Tuesday, November 30, 2010

To Live and Date in Lagos

My mother wants grandchildren. This has been made clear to me in no uncertain terms. She has five children, so she’s hedged her bets pretty well, but as I am the only one of her spawn to have recently taken up residence in Lagos, the onus has fallen upon my head to bear seed first. Why? Because Lagos is the land where people meet, marry and make babies in the span of a year. The streets of Lagos are paved with eligible men. They’re arriving by the boatload off the shores of Ember Creek. Lagos is the veritable marital Promised Land.

Or at least this is what they told me.

In the year I have been back in Lagos, I have found one thing to be true: it is impossible to date in Lagos. It is not difficult. It is not tricky. It is downright impossible. This is true for several reasons. First of all, even with a population of almost 20 million, Lagos is a smaller town than Coffeeville, Alabama (pop. 389). You cannot so much as smile at the cute guy by the bar without learning that he and your best friend were embroiled in a passionate, if brief, love affair that ended in a fantastical shouting match at your cousin’s wedding last December, or that he is actually your second cousin twice-removed.

Once you’ve managed to eliminate all your relatives (and the men who will obliterate life-long friendships) from your dating pool, you are left with a dazzling array of posers, slackers, felons, perverts, dimwits and sugar-daddies to choose from. The poser won’t talk to you; the slacker will try to get you to buy him a drink; the felon will probably get you arrested for unwittingly smuggling his cocaine across the border; the pervert will try to feel you up; the dimwit will bore you to tears and the sugar-daddy will manage to accomplish all of the above whilst simultaneously being the actual daddy of your college roommate.

In the very unlikely event that you are miraculously able to extract a potential mate from this motley crew, the very city of Lagos itself offers a giant wrench for your best-laid plans. There’s a joke that’s often told about a man who drops his girlfriend off at the international airport for her flight to London. By the time she calls him to say she’s landed safely at Heathrow and claimed her luggage, he’s still stuck in traffic at the Chevron roundabout battling his way back home to Ajah. Between the ridiculous work schedules and the mind-numbing traffic, romance does not stand a chance. In the time it takes you to fight your way from work through the horrific traffic to spend some quality time with your newest love, he has started dating the girl next door, just out of sheer convenience.

Finally, there’s the matter of the married man. Forget the old-school married man; creepy, crusty and old enough to have been schoolyard pals with your grandfather. You’re too smart to be taken in by that guy. The 21st Century has given us the new breed of married man; early 30s, good-looking, mature and married for just under six months. These are the men who conveniently deem jewelry “unmanly” so there is nary a wedding band in sight. These are the men who would like to eat their proverbial cake and have it too. You are in a full-blown, committed relationship with this man before one of your friends realizes that your new love is actually her brother-in-law. By the time you are able to delicately extricate yourself from the situation, you’ve already been branded The Other Woman, doomed to singledom forever.

Dating in Lagos is not quite the bed of roses I was promised. Honestly, It’s more like a minefield. It seems, sadly, that my mother will have to content herself with my empty, as-yet-fruitless womb for a little while longer.

14 response(s):

Myne said...

Hmmm, hilarious but so true, especially about the married men, old and young. But someone told me, get out of your comfort zone...

isha said...

Lol, it really is impossible. Really.

I met one guy who said we won't work because we live too far from each other. It's now very often to see in-laws who live across the road from each other. It's convenient.

Plus, I've been writing on my blog about the guys I've been meeting. You can tell that it's not a pretty sight.

When I was packing my bags in Chicago, I was talking to one of my friends who was already here, and highlighting the benefits of moving back to Lagos. When I mentioned that it would be a good chance to meet the man I would marry, she immediately removed the thought from my head, and advised me to bring a man with me. I wish I had listened.

Otondo Blogger said...

I am slightly confused. If a guy tries to get a girl to buy him a drink in Lagos, he is a poser? How does that work, exactly? Please explain. - Otondo Blogger.

Otondo Blogger said...

Correction: ". . ., he is a slacker?"

Oluwafynboi said...

Very funny post.

Quite interesting read: http://www.saharareporters.com/article/why-nigerians-america-come-home-marry

isha said...

@ Mr Fynboi, that article seems like it was written by a bitter dumpee. It's rather man-hating. Lol.

Anonymous said...

Hmmm, (seemingly) insightful. Never did occur to me these reasons.....

Mrs A said...

interesting point of view... but you never know - you just might me someone

Aiyegbeni said...

Interesting, I wondered how people dated in Lagos thanks for clearing that up.
Have you tried Abuja? lol.

As for the poser he may be innately shy but expected to be social. Why not speak to him.

Good Naija Girl said...

Please tell me you write professionally! Any publication would be lucky to receive a piece such as this to publish...so many fantastic plays on words...if I could write like this I'd be set!

I'm hearing more and more about this new breed of married man. They make me sick!

SongSmith said...

@All: Yay! I'm so glad you enjoyed reading :-)

@Otondo -- Nope, a guy is not necessarily a slacker if he tries to get a girl to buy him a drink. There may be extenuating circumstances (he may have just been pick-pocketed, and might be extremely thirsty, for instance) :-). If a guy IS a slacker though, he's probably going to consistently try to get more out the relationship than he's trying to put in and that's the point I was making.

@Aiyegbeni There's a difference between posers and shy boys. I loves me some shy boys. Posers are socially awkward weirdoes who try to mask their social ineptitude with an "I'm way too cool for this bar anyhow" attitude. As a result, the poser wouldn't talk to you even if you tried. Come to think of it, he wouldn't pour his drink on you if you were to mysteriously catch fire, even. He's not a nice guy.

Someone needs to report back on the Abuja scene, true true.

@Good Naija Girl: I'm so printing your comment out and sticking it in my diary somewhere. That's really kind of you. I'm working on it! If you know anyone who's looking for a writer, feel free to HOLLA!

EVERYONE seems to be relating to this married man scenario. Let me find out it's even more of an issue than i originally thought. SHENANIGANS!

Otondo Blogger said...

@SongSmith -- Oh, O.K. That makes sense. I was hung up on what I thought was the notion that a girl couldn't buy a guy a drink.

Otiti said...

ROFL!!! I was giggling just a few sentences into this post! You rock, SongSmith! :D Makes my own blog pale in comparison, LOL. I am now a loyal follower and yes your writing is fantastic.

LucidLilith said...

This is so funny. Well sha, dating in general is just tough. Reminds me of when I lived in Detroit.

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