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She asked me: “Femi, Do You Even Know How to Be Faithful?” Here’s My Honest Answer

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The Lagos night carried its usual restless energy outside the lounge windows. Traffic lights flickered endlessly across the city while soft Afrobeats floated through the air inside. Between us sat two untouched glasses of gin and tonic, already sweating from the humid evening.

I had just spent the last fifteen minutes talking about my career plans, my next promotion, and where I saw myself in five years. Most men in Lagos would have considered it impressive.

Bolanle did not.

Instead, she leaned back in her chair, folded her arms gently, and asked me a question that cut deeper than she probably intended.

“Femi, do you even know how to be faithful?”

There was no anger in her voice. No jealousy. No drama.

It sounded more like an auditor questioning suspicious numbers on a balance sheet.

And honestly, she had every reason to ask.

In Lagos social circles, reputation travels fast. Especially for men in finance. People knew me as the sharply dressed guy who always seemed to have a beautiful woman beside him every few months. The ambitious corporate guy with expensive perfumes, tailored suits, and a love life that never appeared stable.

Normally, I would have laughed the question away.

That was my usual defense mechanism. Crack a joke. Redirect the conversation. Keep things charming and lighthearted.

But Bolanle was different.

Something about her made shallow responses feel childish.

So instead of dodging the question, I took a slow sip of my drink and finally told the truth.

“For a long time, I didn’t think I needed to know how to be faithful.”

The Truth About Modern Nigerian Men and Commitment

In my early twenties, I was obsessed with momentum.

I wanted the best salary package, the fastest promotions, the cleanest apartment in Lekki, and the kind of lifestyle that made people respect you before you even spoke.

Women became part of that success checklist.

Not intentionally. But gradually.

I genuinely liked women. I enjoyed their intelligence, beauty, warmth, and companionship. But if I am being honest, I was never emotionally prepared for one woman.

And there is a huge difference between liking women and being ready for commitment.

Many Nigerian men never admit this.

Liking women is easy. It requires charm, attention, and chemistry. Commitment, however, requires emotional responsibility. It demands consistency, sacrifice, patience, and vulnerability.

Back then, my ambition occupied most of my heart.

I had no emotional space left to truly build with someone.

So I stayed in shallow relationships because they were safer. If you never go too deep emotionally, you never risk heartbreak, disappointment, or accountability.

At the time, that felt smart.

Now I realize it was emotional immaturity disguised as confidence.

I Was Faithful Only by Technicality

As Bolanle listened quietly, I admitted something I had never fully confessed out loud before.

“Faithfulness used to feel like a technicality to me.”

I believed that as long as I was not openly lying or making fake promises, then I was still a “good man.”

But that mindset was cowardly.

I would give maybe forty percent of myself to relationships while keeping the remaining sixty percent reserved for work, ambition, convenience, and personal freedom.

Whenever the woman involved wanted something deeper, I would slowly withdraw and eventually move on.

Not because she was bad.

But because I was emotionally unavailable.

Looking back now, I realize my reputation as a “player” was really built on emotional laziness. I was disciplined in my career but careless with people’s hearts.

I could work on spreadsheets for eighteen hours straight, yet struggle to invest deeply in one woman.

That contradiction finally started bothering me as I approached thirty.

What Changed My Mind About Love and Faithfulness

People assume men change because of one magical woman.

Sometimes that happens.

But for me, the shift started with silence.

The older I became, the more I noticed how empty my apartment felt after long workdays. The expensive car, the designer watches, the nightlife, and the attention from women started losing their excitement.

Because none of it created emotional peace.

At some point, I realized I was constantly performing.

Being known as the “smooth guy” is exhausting. Maintaining that image requires endless validation, endless flirting, endless movement.

And eventually, you start wondering whether anybody truly knows the real you beneath the performance.

That realization changed me.

For the first time, I started seeing faithfulness differently.

Not as imprisonment.

Not as punishment.

But as discipline.

Faithfulness Is a Form of Emotional Discipline

I explained to Bolanle that I now see relationships the same way I see investments.

In finance, wealth is not built by jumping from one opportunity to another every week. Sustainable wealth comes from patience, consistency, and long term commitment.

So why was I treating relationships with less care than my investment portfolio?

That question humbled me.

I finally understood that faithfulness is not simply about avoiding cheating.

It is about emotional presence.

It is about choosing depth over endless distraction.

It is waking up every day and intentionally investing in one person instead of constantly chasing new excitement.

And honestly, that kind of peace feels richer than anything I experienced during my “player” years.

Why Many Nigerian Men Fear Commitment

A lot of men are not afraid of love itself.

They are afraid of responsibility.

Commitment forces you to confront yourself. Your selfishness. Your inconsistency. Your ego. Your emotional habits.

That is uncomfortable.

Many men would rather keep rotating relationships than do the difficult work of emotional growth.

I know because I used to be one of them.

I saw commitment as losing freedom.

Now I see it differently.

Real commitment expands your world instead of shrinking it. The right relationship gives stability, clarity, emotional safety, and genuine partnership.

That is far more valuable than temporary excitement.

Can a “Player” Truly Change?

This is probably the question many Nigerian women reading this are asking.

And honestly, the answer depends on what the man values.

If he still sees commitment as weakness or loss of freedom, he is not ready.

But if he starts valuing peace over attention, stability over ego, and depth over performance, then real change becomes possible.

Growth is not about pretending the past never happened.

It is about becoming honest enough to outgrow it.

I told Bolanle something that night which I still believe deeply:

“A man who has never been tested by temptation does not fully know whether he is faithful. He is simply untested.”

I have lived through attention, ego, validation, and endless options.

And somehow, after all of that, I discovered that the thing I truly wanted was not excitement.

It was connection.

The Kind of Marriage I Want Now

These days, I no longer care about the thrill of the chase.

I care about building something stable.

I want a woman who challenges my thinking, understands my quiet moments, and is not impressed by superficial things alone.

Someone who sees beyond the tailored suits and the polished image.

Someone who understands the man underneath all the performance.

Because at the end of the day, faithfulness is not one grand gesture.

It is a daily decision.

A conscious choice to remain emotionally present even when life becomes noisy, stressful, or repetitive.

And for the first time in my life, I finally understand what that choice truly means.

Bolanle did not say much after I finished speaking.

She simply nodded slowly and looked at me differently.

Not like a man performing.

But like a man finally learning how to stay.

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