![[STORY] Dating in this generation is survival of the fittest [STORY] Dating in this generation is survival of the fittest](https://www.thecityceleb.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Dating-in-this-generation-is-survival-of-the-fittest-1140x641.webp)
[STORY] Dating in this generation is survival of the fittest
Last Friday night, I was at a small rooftop bar in Lekki with a friend when my phone buzzed with a DM notification.
It was from her.
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“Hey… can we talk?”
Now, pause.
You know that one text that makes your stomach drop? That was it. The girl I had been in a long-distance relationship with for almost a year suddenly wanted to “talk.”
I typed back quickly:
“Sure, call me when you’re free.”
Two minutes later, my phone rang. I stepped away from the loud music and picked up.
Her voice was soft, almost shaky. “So… I don’t think this is working anymore.”
My heart sank. “What do you mean? We’ve been holding it down, haven’t we?”
She sighed. “Yeah, but lately, I just feel like I’m dating my phone. No hugs, no dates, no real presence. I met someone at work… and honestly, he makes me feel alive again.”
I went silent. The sound of Lagos traffic below suddenly grew louder, like the city was mocking me.
“Wait—you met someone?” I finally asked, my voice cracking.
“Yes… but I didn’t want to hide it. You deserve honesty,” she replied.
At that point, I laughed, not because it was funny but because life sometimes feels like a bad Netflix script.
“So, all those late-night FaceTime calls, the couple playlists, the plans for December holidays—none of that meant anything?”
She whispered, “It did. But feelings change.”
I stared at the skyline, neon lights flickering, my reflection faint on the glass barrier. My chest tightened. Long-distance relationships are already tough, but betrayal makes it worse.
I muttered, “You could have just said you were tired, instead of auditioning a replacement.”
There was silence. Then she said softly, “I’m sorry.” And the line went dead.
Fast forward three days. I was scrolling Instagram when I saw her story—her and the so-called “work guy.” Smiling. Happy. Caption: “When you know, you know.”
But here’s the twist—guess who slid into my DMs later that same night? The “work guy.”
“Hey bro… I think she’s still texting you behind my back. Just wanted to ask, is she over you for real?”
I blinked at the message. My ex-girlfriend’s new boyfriend was asking me for relationship advice.
The irony? I still had a text from her that morning: “I miss us sometimes.”
I didn’t reply to either of them. I just closed my phone, ordered suya from the spot downstairs, and whispered to myself:
“Dating in this generation is survival of the fittest.”