Charlen Ruto had grown up in the heart of Kenya’s Rift Valley, surrounded by the strong values and expectations that came with her prominent surname. After completing her studies abroad, she returned home and took a position with an international development organization. Her first major assignment was in Nairobi, where she settled into a fast-paced professional life while trying to balance personal expectations with her own ambitions.
It was during this time that she met Kevin, a well-mannered Kikuyu professional with a stable career and a calm personality. He was respectful, deeply rooted in tradition, and came from a good family. For a while, Charlen tried to convince herself that this was the kind of relationship she should want. Kevin was dependable and thoughtful, often speaking softly about marriage, children, and building a quiet, stable life together.
But as time went on, Charlen began to feel emotionally confined. Their relationship felt too careful, too controlled, as though every feeling had to pass through invisible cultural expectations before it could be expressed. Passion was whispered rather than lived openly, and dreams were constantly moderated by “realistic” limits. One evening, while writing in her diary, she finally admitted to herself what had been growing inside her for months: “I need more fire.”
Everything changed when her work contract transferred her to Lagos, Nigeria. The city was loud, energetic, unpredictable, and completely different from the structured life she had known in Nairobi. Lagos moved with confidence and intensity, and Charlen quickly found herself drawn into its rhythm.
Within her first month there, she met Tunde Adebayo, a confident and ambitious Yoruba entrepreneur whose presence seemed to command attention wherever he went. From the very beginning, Tunde pursued her boldly and without hesitation. He openly expressed his feelings, planned spontaneous outings, and spoke passionately about building a future filled with ambition and adventure. His affection was expressive, energetic, and impossible to ignore.
Charlen found herself falling deeply in love. Where many of the Kenyan men she had known were often reserved and cautious with emotions, the Nigerian men she encountered — especially Tunde — were direct, emotionally expressive, and unapologetically confident. Tunde challenged her intellectually, encouraged her ambitions, and never made her feel like she needed to shrink herself to fit traditional expectations. They would spend hours debating politics, business ideas, and their visions for the future before laughing together late into the night.
One humid evening in Lagos, the two sat on a rooftop overlooking the city’s glowing skyline. As music drifted through the warm air, Charlen turned to him and quietly confessed, “I never thought I’d admit this… but I prefer Nigerian men.”
Tunde laughed warmly before asking, “Why is that?”
She smiled thoughtfully before answering. “Kenyan men are good men — respectful and responsible. But sometimes it feels like they love with brakes on. Nigerian men love like they’re chasing something great. No brakes. Just full speed. It makes me feel alive.”
Over the following months, Charlen quietly embraced a different path for her life. The vibrant chaos of Lagos, combined with the passionate and ambitious love Tunde offered, awakened a side of her she had never fully explored before. Their relationship was intense, colorful, emotional, and deeply fulfilling.
She still loved Kenya and remained proud of her roots and her family name. But when it came to matters of the heart, Charlen Ruto discovered a new rhythm in Lagos — one that made her feel fully seen, fully challenged, and fully alive.












