Every week,聽X站福利所 seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it鈥檒l be revealing.

What鈥檚 your earliest memory of money?
I started helping my dad at his shop in primary four and continued until I finished secondary school. He did a couple of photography-related things: he sold photo accessories and photo printers, and made picture frames.
In exchange for helping him, he allowed me to take a cut of the daily profits.
How big a cut are we talking about?
It wasn鈥檛 specific. He鈥檇 just give me a daily sales target, and if we exceeded the target, I could keep the extra money.
I mostly spent the money I made from the shop on toys 鈥 nothing reasonable. The only memorable thing I bought was my first phone in primary 5. It was a Multilinks phone, but I don鈥檛 remember how much I bought it.
However, I remember not telling anyone before I bought the phone. My parents just saw me with a phone. While my dad didn鈥檛 mind, my mum was like, 鈥淲hy would you buy a phone just like that?鈥 She was only on the subject for a few days before the whole thing died down.
Can I assume this solo spending adventure meant your folks had money?
There was money in the beginning. My dad had his business, and my mum had a big provision store. We were comfortable, and I got whatever I wanted.
Things suddenly changed in 2014, after I finished secondary school. Both my parents鈥 businesses crashed for reasons I don鈥檛 understand, and we had to start managing.
My dad鈥檚 business crashed first, and my mum used hers to support the family. Then, she got scammed by an agent while trying to send me abroad for school, and she lost all her savings.
Oh my
We had to adjust to our new financial situation. My dad went from giving my siblings and me pocket money every morning to nothing at all.
After secondary school, I started looking for ways to make money. I tried to follow in the footsteps of my friends who were hustling and finding jobs as bar attendants and security guys, but my dad didn鈥檛 allow me. He said he didn鈥檛 want me to work for anyone. Instead, I should keep helping him out with his business.
When the job plan didn鈥檛 work, I decided to upgrade my photography and videography skills instead. I already knew the basics from working with my dad, but I needed advanced training to monetise the skills. Still, my dad refused to let me go to work with someone else.
I stuck it out for about a year, but when my dad didn鈥檛 change his mind, I did the only thing I could do: I left home.
Where did you go?
I started living in a church. I played the piano and often played at events, earning small money. I did that for a few months until I met a photographer at a wedding. I watched him work, and after the event, I went up to him and told him I really wanted to learn photography. Thankfully, he gave me his business card.
A few days later, I contacted him, and he asked me to meet in town. I did, and I told him my life story and why I wanted to learn the trade. He spoke to my mum before he agreed to take me in as his apprentice. This was in 2016.
Was this a paid apprenticeship?
I didn鈥檛 have a structured salary, but I often travelled around Nigeria with my boss for jobs, and he regularly gave me stipends. After we completed a job, he鈥檇 transfer between 鈧50k and 鈧100k, and we had an average of four jobs monthly. He was very kind and generous in that regard.
At this point, I had moved in with a friend. Then, in 2017, I got my one-room apartment at 鈧70k/year. That same year, I bought three cameras at once. It was a distress sale, and I paid around 鈧1m for cameras worth about 鈧3m.
The money for that purchase came from the income I鈥檇 saved from my boss, a 鈧20k weekly ajo contribution I was part of, and income from side hustles.
What side hustles?
I didn鈥檛 want to rely only on photography gigs, so I learned graphic design and made some money by taking printing gigs. I designed and printed everything from picture frames to flyers.
I also used my cameras to take on side jobs and earn money. But that didn鈥檛 last long, as they were stolen in 2018.
All of them?
Yeah. My boss got a new apprentice who turned out to be a thief. The one time we left him alone in the office, he emptied it. He took my cameras, my boss鈥檚 cameras, and several equipment.
My boss didn鈥檛 really recover from that loss because it prevented him from getting gigs. No gigs meant no money came in. I had to look for something to sustain myself, and I found a job as a cashier at a barbing salon.
What was the pay like?
鈧12k/month, and I was also the cleaner. It was a very depressing period for me, from earning so much to that level. Most people didn鈥檛 know what I went through because I still looked regular on the outside.
I worked at the salon for six months until I met someone who asked why I was cleaning. I told him how I鈥檇 lost my cameras, and it turned out he was into cinematography. He offered to train me, so I left the salon and went to work with him.
I only lasted three months with him. He was toxic, constantly complaining about everything, and the atmosphere was just off. He also didn鈥檛 pay me at all while I worked with him. He just kept feeding me 鈥滻t鈥檒l get better鈥 stories.
What did you do after you left him?
I moved in with my uncle in 2019. He was into home security solutions鈥擟CTV, home automation, and the like鈥攕o I stayed with him to learn the business and assist him. He didn鈥檛 pay me either, but I got small cash here and there from my graphic design and printing side hustle.
In 2020, I was admitted to the university and had to leave my uncle鈥檚 place. Of course, I needed money for school, so I found another hustle. This time, it was a job at an oil and gas firm. I was employed as an IT/Admin officer.
My employer knew I was in school, so I needed to show up at the office only twice a week and work remotely for the rest of the week. My pay was 鈧50k/month.
How did you manage work and school?
I鈥檓 honestly not sure how I managed it because it was a real struggle. But I needed to pay myself through school, so I guess I had no choice.
I graduated from university in 2024 and still work at the same job. My pay is now 鈧150k/month, and I supplement my income with side gigs. I make signage 鈥 yes, I learned that one, too 鈥 and take up CCTV installation gigs from time to time. I also occasionally go out for photography gigs. I do a lot of jamajama just to sustain myself.
What鈥檚 the income from your side gigs like?
I honestly can鈥檛 say because it鈥檚 once in a while. I can make 鈧1m today and nothing for the next few months. I haven鈥檛 been able to go out to look for gigs as much as before because I鈥檓 struggling to meet my 9-5. My salary is the only income I鈥檓 sure of, even though it doesn鈥檛 sustain me. I just do it so I can leave the house daily.
2022 was the last time I made big money from my side hustle. I got a contract worth 鈧20m to make signage for a hotel. My profit from that job was over 鈧8m, but I didn鈥檛 handle that money well.
What did you do with it?
I sent 鈧2m to my uncle to help me buy a car, but I haven鈥檛 seen any car or received my money back.
Then, in January 2023, I got scammed of 鈧4m while trying to buy a CNC router machine from China for my signage business. I still had some change from the contract money, which I used to buy a few needed tools, but it was nowhere close to the difference the machine would鈥檝e made.
I eventually lost that hotel client because I couldn鈥檛 meet up with subsequent jobs.
Yikes. Sorry about that
Thanks. I feel like I鈥檓 in a cycle where I can make good money from my side hustles today and be very comfortable, and then be very broke for the next three months. I think it鈥檚 because I don鈥檛 make the best financial decisions when money comes. In fact, I can say I have bad money habits.
Tell me more
When I have money, I like to spend it. I love gadgets, so I often buy things I don鈥檛 need. But I鈥檓 learning to be better. I now draw up budgets to plan my expenses and try to limit my spending unless it鈥檚 necessary.
I鈥檓 now at a stage where I believe money comes to you when you treat it nicely. I used to spend lavishly, but that hasn鈥檛 exactly helped me. I鈥檓 now pursuing financial discipline so I can be financially stable.
I don鈥檛 go out so much anymore because when I do, I spend money. I鈥檓 also trying to save money to get a physical space for my business. I don鈥檛 know what it鈥檒l cost yet; it鈥檚 just on my wishlist.
What does your typical month in expenses look like?

The ajo contribution is my savings; I鈥檝e been doing it since October. I expect to collect 鈧600k in September, and I want to put it towards my plans to get a car. I also have 鈧300k locked in a savings app.
Is there any aspect of your finances you wish to be better at?
My earnings. I just want a stable cash flow every day. It would make a world of difference.
Is there anything you want right now that you can鈥檛 afford?
Studio equipment. I learnt music production鈥
Is there anything you haven鈥檛 learned to do?
Haha. I learned this one during COVID from YouTube and with help from a neighbour. I even produced my own song just for fun. I also learned web development and web design during that period. I just randomly learn different things.
Anyway, back to what I was saying. I know a lot of upcoming artists around my area, and music production would be a stable income source. I once produced music for someone in 2023 and got paid 鈧70k.
If I get like 鈧1m now, I should be able to get a studio space and basic equipment. I still want a shop for my business, too. It鈥檚 now a matter of whichever opportunity comes first. My long-term business plans are music production, the signage business, and CCTV installations. Maybe I鈥檒l even find a way to put everything under one business label.
How would you rate your financial happiness on a scale of 1-10?
4. I鈥檓 still struggling financially, and I don鈥檛 feel stable at all. Maybe when I get a physical shop space, I鈥檒l become serious about my business and change my finances.
If you’re interested in talking about your Naira Life story, this is a good place to start.
Find all the past Naira Life stories聽here.

!