
29/06/2025
We were in her room, watching Netflix, when she paused the movie and turned to me with that sweet, dangerous smile she uses when she’s about to ask for something expensive.
“Baby, you know my birthday is coming soon, right?”
I nodded. “Of course. I’ve been planning for it.”
(A lie.)
“I want something special this year,” she said. “ lI want Labubu.”
“Labubu?” I blinked. “Na that angry-looking teddy bear”
“Babe! It’s a collectible art toy. It’s cute and chaotic.”
I laughed. But she didn’t. “We saw when we went to the m store. Remember? It was ₦250,000.”
“Oh… that Labubu.”
My chest suddenly felt tight, like NEPA had taken light inside my soul.
But I nodded like a supportive boyfriend.
I just had ₦3,200 left in my account.
So I started scouting.
Jumia? Too expensive.
Temu? Out of stock.
That’s when I stumbled on him…
An account called: . "Cheapest plug in Lagos.”
Against my better judgment I DMed him.
Me: “Oga, how much your Labubu?”
Plug: “₦19k. I fit run delivery to your side. This one na Japan version — limited edition. E even get voice chip.”
Me: “Voice chip?”
Plug: “Yes now. If you press belle, e dey talk .”
I was desperate. I transferred ₦19k and told him to deliver on the birthday.
On the D-Day.
Her room was decorated. Balloons everywhere. “Babe, close your eyes,” I said, grinning .
“OMG,” she squealed. “I know it’s Labubu right!”
She opened the box…
Silence.
Dead silence.
She looked at me… then looked back at the toy.
“Baby…” she said slowly, “why does this Labubu have dreadlocks?”
I blinked. “Dread—?”
She turned it around.
The doll had one eye bigger than the other, tribal marks, and a nose ring.
Instead of a scary-cute vibe, it looked like it had escaped from a Nollywood horror movie.
Then she pressed the belly.
> Labubu (in a deep, Igbo-accented voice): “Cha Cha Cha Labubu.”
“I don’t think this is working. Any man who can’t buy me the real Labubu is not ready for a real relationship.”
Me: 😭