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  • 5 Yoruba Aunties on Why They Dumped Their Friendship Groups

    I dodged a bullet.

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    Friendships come in different forms, but Yoruba auntie friendships? Those are a league of their own. They’re more about full-fledged commitment to the clique, owambes, uniformed aso ebi that costs a fortune, and the silent rule that you must never be the odd one out.聽 But what happens when an auntie decides she鈥檚 had enough? We spoke to five Nigerian women over 50 who chose to walk away from their groups 鈥 and never looked back.

    鈥淚 realised they didn鈥檛 rate me鈥 鈥 *Bose, 55

    Nothing stings more than realising your friends have deliberately left you out of something. It鈥檚 even worse when their excuse is that they thought they were doing you a favour. That鈥檚 exactly how *Bose knew it was time to move on.

    鈥淚’ve been friends with these women for over a decade. We鈥檝e done birthdays, weddings, and countless owambes together. But last year, one of them threw a massive 50th birthday party, and they all showed up in matching lace except me. Nobody told me about it. When I asked why, they said they assumed I wouldn鈥檛 want to buy it because it was expensive, and I鈥檇 been complaining about the cost of previous ones. That was my wake-up call. If they truly considered me a friend, they wouldn鈥檛 have left me out and made me feel like an outsider. I didn鈥檛 fight them, but I slowly stopped attending the group鈥檚 events.鈥

    鈥淭hey turned my kindness into an insult鈥 鈥 *Shade, 51

    People always say 鈥渋t鈥檚 the thought that counts鈥 when it comes to gifts, but for *Shade鈥檚 friends, only expensive gifts were good enough. After years of friendship, she was shocked to realise they valued her money more than her presence.

    鈥淚鈥檓 a single mum putting two children through university, so I don鈥檛 have money to waste. At every party, my friends hand out souvenirs like expensive blenders and food processors, but I keep it simple with detergent. After a while, I noticed two of them started acting distant. It all came to a head at a party when they deliberately left my souvenir on the table while leaving. When I asked them about it, they said I always gave 鈥榗heap鈥 gifts despite them going all out for me. I was hurt because they know my financial situation. That night, we had a heated argument, and I decided I was done with the group.鈥


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    鈥淚 got tired of trying to keep up鈥 鈥 *Funmi, 50

    For some women, friendships are a sisterhood. For others, they鈥檙e an extreme sport. Funmi spent years keeping up with hers, until she realised she couldn鈥檛 anymore.

    鈥淓very weekend, there was one party or the other. Each one came with an aso ebi that ran into hundreds of thousands. And it wasn鈥檛 just that, you were still expected to hand out expensive souvenirs, and even your jewellery couldn鈥檛 be repeated too often, so it wouldn鈥檛 look like you didn鈥檛 have enough.

    I managed for years, stretching myself just to keep up. But at some point, I started withdrawing. I started turning down invites. When they brought new aso ebi, I told them I couldn鈥檛 buy it. Obviously, once I stopped participating, the calls became less frequent. Then, they stopped altogether. That鈥檚 how the friendship fizzled out. I didn鈥檛 even fight it. At my age, I know when something is no longer meant for me.鈥

    鈥淚 was the problem because I chose myself鈥 鈥 *Helen, 52

    Leaving her marriage was hard enough, but *Helen never expected that the real battle would be with her own friends.

    鈥淚 thought they鈥檇 be my safe space, but instead, they treated me like I was doing something shameful. I had known these women for decades, women who had seen me struggle in that marriage. But when I finally left, they acted like I was betraying them. Most of them were still married, and I realised they weren鈥檛 just upset about my divorce; they were scared. My decision made them question their own marriages and wonder if they were truly happy or just enduring. It was easier for them to frame me as the problem than to confront their doubts.

    They didn鈥檛 come right out and say it, but I heard it in their comments: 鈥楳arriage is not easy, but we endure.鈥 鈥楢t our age, starting over is risky.鈥 One even said, 鈥榃hat will people say?鈥 as if that was supposed to matter more than my peace of mind. The final straw was when one of them called my ex to 鈥榩ray鈥 for us to get back together. That was it. I realised they weren鈥檛 my friends, they were just women who needed me to stay in a bad marriage so they could feel better about staying in theirs. So, I chose myself and walked away.鈥

    鈥淚 was the bad person for wanting my own jewelry back鈥 鈥 *Adija, 56

    Yoruba auntie friendships thrive on trust and favours. But what happens when a friend takes advantage of that trust? *Adija, 54, learned the hard way when a close friend borrowed her gold jewelry worth millions and refused to return it.

    鈥淚 should have known better than to mix friendship and valuables, but when a close friend asked to borrow my gold jewelry set for her daughter鈥檚 wedding, I didn鈥檛 think twice. This wasn鈥檛 just any set; it was worth millions, a gift from my husband on our 25th anniversary.

    Weeks passed after the wedding, and she kept making excuses. 鈥楲et me hold it till my niece鈥檚 introduction.鈥 鈥業鈥檝e been so busy, I forgot to bring it.鈥 Meanwhile, I kept seeing her wear it to different events. When I finally went to her house to demand it back, she acted like I was being dramatic. She told me she鈥檇 bring it later, but I refused to leave without it.

    The real shocker came when our mutual friends sided with her. They said I embarrassed her by showing up at her house. That I threw away years of friendship over 鈥榡ust jewelry.鈥 If I could do this to her, they said, what鈥檚 stopping me from doing it to them? As if I was the one who borrowed millions worth of gold and refused to return it. We鈥檙e still cordial, but I know where I stand now. Some friendships only work when you鈥檙e the one being taken for granted.


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