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  • Love Life: We鈥檙e Married but Visiting

    Rasheed* (44) and Toyin* (38) are a power couple who met a decade after attending the same uni. On this week鈥檚 Love Life, they share how politics brought them together, distance makes the love stronger and why it took eight years to get married.

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

    Love Life: We鈥檙e Married but Visiting

    What鈥檚 your earliest memory of each other?

    Rasheed: It was at a party rally in 2011. By party, I mean political party. I鈥檇 been an active member for about five years at the time, but she鈥檇 just become a card-holding member. It was one of the first activities she attended, ahead of the general elections.

    She came and sat on the bleachers with her aunt, who was the PA to a popular state first lady. She was one of the few young ladies present, so I noticed her quickly.

    Toyin: I noticed him because he moved around a lot during the proceedings, and I was curious about who he was in the scheme of things. He dressed well, in a neat native kaftan, and looked generally clean and put together. I asked my aunt who he was, but she only had vague answers. He was a political aide or party agent or something or the other. 

    We didn鈥檛 notice each other noticing each other. It was a stadium, and rallies are chaotic. The only reason why we even crossed each other鈥檚 eyes was because we were in the same section of the stadium. We supported the same aspirants.

    Rasheed: It wasn鈥檛 until she became a more active part of a federal reps鈥 campaign as one of his speech writers that we met in earnest. 

    During campaigns, the team would stay up many nights in the aspirants鈥 living rooms, strategising but mostly gisting. The young people usually formed a coalition against the older folks, who were usually the majority. We had many such nights of casual debates. 

    She didn鈥檛 spend as much time with us on those nights because her parents weren鈥檛 supportive of political work. She also worked full-time at a law firm, and I could tell it was hard for her to balance both responsibilities.

    When did you realise you liked each other?

    Rasheed: When I found out we attended the same university. Although I鈥檇 graduated before she even entered, it gave us some nostalgic stories to share that only we could relate to. Her smartness was also evident. She鈥檚 a beauty with brains, so I had no choice but to like her. Many of us liked her that year. It was an inside joke that even the honourable was toasting her.

    Toyin: They couldn鈥檛 approach me because of my aunty and her boss. Alhamdulillah because I didn鈥檛 want those political boys disturbing my life. They鈥檙e notorious for carrying girls up and down. I wasn鈥檛 sure if Rasheed was like that, but at least, we could have decent conversations.

    One day, after the elections were over and our candidate unfortunately lost, he sent a consolation package to my office. It had a handwritten note, a bottle of fruit wine and some assorted fruits 鈥 it was during Ramadan. Seeing the package and finding out it was from him was the first moment the possibility of liking him more than a friend came to me. I just sat there smiling and ignoring my colleagues’ many questions. I didn鈥檛 expect it at all.

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    When did you both know you鈥檇 fallen in love?

    Rasheed: After I sent the gift, she didn鈥檛 call to thank me, so I felt, 鈥淭his girl doesn鈥檛 have manners.鈥 I waited for some days, and when she still didn鈥檛 call, I had to bite the bullet. When we spoke over the phone, she immediately apologised, claiming she鈥檇 been overwhelmed because her boss had a serious litigation case and was making all the associates鈥 lives hell. 

    I was still annoyed, but when I heard she was spending late nights at the office, I decided to go visit her at 6 p.m. one evening. I went with some snacks and drinks, of course. That was when we first spoke 鈥 well joked 鈥 about running for office ourselves, and leaving the rat race behind.

    Toyin: It helped that we鈥檇 left the political campaign arena for a bit. That space could get a bit like secondary school, where you鈥檙e clustered in the same environment for too long. 

    He had an unofficial job in the government because that rep aspirant was appointed as a commissioner by the state governor. Rasheed helped him run contracts out of office, so he was a lot more flexible than I was at the law firm. He talked me into leaving the office earlier than I might have 鈥 even though it was getting to 8 p.m. No one else would鈥檝e ever convinced me to leave those folders and literally risk my job 鈥 one of the partners was still on seat 鈥 to sneak home. 

    Our relationship kicked off from there.

    Rasheed: Don鈥檛 worry, she left that job soon after, when I got sponsorship to run for the state house of rep later in 2011. I didn鈥檛 win, but she was a huge help, travelling with me and offering great advice. We both got our first big political gigs after that long campaign travail.

    What was your first major fight about?

    Rasheed: When I had to go to my hometown to take up a government appointment. She鈥檇 just started at a multinational NGO, so she couldn鈥檛 leave and come with me. This was in 2013. We were discussing getting married when the job and then my appointment came in quick succession. It was like God was challenging our relationship.

    Toyin: It all but paused when neither of us agreed to stay with the other. I was upset for a while. I remember when he was leaving, a lot of people around me knew about it and asked why I didn鈥檛 want to see him off. It was partly because I was angry, but also because I knew I鈥檇 miss him. I didn鈥檛 want to watch him leave. He had a better chance of winning elections in his own hometown, so I didn鈥檛 expect him back. It really felt like the end of us.

    Rasheed: For some weeks, we didn鈥檛 speak. And I think it鈥檚 only because we didn鈥檛 make a conscious decision to and we were overwhelmed with settling into our respective jobs. But soon after, we were calling each other to check-in. I don鈥檛 even know who called first. Some months in, I invited her to come and spend a weekend. That鈥檚 how our relationship kicked back off.

    Toyin: We started making the trip to spend some days with each other every so often.

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    How long did it take for the topic of marriage to come up again?

    Toyin: It took some time because we were so focused on our careers. We had so much ambition that we couldn鈥檛 just settle down to all the logistics a wedding entails, given the families we come from. But we鈥檇 started getting external pressure at that point when he moved to his hometown. My mother and aunties urged me not to 鈥渓et this man see you finish before doing the right thing鈥.

    Rasheed: I was getting political pressure as well. Elections are easier to win when you鈥檙e married and have your own family.

    Toyin: I wasn鈥檛 ready for all that at all. I knew the moment we wed, I鈥檇 have to pause my own political ambitions and be his 鈥渉elper鈥. That鈥檚 the way Nigerian politics goes. 鈥淔irst ladies鈥 are put in a box, and it鈥檚 only after your husband has done it all politically that you can even attempt to come out of his shadows if you鈥檙e lucky. I didn鈥檛 want that.

    Rasheed: I decided to respect her wishes, and that brought some ups and downs for us for the next four or so years. I loved her dearly, but there were a few times my eyes strayed, and I wasn鈥檛 so sure we鈥檇 ever marry.

    Why d鈥檡ou think you lasted together then?

    Rasheed: No other woman ever gave me that pride I have when I鈥檓 with her. She鈥檚 an impressive person, the things she鈥檚 been able to achieve in her own right. I wanted her and was willing to do anything to have her as my official wife.

    Toyin: I think it鈥檚 just the fact that he waited for me. I wanted to get my master鈥檚 and reach a certain level in my governmental career. He waited through all that, and it took five years, I think. He wasn鈥檛 just patient; he was immensely supportive. I know he had other women a few times, but to me, he was faithful in the ways that mattered. It鈥檚 clear from how he proposed. 

    He just sat me down one day in May 2018, when we were finally living in the same city for the first time in about a year. He said, 鈥淟isten. We better do this once and for all. Before I just announce to the world that we鈥檙e already married without you and your family鈥檚 consent.鈥

    The man was tired

    Rasheed: I was. I also wanted to be sure we were still on the same page. Maybe she had someone else she was waiting for while stringing me along on the side.

    Toyin: You鈥檙e not serious.

    Rasheed: We finally got married in January 2019. The next month, I won my first election, and I truly believe she was my good luck charm.

    God, when? What鈥檚 the most unconventional thing about your relationship?

    Rasheed: We live in different cities again, because of our jobs. I鈥檓 in Abuja now, in a political office. She鈥檚 a commissioner in our state. We鈥檙e married but visiting. She has her house, and I have mine. It鈥檚 brought a lot of excitement into our marriage, truth be told. You know the saying, 鈥淎bsence makes the heart grow fonder鈥? That鈥檚 so true for us.

    Toyin: Our jobs give our marriage breathing space by force so that when we see each other maybe every other week, we鈥檙e so excited. We鈥檙e always in a good mood when we鈥檙e together in one home. He鈥檚 gotten used to cooking for himself or having our cook make his meals. It also makes conversations about me needing to travel for work easier.

    Rasheed: Don鈥檛 get us wrong. It鈥檚 not a long-distance marriage. It鈥檚 just that where the average married couple sleep in the same bed every single night, ours is maybe ten nights a month. And it works perfectly. It鈥檚 like we鈥檙e still only dating.

    What about your children, if you have any?

    Rasheed: We have a son, yes. And we don鈥檛 carry him back and forth if that鈥檚 what you鈥檙e asking. His stability is paramount to us. He stays with me, and my mother and sister take care of him fully. I didn鈥檛 marry a housewife, so no one expects her to be doing homemaking. However, she manages both houses and all our staff answer to her.

    Toyin: Our son is still a toddler, so we try to shield him from the chaos of Nigerian politics the best we can. While I wish we could be more present for him, he has the best care from his grandmother, and she has the luxury of time to give him that I don鈥檛 have right now. I鈥檓 glad I can create a legacy for him to inherit instead.

    What鈥檚 the best thing about being married to each other?

    Rasheed: Our shared ambition. I鈥檝e had girlfriends in the past who simply didn鈥檛 care about doing anything to change the world or help society. With Toyin, I can talk about my ideals without feeling foolish. It鈥檚 been that way from day one. We鈥檙e still going to rule the world together; that鈥檚 the goal. She鈥檚 the reason I can confidently have that kind of goal.

    Toyin: We鈥檙e a power couple, and I love it. There are very few power couples in Nigerian politics.

    How would you rate your love life on a scale of 1 to 10?

    Rasheed: 7 or 8. But no marriage is perfect.

    Toyin: Very true. I鈥檇 say the same.

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