Published: 14 June 2025 | Posted by Admin | Relationships & Emotional Recovery
Chisom, Port Harcourt.
You know that feeling when you wake up in the morning… and the very first thing that enters your mind is him?
Not a happy memory. Not something that makes you smile. Just… that heavy weight. That tightening in your chest. That quiet ache that has become so familiar you almost don't notice it anymore.
You get up. You wash your face. You look in the mirror.
And somewhere behind your eyes — in a place you can't quite name — you don't recognise the person staring back at you.
When did I become this?
You go to work. You smile. You answer emails. You laugh at your colleague's joke in the hallway. People see a woman who has it together.
But nobody sees what happens on the drive home. Nobody knows about the songs you skip because they remind you of him. Nobody knows that some evenings you sit in your car in the compound for twenty minutes before you can bring yourself to walk inside.
Because inside, alone, is when it gets loud.
You replay conversations. You dissect things he said. You catch yourself wondering, again, what was wrong with you. Why you weren't enough. Why, even now that it's over, you still feel like the problem was you.
You've prayed about it. You've journalled about it. Your best friend said "move on, babe — you deserve better." Your mother said "just focus on your work." Someone on Instagram said "heal your inner child." You've saved seventeen motivational quotes you've never gone back to read.
And yet.
You still don't feel like yourself. The confidence you used to carry — that easy, unself-conscious way you used to move through a room — it's gone. And nobody can tell you how to get it back.
What if something is actually broken in me? you've thought more than once. What if I'm the kind of person who just never gets over things?
You are not broken. Nothing is wrong with you. And you are not alone in this feeling — not even close.
But I need you to stop what you're doing right now and read every word I'm about to write.
Drop everything you are doing now and listen to every word I'm about to say.
Because I'm about to share with you a simple 21-day self-work protocol that changed everything for me — and has already changed everything for hundreds of women who were exactly where you are right now.
Nigerian women have always known how to come back from destruction. Our grandmothers didn't have therapy. They didn't have self-help books. They had rituals, honesty, community wisdom, and an unshakeable knowledge of who they were — even when life tried to tell them otherwise.
That knowledge didn't disappear. It just stopped being passed down in the way it used to be.
What I'm going to share with you is rooted in that same quiet, powerful tradition of self-reclamation — combined with what emotional recovery science now confirms actually works to reverse the specific psychological damage a toxic relationship leaves behind.
My name is Chisom. And the first thing you should know about me is that I am NOT a therapist. I am not a life coach. I don't have letters after my name.
I am a 31-year-old woman from Port Harcourt who spent four years of her life in a relationship that slowly, quietly, and very deliberately dismantled everything she knew about herself. And I am someone who found her way back.
This is my story.
Chisom, Port Harcourt — three weeks after completing the 21-day protocol.
I met Emeka in 2019 at a friend's birthday dinner in GRA. He was charming. Funny. The kind of man who makes you feel like the most interesting person in the room.
We dated for four years.
I will not waste your time describing the good parts — because you already know how that story goes. You lived it too. The beginning was beautiful. The middle was confusing. And by the end, I was a version of myself I didn't plan on becoming.
It didn't happen all at once. That's the thing nobody tells you about toxic relationships. They don't break you in one dramatic moment. They chip away at you — slowly, methodically — until one day you realise you have been asking permission to have opinions.
"Why do you always have to argue?" he'd say, when I disagreed with him.
"You're too sensitive," he'd say, when something he did hurt me.
"You know I love you, but sometimes you make it so hard," he'd say, when I asked for basic consideration.
And I believed him. I adjusted. I made myself smaller. I turned down my own volume so many times that I genuinely forgot what I actually sounded like.
By year three, I had stopped going out with my friends because he didn't like it. I had stopped wearing certain clothes because of his comments. I had stopped sharing my ambitions because he had a way of making them seem naive or foolish.
And the worst part? I thought this was just what love looked like.
The breaking point came on a Tuesday evening in November 2022.
I found messages on his phone. Not just one conversation. Several. Going back months. Names I recognised. Names I didn't.
I didn't scream. I didn't throw things. I just sat on the edge of the bed for a very long time, looking at nothing.
That night, I called my Aunty Ngozi — my father's sister, the woman who had always been the one in our family who told the truth plainly, without softening it.
She listened to everything I said. Then she was quiet for a moment.
Then she said: "Chisom, that man did not just cheat on you. He spent years convincing you that you were less than you are. That is a bigger crime than the cheating. And the work you have to do now is not about him. It is about finding the girl he took from you."
I cried for a long time after that call. But something in those words stayed with me.
Find the girl he took from you.
I started looking. I tried everything I could find.
I threw myself into work — 12-hour days, back-to-back meetings, volunteering for projects I didn't need. The busyness helped during the day. At night, the feeling was always waiting.
I tried talking to my friends. But after two or three conversations, I could see the exhaustion behind their eyes — the polite "mmhm" that meant they had heard this before and didn't know what else to say.
I started following every self-help account I could find on Instagram. I saved posts. I wrote affirmations. I repeated "I am worthy" into my bathroom mirror so many times the phrase lost all meaning.
I bought a popular breakup recovery book by an American author. Finished it in four days. The advice was fine — but it was written for a completely different world. It didn't understand the pressure of being a Nigerian woman. It didn't understand what it means to have your mother quietly imply that you should have held on. It didn't understand the particular shame of admitting to your community that your relationship fell apart.
I even tried jumping into something new — a man who was nothing like Emeka, who I dated for six weeks before realising I had brought all my unhealed pieces into something new and made a mess of it.
Nothing worked. Because none of it was structured. None of it was targeted. None of it was built for the specific damage that had been done.
The shift came from an unlikely place.
Three months after everything fell apart, I travelled to Enugu for my cousin's traditional wedding. At the gathering, I ended up sitting with a group of older women I didn't know well — women in their fifties and sixties, the kind who have seen things.
One of them was Mama Obiageli. Seventy-one years old, sharp as a blade, with the kind of calm that comes from having already survived everything life could throw at her.
I don't know how the conversation started. But somehow — maybe because I was tired of pretending I was fine — I told her a little of what I was going through.
She looked at me for a long moment. Then she said something I will never forget.
"The problem is that you are trying to move forward before you have looked backward. You cannot know what was stolen from you if you have never named it. And you cannot take it back if you do not first understand exactly what they took."
She told me that when a woman in her village went through something like this, the women did not tell her to "move on." They sat with her and did inventory. They named, one by one, everything that had been taken — her confidence, her voice, her trust, her laughter, her sense of safety. They named it, witnessed it, and only then — only then — did they begin the work of taking it back. Piece by piece. Day by day. With specific practices, not vague encouragement.
I sat with her for two more hours that afternoon. I asked her questions. I took notes on my phone. I didn't sleep much that night — but for the first time in months, I was thinking forward instead of backward.
When I returned to Port Harcourt, I began.
I'll be honest — the first few days felt strange. The exercises were simple. Too simple, I thought. Surely something this uncomplicated cannot fix what I am feeling.
By Day 5, nothing had dramatically changed. I almost stopped.
Then Day 7 happened.
I was sitting at my desk at work, and a male colleague said something dismissive to me in a meeting — the kind of thing I would normally have let pass, shrinking into myself the way I had learned to do. But instead, I heard myself say clearly: "Actually, I disagree with that. Here's why."
It was not a big moment. Nobody else noticed. But I noticed. Because that was her — the woman I used to be, before years of being told I was too much had taught me to be less. She had said something.
I cried in the bathroom afterwards. Happy tears.
By Day 14, my close friend Adaeze sat across from me at dinner and said: "Chisom, you look different. Something in your face. You look like yourself again."
By Day 21, I had completed something I hadn't had in years: a clear, written, detailed picture of who I was, what I would accept in my life, and what I was worth. In my own handwriting. In my own words. Nobody had given it to me — I had built it myself, from the inside out.
That document — my Identity Statement — sits on my nightstand. On the days when old doubts creep back, I read it. It never fails to re-anchor me.
Three other women at that gathering in Enugu who I shared parts of Mama Obiageli's method with — my cousin Uju, her friend Stella, and an older woman named Mrs. Adeyemi — all came back to me within weeks with the same report: something had shifted. Something they hadn't been able to move on their own had finally moved.
I knew then that I had to package this properly. I had to make it available to every Adaeze, every Chisom, every woman sitting in her car trying to find the strength to walk back into her own life.
Since that time, I have been getting messages — from friends of friends, from strangers who somehow heard, from women in my DMs who found me through a comment I left somewhere. More messages than I can personally respond to.
I cannot sit with each of them the way Mama Obiageli sat with me. But I can give them the next best thing.
I put everything — the full 21-day protocol, every exercise, every reflection, every tool, the exact daily structure, what to do when you want to quit, how to know it is working, what to protect once you've healed — inside one simple, complete guide.
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