛 easy navigating that.

    How did you navigate it, though?

    Amaka: By the time we got serious about marriage, we started facing pressure, especially from his side. My family was more relaxed, but his? They had all these expectations. They weren鈥檛 against me personally, but the expectation of 鈥減roper Lagos society鈥 just got exhausting. 

    Every time we鈥檇 try to talk about the wedding, there鈥檇 be all these side comments and subtle jabs. I think one day, I just snapped and said, 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 we just do it our way, without anyone鈥檚 approval?鈥 I meant it as a joke at first.

    Dayo: Yeah, that moment was funny because we were just venting about how complicated things were getting with family, especially my mum. We鈥檇 been so caught up in trying to make everyone happy, we almost forgot this was about us. 

    The idea of eloping started sounding like freedom. No drama, no trying to impress anyone, just doing what felt right for us.

    Eloping? In Nigeria?

    Amaka: Once the idea was out there, it stuck. It wasn鈥檛 a big, romantic 鈥渞unaway together鈥 moment. It was more like, 鈥淥kay, let鈥檚 just make this simple.鈥 

    We picked a random Thursday 鈥攖wo weeks after that conversation. No one knew, not even my best friend. We both took the day off work and got married at the Ikoyi Registry. It wasn鈥檛 fancy 鈥攋ust us, two witnesses, and a marriage officer.

    Dayo: We didn鈥檛 want anyone to talk us out of it or complicate things, so we didn鈥檛 tell our families until afterwards. After we signed the papers, I remember we went to this small bar, just the two of us, had a couple of drinks, ate pepper soup, and laughed about how we鈥檇 just done the most unconventional thing for a Nigerian couple. 

    It felt right, though.

    I鈥檓 in shock

    Amaka: Afterward, we went back to our apartment like it was just another regular day. No one knew we鈥檇 gotten married, not even our neighbours. It was almost surreal, but it felt like the most natural thing in the world.

    I鈥檓 scared to ask how your parents took it when you finally told them

    Dayo: My mum was livid. She couldn鈥檛 believe we didn鈥檛 throw a proper wedding, and Amaka鈥檚 family was shocked too. But we figured they鈥檇 come around eventually. We didn鈥檛 elope to hurt anyone.

    Amaka: It鈥檚 funny, though鈥攚hen we eloped, a few people started putting the pieces together. They knew something was up, but they couldn鈥檛 figure out what exactly. Some of my friends still don鈥檛 know the full story. 

    But did your parents later come around?

    Amaka: Of course, my family came around faster than his. At first, they were shocked and a bit hurt that we didn鈥檛 have a traditional wedding, but after some time, they understood why we did it. My mum was just happy I was happy, and my dad kind of laughed it off, saying I鈥檇 always been a bit unconventional.

    We ended up doing the traditional in 2023 anyway. 

    Dayo: My mum didn鈥檛 speak to me for months, and there was cold silence from my extended family. I think they were embarrassed, to be honest. They kept bringing up how 鈥減roper鈥 weddings were a big deal in our circle and how we basically disrespected my family by eloping. 

    But over time, they softened. I think they realised we wouldn鈥檛 apologise for how we chose to do things, and eventually, they accepted that this was who we were.

    Do you still get glances and whispers at family gatherings?

    Amaka: Not really. How many family gatherings do we even attend these days?

    There was one, months after we eloped, where his mum finally just sighed and said, 鈥淵ou two are stubborn.鈥 But then, she smiled. That was her way of giving in, I guess.

    Dayo: She still wishes we had a big wedding, though. Every now and then, she鈥檒l drop a comment like, 鈥淵ou can still do a vow renewal, you know?鈥 But at this point, everyone鈥檚 accepted that we did things differently. I think they respect that now, even if it wasn鈥檛 what they wanted.

    What about your friends? Are they as accepting?

    Amaka: A lot of our friends were completely thrown off when they found out. Some were offended they weren鈥檛 invited. One of my closest friends even jokingly said, 鈥淵ou didn鈥檛 even give me the chance to buy aso ebi.鈥

    Dayo: Yeah, there were some awkward moments for sure. Some of my boys couldn鈥檛 understand why we didn鈥檛 just deal with the family drama. But I think over time, they realised it wasn鈥檛 about the ceremony for us鈥攊t was about keeping our peace.

    Right

    Dayo: The weirdest comments came from people who asked if our decision meant we were hiding something鈥攍ike, 鈥淒id you elope because of money issues?鈥 or 鈥淲hy were your families against it that much?鈥 It鈥檚 funny how people automatically assume something had to be wrong for us to make that choice. But nah, we just didn鈥檛 want the stress.

    Amaka: There were others who totally got it. Some of my friends said they respected how we didn鈥檛 let anyone鈥檚 expectations define us. Still, people give us a knowing look at parties, like we broke some unwritten rule. It鈥檚 like we鈥檝e become the couple that did the 鈥渃razy, rebellious鈥 thing.

    I thought it was impossible to elope, knowing Nigerian parents

    Amaka: And I think, even now, some of them are still trying to process how we managed to pull it off without letting anyone in. But honestly, most of our real friends are happy for us鈥攖hey just didn鈥檛 expect us to go that far off the beaten path.

    Any regrets about it?

    Amaka: There are moments I wonder what it would鈥檝e been like to have thebig, Yoruba wedding鈥攚earing aso ebi, having our families all there, you know? But then, I remember the peace of mind we had doing it our way. The stress of trying to please everyone would鈥檝e driven me crazy.

    Dayo: I wouldn鈥檛 say I regret it. The only thing I wish is that our families didn鈥檛 take it so hard at the time. It was tough navigating that, especially with my mum, but I don鈥檛 regret the decision itself.

    Would you do it again if you could go back in time?

    Amaka: I don鈥檛 know o.

    Eloping definitely changed the dynamic between us and our families. It put us in a bubble for a while, where it felt like it was just us against the world. In a way, it made us stronger as a couple because we had to rely on each other more. But it also created tension, especially with his family, and that鈥檚 something we had to work through.

    Dayo: Well, there was already tension there. Which is why we did what we did. 

    But yeah, it made us more united as a couple, but it also forced us to grow up fast. We didn鈥檛 have the safety net of a big wedding or family support from the start, so we had to figure a lot out on our own. It was a good thing in the end, but at the time, it felt heavy.

    Right

    Amaka: It also changed the way people saw us. Some relatives didn鈥檛 even believe we were married until the traditional wedding. We had to explain to a lot of people that we didn鈥檛 elope just to rebel.

    Dayo: But one thing for sure, eloping made us prioritise each other more. It took away all the noise and distractions. It set the tone for our marriage in a way, like, 鈥淚t鈥檚 you and me, no matter what.鈥 That mindset has helped us through a lot of the challenges we鈥檝e faced so far.

    What was your first major fight about?

    Amaka: Ah, that was over something so silly. We were arguing about where to live. I wanted to stay in Lekki. I was used to the Island, it was close to my work, and let鈥檚 be real, it鈥檚 a vibe. But Dayo was set on staying on the Mainland. He had this whole thing about how Island living was overhyped and it was just going to drain our finances.

    Dayo: Yeah, rent on the Island is mad. I couldn鈥檛 justify paying all that money when we could get a much bigger place for less on the Mainland. I grew up in Surulere, and I didn鈥檛 see the big deal. Plus, traffic wasn鈥檛 that bad if we timed things right. 

    But I think, for Amaka, it was more than just location. It felt like we were fighting about lifestyle鈥攚hat kind of life we wanted to live together.

    How so?

    Amaka: It wasn鈥檛 just about the house. The Island represented the life I鈥檇 worked hard for, and I didn鈥檛 want to feel like I was 鈥渄owngrading鈥 by moving to the Mainland. I know it sounds shallow, but I was used to a certain standard of living.

    Dayo: That鈥檚 when it got heated. I accused her of being too materialistic, and she said I was being cheap. We were both kind of stubborn about it. The argument went on for days鈥攕ilent treatment, the works. We weren鈥檛 really fighting about the house anymore; we were fighting about the future and what it meant to be together.

    When did this happen exactly?

    Amaka: It was about six months after we moved in together. So, maybe around February or March 2022? We鈥檇 just gotten past the honeymoon phase of living together, and reality hit us hard.

    Oh, so, before eloping?

    Dayo: Yeah, that鈥檚 right. By then, we were starting to see the day-to-day struggles of sharing a life鈥攎oney, commuting, all of that. I think it was the first time we had to confront the fact that our backgrounds and expectations didn鈥檛 always align perfectly.

    Amaka: I remember crying one night because I felt like we were so different, like maybe we wanted completely different things. But then we had this talk鈥攐ne of those conversations that last till like 2 a.m. We finally got to the heart of it: we were both scared of losing who we were individually by compromising too much.

    How did you resolve this?

    Dayo: We met halfway. 

    We ended up living on the Mainland, but we made sure to prioritise comfort and style. It wasn鈥檛 the Island penthouse Amaka dreamed of, but it was a place we could both call home. Looking back, that fight was less about where we lived and more about learning how to really communicate. It was our first big test as a couple.

    Why does it sound like it wasn’t exactly halfway for Amaka?

    Amaka: Because it wasn鈥檛. Let鈥檚 be real鈥擨 compromised more. I had anidea of what our life should look like, and I didn鈥檛 get that. Moving to the Mainland felt like a step down at the time, especially when most of my friends lived on the Island. 

    Dayo: I think it was more important for me to show her we could create a life we were both comfortable with, without letting societal pressures dictate everything. The truth is, we both had to adjust, but yeah, Amaka definitely gave up more in terms of location.

    Amaka: I鈥檒l admit I was salty about it for a while. Every time I hit the Third Mainland Bridge traffic, I鈥檇 remind him whose idea this was. But over time, I got used to it. I think the real halfway came in the way we decorated and made the space feel like ours. That鈥檚 where we truly met in the middle.

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

    Amaka: Hmm, I鈥檇 say a solid 8. We鈥檝e had our ups and downs, but we鈥檙e always learning and growing together. The little things he does, like making me tea when I鈥檓 stressed, or listening when I just need to vent鈥攊t鈥檚 those moments that make it an 8 for me.

    Dayo: Yeah, I鈥檇 say around an 8 too. We鈥檝e learnt to argue better, love better, and be more patient. Plus, Amaka makes the best creamy pasta, so that bumps the rating up.

    Amaka: See, it鈥檚 the food for him! But seriously, we鈥檙e still figuring things out, and that鈥檚 okay.

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up .

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