A Nigerian woman has shared her story of struggling with bedwetting well into adulthood, and the account she gave is the kind that makes you sit with it long after you have finished reading. Not because it is dramatic in the way most viral stories are, but because of how quietly devastating it was, year after year, night after night, for most of her life.

By her own account, her family tried everything. They woke her up every hour through the night to use the bathroom. They cut off her water intake from 3pm. They took her to churches. Someone made her sit on hot coal. Red oil was rubbed on her body. There were soaps, medications, home remedies passed down and tried with diminishing hope. None of it worked. And when it did not work, what followed was flogging, insults, and shame. The kind of shame that gets layered onto a child so consistently it starts to feel like identity.

She was the only one of five siblings who did not attend a boarding school. Not because she did not want to. Because she could not risk it. She avoided travelling. She avoided men. She built her life around managing a secret that was exhausting to keep and humiliating whenever it slipped out.

It slipped out once in a way she has never forgotten. Her best friend told the whole class. She fought her for it, and even though the fight is long behind her, the wound from that betrayal quietly reshaped how she trusted people from that point on.

Through all of it, she said she had one prayer she returned to for years. Just one. That God would make it stop.

It did not stop.

Then at 21, she got admitted into university and had to face a reality she had been dreading since childhood: a shared hostel. Strangers. Bunk beds. No way to hide. She was terrified in a way that went beyond the normal anxiety of starting a new chapter. She knew what she was carrying into that room.

So she did not sleep. For four days, she stayed awake, running on fear and determination, refusing to give her body the chance to betray her in front of people who did not yet know her story. On the fifth day, exhaustion won. She slept.

She woke up to a dry bed.

She said it was the happiest day of her life. And the nights that followed brought the same result. Dry. Consistently, inexplicably dry.

“It just stopped. Just like that. Till today, I don’t know why. Maybe it was fear. Maybe it was a new environment. Or maybe God finally said, it’s time,” she wrote.
She still does not have a medical explanation. And maybe she does not need one. What she has instead is the other side of something that once felt permanent, and the quiet, remarkable fact that one morning changed everything.

Read story below:

“At 21, I got admission into the university.
My parents were already tired of everything… so they let me go.

“I was terrified.
Terrified of being exposed.
Terrified of disgrace in the hostel.
So for 4 days… I didn’t sleep.
On the 5th day, my body gave up.
I slept.

And for the first time in 21 years…
I didn’t wet the bed.
I woke up, checked… Dry.

I can’t even explain the feeling.
That was the happiest day of my life.
Then the next day… still dry.
And the next… still dry.

It just stopped.
Just like that.
Till today, I don’t know why.
Maybe it was fear.
Maybe it was a new environment.

Or maybe…
God finally said, “It’s time.”

If you’re going through something you’re ashamed of… I hope this reminds you:
Your story is not over yet.”

 

 

 

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