Spotlighting Remarkable Women and Girls

The Apartment With No Ceiling

By Anonymous

You asked me how I did it. How I went from that girl crying outside a church gate with a torn plastic bag to someone who runs her own catering business, with a child who sleeps safely every night.

So here it is.

I didn’t have a plan. I didn’t have a vision board or a 10-year dream. I had fear. Fear so loud it drowned out reason. And I had a three-year-old daughter holding my hand, asking me what we would eat.

The night I left my husband, it wasn’t brave. It was survival. He had thrown a hot kettle across the kitchen. Not at me, not that time, but close enough. The tiles cracked. So did something in my chest.

I left with a small Ghana-Must-Go bag, a phone with 7% battery, and a child who had just learned how to say “I’m hungry” in full sentences.

For the first two nights, we stayed at a woman’s shop where she sold secondhand clothes. She let us sleep there with the mannequins. On the third night, she told me about an uncompleted building with one roofed room. The other room didn’t have a ceiling. But it had walls. I took it.

The floor was dusty. The windows were just holes in the wall. At night, I placed my daughter on the far end of the mattress to shield her from mosquitoes. When it rained, we shifted everything into a corner and prayed.

But in the silence of that roofless room, something grew. I still don’t know what to call it. Maybe desperation, maybe a seed of defiance. But it was louder than the fear. It told me to keep moving.

So I did what I knew. I could cook. Not Instagram-pretty meals, but real food that tasted like home. I borrowed a stove. I sold jollof in transparent plastic bowls to construction workers and okada men. Some days I made 3,000 naira. Some days I made 700.

There were days I went to bed angry. Days I borrowed salt from a neighbor who was also borrowing sugar from someone else. Days I wanted to disappear into the wall. But I never did. Because my daughter started smiling again. She made friends with the lizards in the corner and called the roofless room “our sky house.”

One day, a woman who bought my food told me about a catering contract at a small office nearby. They wanted lunch delivered three times a week. I lied and said I had a team. It was just me, two pots, and a broken cooler. But I got the job.

That was the crack of light. Not sunlight, not yet. But enough.

From there, I saved. I bought a second stove. I painted one wall of the apartment. It was still leaking in the corner, but it was mine. I printed a menu. I registered a business name. I stopped apologizing for my prices.

I still remember the day I moved out of the sky house. My daughter cried. She said she’d miss the stars at night. I promised her we’d find new stars, ones we didn’t have to fear.

Now, I have four part-time staff. I pay rent. I don’t flinch when I hear footsteps. I take long showers without rehearsing escape plans. And my daughter? She’s in primary three. She corrects my English sometimes and tells me she’ll be a “woman with money.”

So how did I do it?

I didn’t wait to feel strong. I didn’t wait to have enough. I just moved. I cooked. I borrowed. I cried. I prayed. I tried again. I lost sleep. I gained courage. I said yes to things I was afraid of.

And I forgave myself every time I thought about going back.

I still don’t have a perfect life. But I have a real one. I have a business that feeds people. I have peace that doesn’t shake when the wind blows.

So when you ask me how I did it, know this I didn’t do it alone. I had help in strange places. Women who gave me buckets, matches, and kind words. God who met me in leaky rooms and plastic bowls.

And I had a reason to keep going. Her name is Miracle.

You may not be in a sky house. But if you’re in a place that feels broken, if you’re starting from scraps, just know this ,

you’re not too late. You’re not too empty. You’re not too small. You can build again. Even without a ceiling.

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ISSUE 034

As we arrive at the final pages of 2025, this
Christmas edition feels both tender and collective. It
is a pause between what has been and what is
quietly becoming. A season of warmth, reflection,
and honest stock taking, wrapped in the familiar
comfort of family, memory, and hope.
This issue is about finishing well. Not with noise or
perfection, but with intention. Across these pages,
we explore purpose, resilience, womanhood,
healing, and the quiet power of choosing peace in a
world that constantly demands performance.
Being the cover star of this final issue is not about
visibility, but responsibility. It is about holding space
for reflection and renewal, and reminding ourselves
that growth often arrives softly. In wisdom earned,
boundaries honoured, and rest finally embraced.
As the year closes, I hope this edition meets you
gently. Whether you are celebrating milestones,
sitting with loss, or rebuilding in silence, remember
this, finishing strong is not about how the year
looked, but how you choose to step forward.
Here is to light, intention, and the courage to begin
again. Wishing you all a Merry Christmas and a
great New Year

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ISSUE 034

As we arrive at the final pages of 2025, this
Christmas edition feels both tender and collective. It
is a pause between what has been and what is
quietly becoming. A season of warmth, reflection,
and honest stock taking, wrapped in the familiar
comfort of family, memory, and hope.
This issue is about finishing well. Not with noise or
perfection, but with intention. Across these pages,
we explore purpose, resilience, womanhood,
healing, and the quiet power of choosing peace in a
world that constantly demands performance.
Being the cover star of this final issue is not about
visibility, but responsibility. It is about holding space
for reflection and renewal, and reminding ourselves
that growth often arrives softly. In wisdom earned,
boundaries honoured, and rest finally embraced.
As the year closes, I hope this edition meets you
gently. Whether you are celebrating milestones,
sitting with loss, or rebuilding in silence, remember
this, finishing strong is not about how the year
looked, but how you choose to step forward.
Here is to light, intention, and the courage to begin
again. Wishing you all a Merry Christmas and a
great New Year

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