As we step into a new age and season of life, things start to feel different. In this episode, I talk about enforcing boundaries, unlearning patterns, healing from last year, creating vision, and learning to grow intentionally one step at a time. A reminder that growth doesn’t have to be rushed to be real.
A family episode filled with advice, encouragement, laughter, and love closing the year surrounded by people who matter.
Happy New year and may this year be the best year yet❤️.
This episode is literally me being everywhere. From mums sending errands even when they’re not home. I talk about Igbo greetings people are replying wrongly (kachifo is not answered with kachifo please ), missed calls in this economy and insecurity, a scary police stop, a stolen phone that somehow found its way back, and Christmas with cousins that definitely don’t share sense equally. Random, funny, and very real as usual.
Welcome to the part of the cycle where estrogen is that girl and progesterone humbles you.
In this episode, I break down ovulation and the luteal phase the hormones involved, the symptoms you feel, the reason libido spikes, and why bloating, acne, and mood swings suddenly appear out of nowhere. We’re talking eggs, hormones, cervical mucus, fertility facts, and real-life body truths they didn’t teach us in school.
In this episode, I am breaking down the female cycle the way school should’ve. I explain what actually happens during each phase, why you feel drained during your period, why you suddenly feel like yourself again afterward, and what your hormones are doing behind the scenes.
We talk Follicular, Ovulation, Luteal and Menstrual in real language: building, releasing, protecting and shedding. I also touch on early periods, PMS, real symptoms, why heat helps cramps and why your body literally purges sometimes.
If you’re a girl, you NEED to know this about your body, and if you are a boy, sit back and learn something new.
In this episode, we’re doing the real end-of-year clean-up, the forgiveness, the reflection, the accountability, the soft reset. I talk about the mistakes you need to release, the small wins you should finally celebrate, and the habits you have to be honest about.
I share simple rituals that actually help like writing to your future self, listing your progress, checking in with who you’ve become, and trying one new thing before the year ends.
It’s a reminder to step into the new year lighter, clearer, and kinder to yourself.
The link of the website as promised:
https://www.futureme.org/letters/new
In this episode, I talk about the reality we’re living in from the chaos in this country to the horrifying story of a three-year-old who wasn’t protected in the one place she should’ve been safe.
I also share a situation my aunt found herself in with a man who refused to let her leave until she “returned” the money he spent during their outing .
This whole episode is a reminder that the world is getting scarier by the day, and we all need to move smarter. I break down some of my safety tips and you better listen.
I looked back at my old birthdays, made peace with some things, thanked God for everything, and ended up giving advice I should probably listen to myself. A wholesome episode, no stress.
This is just like every other episode, where I unpack my very eventful week and how I discovered new things in between habits, it’s my being unapologetically me and being effortlessly funny. As we talk about my dad’s faulty but amazing cooking skills, my gym pain, smokers polluting the air without thinking, and how we should be allowed to fart without thinking as well cause as the saying goes, what’s good for the Goose is also good for the Gander.🥂
This episode dives into the last chapter of my very intentional childhood where structure met softness. From CCTV cameras to orange juice duty, my dad’s market runs, and those monthly “speak-your-mind” sessions, everything had a rhythm. It wasn’t strict, it was just our version of love… with a touch of supervision. I honestly wouldn’t have it any other way
This episode is an urgent call for justice.
She Deserved Better. The Fight for Ochanya tells the heartbreaking story of 13-year-old Elizabeth Ochanya Ogbanje, who was failed by her maternal family and the Nigerian justice system. From age eight, she suffered years of sexual abuse in silence, violated by those meant to protect her, ignored by those meant to deliver justice.
Despite forensic proof, her abusers were acquitted, and her aunt convicted only of negligence. Ochanya died in pain from complications of VVF (vesico-vaginal fistula), a preventable condition caused by years of trauma.
But this story doesn’t end here. We can still fight for her.
✊🏽 Sign the petition to reopen the case and demand justice for Achaya.
https://c.org/7Rfkb2Kx84
Justice isn’t optional. It’s overdue.
Growing up in an African home is the perfect balance of being deeply cared for and tightly supervised. In this episode, I talk about my mum’s iconic electronic bell era, being over-fed with snacks, morning prayers that shaped our day, and why phones were considered a luxury only granted after graduation. This is childhood under structure, comfort laced with control, love wrapped in discipline and how it secretly shaped who I am today.
In this episode, I take you back to my African childhood, where Sunday Mass wasn’t just attended, it was examined, quail eggs were breakfast shots, and vegetables were a mandatory side dish. From decoding Bible verses for my parents to secretly burying greens in the dustbin, and playing in sand like it was Disneyland, this episode is a hilarious and emotional reminder that African parenting was a mix of discipline and pure childhood freedom.
This episode has everything, exams done, kittens acquired, lazy hairdressers, ASUU drama, and a full-blown rant about people who text in lowercase. Basically, it’s me back home, loud, learning, and lowkey losing it and definitely enjoying it.
This episode is everything, everywhere, all at once faith, foolishness, friendship drama, exams, bad decisions, good laughs, and lessons I didn’t know I was signing up for. It’s loud, it’s real, it’s vulnerable, and it’s me trying to make sense of a week that made absolutely no sense.
This week’s episode is a wild mix from the chaos of exams to roommates serving bedwetting confessions and painful blood draws, nothing was off-limits. But beyond the laughs, I get real about the pressure to always be happy for others when you’re still battling your own struggles. Sometimes, the truest love is giving yourself time to heal before celebrating someone else’s win. Plus, I share the sweetest moment of support from a friend’s mom that carried me through this hectic exam week.
Exam week came with everything, disappointment, frustration, weird surprises, and tiny lessons tucked into chaos. From tanker men delays to raw Indomie revelations, from lazy lecturers to tough exam questions, I’m holding onto one truth, this degree won’t see the end of me.
This week, I bring you a story that blurs the line between genuine friendship and parasitism. Glory and Favor’s bond looked like sisterhood from the outside, but behind the laughter and shared meals was manipulation, betrayal, and a shocking twist that still raises the question: when does a friend stop being a friend?
This week takes us through it all the exhausting chase for validation, the harsh reminder of how fragile life really is, and the joy tucked into small wins that prove the littlest acts still hold the most weight.
In Part Two, I’m revisiting the little notions and quiet beliefs that shape how I move through life. They’re not always right, and sometimes they don’t even hold up under scrutiny but they still keep me going. They soften me when the world feels hard and maybe that’s their true purpose.
This episode dives into what it really means to lean on ideas that aren’t perfect but still keep us alive, hopeful, and connected.