(Real Stories) The Price of Love: How Bride Price Crushed My Marital Dreams
I met Femi at a wedding in Abuja. We clicked almost instantly. He was quiet, thoughtful the kind of man who made small moments feel meaningful. He remembered how I took my tea, opened car doors, and would text after a long day just to say, “I’m proud of you.”
It felt solid. Safe. Real.
Two years later, he proposed. No grand gestures. No crowd. Just him, down on one knee in our living room, hands shaking, eyes soft. I said yes before he even finished asking. We were ready.
We rented a place together, opened a joint savings account, and started planning for a small but elegant wedding.
Then came the formal introductions.
I’m from Imo State. Femi is Yoruba. I had warned him—half-jokingly that my people didn’t play when it came to tradition. But even I wasn’t prepared for what followed.
The bride price list his family received was… overwhelming.
₦1 million in cash. Two live goats. 25 tubers of yam. Crates of soft drinks. Kegs of palm wine. Traditional outfits for my father, mother, and elders. An additional ₦200,000 labeled “groom appreciation” and another ₦50,000 to “greet the in-laws.”
Femi’s father was stunned. He looked at the list and laughed.
“Are we marrying a daughter or opening a supermarket?” he joked.
They took the list home, saying they’d “discuss it.” But deep down, I already knew what was coming.
Three weeks later, Femi sat across from me, quiet. He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t blame me.
He just said, “I love you… but I can’t bankrupt my family to marry you.”
I stared at him, waiting for the punchline.
“So that’s it? Just like that?”
“It’s not just like that,” he replied. “We tried to negotiate. Your uncles won’t budge. My dad says it feels like extortion. I’m stuck.”
I wanted to scream. I wanted to remind him of everything we had built, everything we’d overcome. But what hurt most wasn’t the money—it was that he didn’t fight harder. He let it go. He let me go.
After he left, I begged my mother to speak to our kinsmen. She shook her head.
“It’s our custom,” she said. “Any man who truly wants to marry you will pay it.”
But what happens when culture prices you out of love?
It’s been seven months. Femi has moved on. He’s with someone new now. I see his updates her smile, their trips, their soft launch into a future I once pictured for us.
And me? I’m still here, surrounded by aunties telling me not to worry, that the right man will come and pay every kobo.
But I don’t want a man who can afford me.
I want the man who chose me even when it was hard.



