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

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What鈥檚 your earliest memory of each other?
Motunde: It was at a cemetery in 2018. I had just returned from Benin Republic and wanted to visit my dad鈥檚 grave for the first time three months after his passing. I was completely lost, wandering around for what felt like hours. Then, this guy showed up and offered to help. Initially, I was startled because I was so lost in my thoughts that I didn鈥檛 even know when he approached me. I didn鈥檛 answer him sha. I just nodded and kept walking.
Why?
Motunde: I guess you could say I鈥檇 watched enough Nollywood movies to know better than to speak to a stranger in the cemetery. He could have been a ghost or something.
Anyway, his phone rang around the same time and from his conversation, I felt slightly relieved. I think it was a relative who called because there was a lot of praying, and he kept saying 鈥渁men鈥. He asked to help me again after he got off the phone, and this time around, I responded.
Gregory: The funny thing is, I wasn鈥檛 even supposed to be there that day. I鈥檇 kept postponing the visit to my dad鈥檚 grave because work wouldn鈥檛 allow and I wasn鈥檛 keen on visiting alone. My siblings were also supposed to come because we wanted to lay wreaths on the grave and inspect some minor construction work, but they cancelled at the last minute.
When I noticed Motunde, she looked so frustrated, pacing back and forth. Something told me to ask if she was okay, and she said she was trying to find her dad鈥檚 grave. I鈥檇 been in a similar mix the first time I came to the cemetery, so I knew what she was dealing with and decided to help.
How were you able to locate a stranger鈥檚 grave?
Gregory: Well, there鈥檚 a way they demarcate the cemetery. The first question I asked was if her dad was Christian or Muslim. He was Muslim, so that gave me an idea of where to look.
Right
Motunde: He helped me find the grave and stayed with me the entire time, even though I was crying my eyes out.
Gregory: I couldn鈥檛 leave. I鈥檇 been there before鈥攆eeling lost and overwhelmed by grief鈥攁nd I wanted to make it easier for her. Before leaving, I jokingly said, 鈥淚f you owe me anything, it鈥檚 lunch.鈥
Motunde: I thought, 鈥淲ho asks for lunch in a cemetery?鈥 But he said it so casually that I laughed. He also asked for my phone number under the guise of 鈥渃hecking in鈥, and I gave it to him because he鈥檇 been so helpful that I didn鈥檛 feel the need to deny his request. Plus, I wasn鈥檛 planning to stay in touch.
You weren鈥檛?
Motunde: The cemetery didn鈥檛 seem like an ideal place for a love story to happen.
I see. So what happened after that?
Motunde: Nothing, really. A week after the cemetery encounter, he texted me to check up, but I wasn鈥檛 really interested, so the communication fizzled out. Then, eight months later, I ran into him at a party in Osun state.
Gregory: It was a complete coincidence. I saw her across the room and thought, 鈥淣o way. What are the chances?鈥 I walked up to her and said, 鈥淒o you always meet people in strange places?鈥 She laughed and tried to form brand new, as if she didn鈥檛 know who I was, but I wasn鈥檛 having it. We talked all night.
Motunde: We went on and on about how cool and peaceful Osogbo was. We also veered into bits of our personal life, work and other stuff. Our conversation that night made me realise there was more to him than I thought. He wasn鈥檛 just the kind man from the cemetery鈥攈e was funny, attentive, and easy to talk to.
Gregory: After that night, we started texting and talking more regularly. At first, it was casual, but over time, our conversations deepened.
How so?
Gregory: We got into more personal aspects of our life. I鈥檇 been single for so long because I was hyper-focused on my business and money, but I鈥檇 started to feel strong waves of loneliness since I lost my mum. Motunde was the first person I shared this with because my siblings and other relatives would have assumed I was depressed or something if I mentioned loneliness. I didn鈥檛 want that.
Motunde: Like I said, Greg鈥檚 very easy to talk to. I found myself talking about some of my projects, family troubles I was navigating, and just personal things you鈥檇 only share with people you鈥檝e known for a long time.
Was this how you became friends?
Gregory: In a way. We talked for hours about anything and everything, and she quickly became one of my favourite people.
Motunde: He was consistent, which meant a lot to me. He paid attention to the little things鈥攍ike when I mentioned missing amala from a restaurant in Lagos, and he sent me a picture of himself eating there a week later, teasing me about it.
Gregory: I wasn鈥檛 teasing 鈥 I was trying to make her smile.
Motunde: Those moments made me feel seen. He wasn鈥檛 just my friend; he became someone I trusted deeply.
Gregory: I think that鈥檚 what made transitioning to dating so easy. The foundation was already there.
I was coming to that. How did the relationship move from friendship to dating?
Motunde: It all felt very natural. There wasn鈥檛 a grand confession of love or anything like that. In March 2019, he told me how he felt, and I realised I felt the same way. I remember the month because I wrote about it in my journal and prayed to God about what I was about to get myself into.
Gregory: I didn鈥檛 want to risk ruining what we had, but I also didn鈥檛 want to hold back my feelings. I told her, 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 feel the same, we can stay friends鈥攏o pressure.鈥
Motunde: I appreciated that he made it so easy to say yes. It didn鈥檛 feel scary or rushed; it felt right. And that was how we became official.
Cute. What were those early days of dating like?
Motunde: Oh, they weren鈥檛 my favourite days. We went from seeing each other almost all the time to going weeks and months apart. Work took me to Abuja shortly after we started dating, so we became a long-distance couple. Greg was in Lagos.
Gregory: Those days tested our communication skills. Since we couldn鈥檛 rely on physical presence, we had to be intentional about staying connected via phone calls and constant texting, and I struggled with that.
There were days I worked long and exhausting hours and wasn鈥檛 in the mood to text or talk for long. But Motunde felt I wasn鈥檛 prioritising her.
Motunde: Sometimes, I鈥檇 text him about something important, and he鈥檇 take hours to reply because he was busy. I鈥檇 get upset, thinking he didn鈥檛 prioritise me, but when we talked about it, I realised he was trying his best to juggle work and our relationship.
Gregory: Something I took away from that period was learning to resolve conflicts without escalating them. The distance also made the times we spent together even more special.
How so?
Motunde: We typically spent only two days together whenever he visited Abuja or when I was in Lagos. So, we made sure every second counted. We locked ourselves off from the world鈥攑hones were off, we hardly stepped out鈥攋ust the two of us having loads of intimate time together.
Then, in October 2019, I had a pregnancy scare.
Did this affect your relationship?
Motunde: Quite the opposite. We often talked about our future as a couple, and I was even planning to get transferred back to Lagos. Still, I wasn鈥檛 sure how Greg would take the news. I called him on the phone that day, explained the situation and said I鈥檇 go in for a proper blood test if my period was still late. Then, he asked if it was time to take the next step.
Gregory: I told her, 鈥淚 know I want to spend the rest of my life with you and if this test comes out positive, I think we should get married.鈥澛
Motunde: I remember laughing so hard on the phone because I wasn鈥檛 thinking about marriage when I woke up that morning.聽
Anyway, I told him to let me get the test results before we started building castles in the air. The test came out negative, but Greg was still bent on his request for marriage. I came to Lagos in December 2019, and that was when he proposed.
Gregory: We had our introduction and court wedding in January, and we were going to have our traditional wedding in March. But the pandemic happened, and everything shut down.
I remember
Motunde: It was devastating. I鈥檓 my mum鈥檚 only surviving daughter 鈥 we lost my sister to a car accident in 2009 鈥 and she鈥檇 dreamt of my wedding for years.
We didn鈥檛 immediately pause the wedding planning because we noticed some events still continued into March despite the growing coronavirus concerns. A postponement didn鈥檛 seem necessary鈥攚e鈥檇 spent so much already: printed invitations, paid 鈧3m for the hall, and already bought asoebi for family and friends.
But two weeks before the wedding, government officials began clamping down on event centres, and it hit us鈥攖he wedding wasn鈥檛 going to happen.
Gregory: It was tough watching Motunde go through that. It was a shared event for both of us, but I also knew how much the ceremony meant to her and her family.
We thought we could reschedule by a week or two, but as time passed, it became clear that wouldn鈥檛 happen. My main focus was on recouping our losses. I started reaching out to vendors for refunds, which was one tough battle that rubbed salt on the injury.
Let me guess: no refunds?
Gregory: They weren鈥檛 even picking up calls, and movement was restricted, so tracking them down wasn鈥檛 as easy. The ones who picked up argued they couldn鈥檛 give a full refund. The hall, for instance, said they could only do a 50% refund. Hotels refused to refund and said we should come and use the time we paid for. Everything seemed like it was working against us, and on top of that, I had to deal with Motunde鈥檚 mum.
What was the issue with her mum?
Motunde: My mum is traditional to her core. For her, the wedding wasn鈥檛 just about me and Greg 鈥攊t was also about her. My wedding was supposed to be a thanksgiving for her, almost like she shamed the devil and her enemies.
My mum wanted the whole community to see her only surviving daughter walk down the aisle in full Yoruba splendour. She鈥檇 done the same for many friends and relatives, and it was only right they also celebrated with her. The outfits, the mother/daughter dance, the spraying鈥攊t was her chance to host and show her daughter off, and she felt we deprived her of that.
It sounds like a lot of expectations to put on you. Does she understand that the cancellation wasn鈥檛 your fault?
Gregory: She does, but she hasn鈥檛 forgiven us for not rescheduling the wedding. It comes out in little ways. For example, whenever we visit, she makes these sly comments like, 鈥淲hen people say they鈥檝e married off their daughters, what do they mean? Is it just going to court and signing papers?鈥 I know it鈥檚 a sore spot for her. Sometimes, I feel like I failed to give her what she wanted.
Motunde: Or when we鈥檙e sitting with her friends at a gathering, and they ask, 鈥淗ow was the wedding?鈥 She鈥檒l answer, 鈥淥h, there was no real wedding. It was just in court鈥攕imple.鈥 She鈥檒l smile, but you can feel the sting behind her words.
How does that make you feel?
Motunde: It鈥檚 frustrating. I understand where she鈥檚 coming from, but it feels like she鈥檚 holding me responsible for something beyond my control. I鈥檝e tried explaining that it wasn鈥檛 just about the lockdown but also our current financial situation, but she doesn鈥檛 want to hear it. For her, it鈥檚 simple: the wedding hasn鈥檛 happened yet, and that鈥檚 unacceptable.
Curious. Has this caused friction in your marriage?
Motunde: Absolutely. It鈥檚 been a constant source of tension. Sometimes, I feel like Greg doesn鈥檛 understand just how much this means to me and my family.
Gregory: It鈥檚 not that I don鈥檛 understand鈥擨 do. I know how important it is to them. But I can鈥檛 ignore the financial realities we鈥檙e facing. It鈥檚 frustrating to feel like no matter how much I explain, they still hold the lack of a big wedding against me.
Motunde: I know he鈥檚 under a lot of pressure, and I try to be patient, but sometimes I feel like he could try harder. For example, I proposed doing something small for our fifth anniversary next year. I thought it could be a compromise鈥攏othing too elaborate, just a modest ceremony with close family. But Greg didn鈥檛 seem open to it.
Gregory: It wasn鈥檛 that I didn鈥檛 want to make it happen鈥擨 even considered it seriously. But when I crunched the numbers, it just didn鈥檛 make sense. My business has been struggling for a while now, and the economy hasn鈥檛 made it any easier. I couldn鈥檛 justify spending money on a ceremony when we have other priorities.
Motunde: That conversation turned into a huge argument. I visited my mum one time, and she talked about the wedding again. I told Greg, 鈥淲e need to figure this out.鈥 He said, 鈥淒o you think I don鈥檛 want to make it happen?鈥 And I responded, 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 feel like it.鈥 That set him off.
Gregory: I felt attacked, honestly. I鈥檝e been doing my best to manage our finances and keep things stable, but the pressure from her mum has trickled down to her, and it feels like it鈥檚 all falling on my shoulders.
How did you eventually resolve it?
Motunde: After a few days, I wrote him a letter explaining how deeply this wedding meant. I told him it鈥檚 not just about the ceremony鈥攊t鈥檚 about my mum and what it represents for her.
She鈥檚 traditional, and not having a wedding for her only daughter feels like she has failed at something. Although, to be fair, I hadn鈥檛 been as understanding about his financial situation as I could鈥檝e been. I knew his business was struggling, but in my frustration, I acted like he wasn鈥檛 trying, which wasn鈥檛 true.
Gregory: After I read the letter, we sat down and talked properly. I explained that the wedding isn鈥檛 off the table鈥攚e鈥檙e just postponing it until we鈥檙e in a better financial place. I also shared how much the pressure affected me and made me feel inadequate.
What does your family think about the situation, Gregory?
Gregory: My family is more laid-back about it. They鈥檝e always been practical people and see the court wedding as enough. To them, a big ceremony is unnecessary, especially in this economy.
How has this experience shaped the way you navigate conflict in your union?
Motunde: We鈥檝e had to learn how to communicate better and constantly remind ourselves that our goals as a family take priority over whatever anyone wants for us.
Gregory: We also try to find compromises. An example is how we鈥檝e talked about having a small ceremony instead of a big wedding to give her family closure. It鈥檚 not ideal, but it’s a step in the right direction. I鈥檝e also learnt to manage expectations. Marriage comes with a lot of pressure from both sides, and it鈥檚 important to balance what works for us.
On a scale of 1-10, how would you rate your love life?
Gregory: I鈥檇 rate it a 7. Our relationship is strong because of the foundation of friendship we built early on. Still, we鈥檝e faced our fair share of challenges, especially with the cancelled wedding and navigating expectations from her family. It鈥檚 not perfect, but we鈥檙e constantly learning and growing together.
Motunde: I鈥檇 say a 7 too. We鈥檙e committed to making this work, and even though there鈥檚 tension sometimes, I know Greg has my back. We鈥檙e working on better communication and balancing our priorities, which makes me hopeful for the future.
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