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The Invisible Wife — Reclaim Your Voice Before You Lose Yourself Completely

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Lanzema Reveals How A 7-Day Step-by-Step Voice Restoration Guide Helped A Nigerian Woman Rediscover Who She Truly Is — Beneath The Roles, The Silence, And Everything She Has Given Away

Published: 1 July 2026  |  Posted by Admin

Akonkeade Lanzema — Author of The Invisible Wife

You have been awake since 5am.

Not because you wanted to be. Not because anything exciting is happening. But because the list in your head — the one that never fully empties, not even in sleep — started again the moment your eyes opened.

School lunches. The meeting at 9. Your mother-in-law's visit on Saturday. The bill you have been quietly covering without telling your husband. The conversation you have been meaning to have but keep swallowing. The question you stopped asking yourself years ago because it never seemed to have a good answer.

"Is this it? Is this really all there is for me?"

You get up. You make breakfast. You get the children ready. You hold the household together with your bare hands — as you have done every single day — while smiling at the school gate, saying "I'm fine" to everyone who asks, and quietly counting the hours until bedtime when you can finally, finally be alone.

Except that even then, you are not really alone. Because the thoughts come. The tiredness that sleep does not fix. The low hum of something — you cannot even fully name what — that has been sitting in your chest for so long you have almost forgotten it was not always there.

You love your husband. You love your children. You love your life, or you know you should.

But somewhere in the middle of loving everyone else so completely, you lost yourself.

Not all at once. Gradually. The way a candle burns — steadily, quietly, giving light to everyone around it until there is simply nothing left.

"I am a Nigerian woman. We are strong. We carry things. We do not complain. We hold it together. That is what we do."

And you have. You have held it together beautifully.

But when was the last time someone asked what you were holding — and you told the truth?

When was the last time you said what you actually needed, without immediately softening it, qualifying it, or deciding it was not worth the argument?

When was the last time you answered the question "Who are you?" — not as a wife, not as a mother, not as a professional or a church member or a daughter-in-law — but just as yourself?

If you cannot answer that, keep reading.

Because what I am about to share with you changed everything for me. And I believe it will change things for you too.

"Because I am about to share with you a simple voice and identity restoration system that gave me back myself — and has now quietly done the same for dozens of Nigerian women just like you."


This is not a new idea. What I am about to share with you has been understood by wise women for generations — passed quietly from mother to daughter, from aunt to niece, in the kinds of honest conversations Nigerian families rarely have anymore.

Our grandmothers knew something about womanhood that modern culture has completely buried. They knew that a woman who does not know herself cannot truly love her husband, cannot raise children who are whole, and cannot build a life that is genuinely hers. They did not call it an identity crisis. They just knew when a woman was disappearing — and they knew how to call her back.

Somewhere between the hustle culture and the Instagram highlight reels and the church programs that celebrate the Proverbs 31 woman without ever asking how she actually feels — this ancient understanding got lost.

My name is Akonkeade Lanzema. I am a Nigerian woman in my mid-forties, a wife, a mother, and someone who spent more than a decade performing the role of the perfect Nigerian woman so convincingly that I genuinely forgot there was a real person underneath it.

What I am sharing with you today is not theory. It is not imported from some Western self-help book that knows nothing about what it means to be a Nigerian wife, to carry your husband's family's expectations, to love your children with everything you have and still feel empty, to be praised as strong in public and be quietly breaking in private.

This comes from my actual life. And from a conversation I did not expect to have.

Akonkeade Lanzema — Author of The Invisible Wife

Let Me Tell You The Whole Story

I was twelve years old the first time I was told that a good Nigerian girl does not speak too loudly, does not take up too much space, and does not make people uncomfortable by having too many opinions.

I was not told this cruelly. I was told it lovingly, the way mothers and aunties tell you things that they genuinely believe will protect you. The world will treat you better if you are softer, they said. Men prefer women who know how to hold their tongues. You will go further if you are gracious.

And so I learned. I learned to shrink. I learned to smile through discomfort. I learned to say "it's fine" when it was not fine at all. I learned to make myself smaller so that the people around me could feel larger.

I got married in my late twenties to a man I genuinely loved. We had children. We built a life. From the outside, we looked exactly like what a Nigerian marriage should look like — functional, respectful, held together.

But inside our home, in the quiet hours after the children were asleep, I was disappearing.

Not dramatically. There was no single terrible moment. Just a slow, quiet erosion. The opinions I stopped voicing because the argument was not worth it. The needs I stopped naming because it felt selfish to want things. The dreams I quietly folded away because the practicalities of family life demanded everything I had.

I was present for everyone. I was absent from myself.

My husband knew something was wrong. He just did not know what. And neither did I — not really. I thought I was tired. I thought it was the children. I thought I just needed a holiday, or more help in the house, or my mother to stop calling with problems every week.

I tried everything the world offered me.

I tried church. I served on committees. I led women's fellowship. I prayed more, fasted more, volunteered more. And each time, I would feel temporarily lifted — a week, maybe two — before the same quiet emptiness returned. Nobody in that room was asking the question I actually needed someone to ask me: who are you, underneath all of this?

I tried talking to my close friends. But even with my closest friends, I found I could not be fully honest. There is a particular kind of loneliness in being a Nigerian woman — even among other Nigerian women — when you feel you cannot admit that your life, which looks so good from the outside, feels hollow on the inside. Nobody wants to be the one who seems ungrateful.

I tried throwing myself into work. I was good at my work. Very good. And for a while, being excellent at something gave me a sense of self. But it was borrowed. It was performance. When work slowed down, the emptiness rushed back in.

I tried doing more for my husband and children. Perhaps if I served more, gave more, showed up more fully — perhaps then I would feel something. But giving from an empty place does not produce love. It produces resentment. And I began to notice, with a horror I did not know what to do with, that I was quietly resenting the very people I loved most.

Nothing worked. Not for long. Not at the root.


Then one afternoon — a completely ordinary Tuesday in October — I attended a women's retreat organised by a friend. I almost did not go. I was too busy, too tired, too convinced that another talk about "balance" was not going to change anything.

But I went.

And during one of the sessions, an older woman — a retired educator and counselor in her late sixties named Mama Chidinma — asked a question so simple and so devastating that I could not stop thinking about it for weeks.

She said: "If your husband left tomorrow. If your children grew up and moved away tomorrow. If your job ended tomorrow. Who would you be? Not what would you do — who would you BE? Can you answer that question? Or have you spent so long being everything to everyone that you no longer know?"

The room went quiet in a way that told me every woman in it was asking herself the same thing.

I could not answer. I sat with that question for what felt like a very long time. And the silence where my answer should have been told me more than any words could have.

After the session, I found Mama Chidinma and told her what I had been feeling. Not the polished version. The real one. The exhaustion. The invisible resentment. The sense of performing a life that did not quite belong to me.

She listened without surprise. As if she had heard this particular story a hundred times before — because she had.

Then she said something I will carry with me for the rest of my life:

"My daughter, you cannot give your family a whole woman if you are not one yourself. The problem is not that you love too much. The problem is that you have never been taught to include yourself in that love. You have been so busy filling everyone else's cup that your own is bone dry. And a dry cup cannot pour."

I wanted to argue. Because Nigerian women are not supposed to need things. We are supposed to be enough on our own, to find our worth in service, to be satisfied with the love we give rather than the love we receive or — most dangerously of all — the love we give ourselves.

But I could not argue. Because I knew she was right.

She gave me a simple framework she had developed over forty years of working with women. Seven days. One honest practice per day. No therapy. No group confessions. No public vulnerability. Just a woman, alone, with some structured questions and the courage to finally, finally look at herself honestly.

I started on a Wednesday evening after the children were in bed.

The first two days felt strange. Sitting with questions about myself felt almost selfish — as if giving attention to my own inner life was taking something from the people I was supposed to be serving. That guilt alone told me everything about how far I had drifted from myself.

But I kept going.

Day 3 was when something shifted. I was working through a question about the last time I had said what I actually wanted — not what I was willing to accept, not what seemed reasonable, but what I actually wanted — and I realised I genuinely could not remember. Not in years. I had been so busy accommodating, adapting, managing, and adjusting that my own wants had simply gone quiet.

I sat at my kitchen table at midnight and I wept.

Not from sadness. From recognition. The particular relief of being seen — even if only by yourself — after years of invisibility.

I kept going. Each day built on the last. I was not becoming a different woman. I was meeting the woman I had always been — the one buried under years of performance and silence and selflessness and shame and all the things a good Nigerian woman is supposed to be.

By Day 7, I had a conversation with my husband that I had been avoiding for three years. Not an argument. A conversation. A real one. The kind where you say what is actually true, and the other person actually hears it.

He did not respond perfectly. But he responded honestly. And for the first time in longer than I could remember, we were not performing at each other. We were simply there.

I am not telling you our marriage was transformed in seven days. I am telling you that in seven days, I came back to the table as a whole person. And everything that has been built since then has been built on something real.

I shared the framework quietly with some women I trusted. A friend in London who had been describing the same invisible exhaustion for years. A cousin in Abuja who had not cried in so long she had started to wonder if something was broken in her. A colleague who told me, six weeks after going through it, that her teenage daughter had pulled her aside one afternoon and said: "Mummy, you seem like yourself again."

She could not finish telling me that story without crying. And neither could I.

Another woman told me something that I carry with me every day. She said: "For the first time in fifteen years of marriage, I feel like I am in it — not just holding it up."

That is what this work does. It does not make you someone else. It brings you back to yourself. And when a Nigerian woman knows who she is — her husband feels it, her children feel it, her home breathes differently.

After sharing this framework with more and more women who kept asking for it — messaging me, calling me, sending their sisters and friends to ask on their behalf — I realised I could not keep passing it on one conversation at a time.

So I sat down. And I put everything inside one simple guide. The full framework. The daily structure. The reflection tools. The worksheets. The morning practice. The voice restoration exercises. The honest conversation guide for rebuilding with your husband. Everything that Mama Chidinma gave me, refined through my own journey and the journeys of every woman I have quietly walked through this with since.

Introducing...

The Invisible Wife

— Reclaim Your Voice Before You Lose Yourself Completely —

A 7-Day Voice and Identity Restoration Journey for the Nigerian Woman Who Has Been Everybody's Everything — and Has Forgotten Who She Actually Is

The Invisible Wife — 7-Day Voice Restoration Guide

Inside This Guide, You Will Discover:

  • — Pg. 5
    The Invisible Woman Checklist — A 15-point self-diagnostic that will stop you mid-sentence. You will see yourself on this page in a way no one has ever reflected back to you. Most women read it and say: "This is me. This is exactly me. How did she know?" That moment of recognition is where everything begins.
  • — Pg. 18
    The Root Silence Reflection Guide — A structured journaling template that gently walks you back to the moment you first learned that your voice was too much, your needs were too demanding, or your truth was too inconvenient. Not to reopen wounds. To name them — because what you name, you no longer have to carry alone.
  • — Pg. 23
    The 5 Identity Pillars for Women Worksheet — The most important exercise in the entire guide. You will map five things that are genuinely, originally yours — your values, your voice, your strengths, your wounds, and your purpose. Not what your husband needs. Not what your children require. Not what your culture assigned you. What is actually yours.
  • — Pg. 29
    The Voice Audit Template — A private, structured page for naming what has never been spoken. The unspoken needs. The swallowed words. The things you have been editing out of every conversation for years because peace felt more important than honesty. This exercise alone has unlocked things in women that decades of keeping quiet could not contain.
  • — Pg. 40
    The Daily Voice Anchor Card — A condensed one-page morning practice that takes ten minutes and reconnects you to yourself before the demands of the day get to you. Designed to be saved on your phone or printed. This becomes the most important ten minutes of your day.
  • — Pg. 33
    The Wife's Honest Conversation Framework — Three sentence starters and one listening principle that allow you to begin saying what you actually mean — to your husband, your children, even yourself — without it turning into a fight, a shutdown, or another swallowed truth. Used correctly, this framework has restarted marriages that had gone almost entirely cold.

And the best part? You do not need a therapist. You do not need to attend a seminar or sit in a group or tell anyone what you are going through. You do not need to spend N50,000 on a coaching programme. It is the same simple framework that worked for me, and has now quietly worked for over 40+ Nigerian women I have shared it with — in Nigeria and in the diaspora.

Real Women. Real Transformations.

AN
Amaka Nwosu
🇳🇬 Lagos, Nigeria
2 days ago
★★★★★
I cried on page 5. Not because I was sad — because someone had finally, finally described exactly what I have been feeling for years and I did not have to explain myself. By Day 4 of the framework my husband said "you seem different." I said "I feel different." And I meant it. This guide is not expensive. Losing yourself for another ten years would have been expensive.
FO
Funke Oladele
🇬🇧 London, United Kingdom
1 week ago
★★★★★
I bought this from London. I have been in the UK for nine years and the identity problem for Nigerian women here is even more complicated — you are expected to be modern and independent at work and then go home and be the traditional Nigerian wife. The contradiction is exhausting. This guide was the first thing I have read that understood exactly that tension. The Voice Audit exercise on its own was worth ten times the price.
CB
Chioma Balogun
🇳🇬 Abuja, Nigeria
2 weeks ago
★★★★★
My sister sent this to me and said "just read it." I almost did not because I thought it was another motivation book. It is not. It is the most honest thing I have read about what it feels like to be a Nigerian woman in a marriage where you love your husband but you have disappeared inside the role of being his wife. I did the Honest Conversation Framework on Day 6. We talked for two hours. Real talking. I had forgotten what that felt like.
RO
Rukayat Olatunji
🇳🇬 Ibadan, Nigeria
2 weeks ago
★★★★★
I want to speak to every Nigerian woman reading this — regardless of your tribe or religion. We have all been taught the same thing: be strong, be quiet, carry it, serve. This guide does not tell you to stop serving your family. It tells you that you cannot serve from an empty place. The Daily Voice Anchor Card alone has changed my mornings. I do it before anyone wakes up. Ten minutes. Just for me. It is the first thing I have done just for myself in eleven years of marriage.
NA
Ngozi Achebe
🇨🇦 Toronto, Canada
3 weeks ago
★★★★★
I forwarded this to my mother in Nigeria after I finished it. She called me after Day 3 and said "where did you find this woman?" She is 61 years old. She did the Root Silence exercise and called me again from the garden, where she had gone to cry so my father would not hear. She said: "I have been waiting to say some of these things for forty years." It is never too late. Buy this. Buy it for yourself. Buy it for your mother. Buy it for your daughter before she learns what we learned.
1 2 3

Share Your Experience

What It Cost To Build This Guide — And What It Costs You Today

Between the professional editing, the research into Nigerian women's identity psychology across tribes and cultures, the design and layout work that made every worksheet usable on a phone screen, the testing process with the first group of women who went through it and shaped the final version, and the delivery infrastructure — over N147,000 went into producing what you are about to receive.

I am telling you this so that when you see the price, you understand that someone invested seriously in getting this right — so that it actually works for you.

So what is a fair price?

Not N147,000 — what it cost to create.

Not N75,000.

Not N30,000.

Not even N15,000.

A fair price for me would be just

N9,800

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My Bold, Risk-Free Promise To You

Still feeling unsure? I completely understand. Which is why I am making you a promise that removes every single reason not to try this.


Use the guide for 7 full days. Go through every exercise. Do every day honestly. If you come out the other side and you cannot say that something genuinely shifted in how you see yourself — if there is no moment of recognition, no sense of standing on ground that is actually yours, no morning where you feel less invisible than you did before — then send me a message and I will return every naira you paid. No questions. No forms. No waiting.


I am that certain this works. Because I lived it. And I have watched it work for too many women to have any doubt left.


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Halima Musa
🇳🇬 Kano, Nigeria
4 days ago
★★★★★
I want to speak to every Northern Nigerian woman reading this. We carry this silence more than anyone — it is cultural, it is religious, it is expected. I have been married for fourteen years. I have never once said what I actually wanted without immediately softening it or taking it back. This guide gave me the words for something I have been living my entire adult life without being able to name. I am not the same woman I was before I read it. My husband has noticed. My children have noticed. Buy this.
SO
Sade Okonkwo
🇳🇬 Port Harcourt, Nigeria
1 week ago
★★★★★
I almost did not buy. I have downloaded many things that promised change and opened them once. But the story on this page — especially the part about Mama Chidinma and the question she asked — I read it three times. Something about it felt like it was written about me specifically. So I bought it. And I was right. The Root Silence Reflection Guide brought up things I have not looked at in twenty years. It was difficult. It was necessary. It was the beginning of something real.
EA
Emeka's Wife (Adaobi)
🇺🇸 Houston, USA
10 days ago
★★★★★
My husband bought The Silent Nigerian Man three weeks ago. He gave me this one. We did our guides at the same time — him in the living room, me in the bedroom — and on Day 5 we both came out and had the most honest conversation of our twelve-year marriage. I am not exaggerating. The diaspora puts a particular pressure on Nigerian couples that nobody prepares you for. These two guides together addressed things no marriage counselor has ever quite put into words for us.
IA
Ifeoma Agu
🇳🇬 Enugu, Nigeria
2 weeks ago
★★★★★
My testimony is about my daughter. I went through this guide and on Day 4 — the 5 Identity Pillars exercise — I realised I had been raising my teenage daughter to be exactly the kind of invisible woman I had become. Teaching her to be quiet, to accommodate, to shrink. Not because I am a bad mother. Because nobody ever taught me any different. I am now doing things differently with her. That ripple effect — that is worth more than any money I could spend.
BO
Bukola Ojo
🇳🇬 Lagos, Nigeria
3 weeks ago
★★★★★
I want to be honest. Before I bought this I was in a very dark place in my marriage. Not physically unsafe — emotionally. I had completely disappeared. I was going through the motions of being a wife and mother and I felt absolutely nothing. This guide did not fix my marriage. But it found me. It found the person I had been before the marriage took everything. And from that place, I could actually make clear decisions about what I wanted my life to look like. That clarity is priceless.
1 2 3

Before You Leave This Page, You Have Exactly Two Options:

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Option 2: Close this page. Go back to swallowing what you actually feel. Keep saying "I'm fine" when you are not. Keep giving from an empty place. Keep having the same distance in your marriage. Keep carrying everything alone. Keep hoping that one day, somehow, without doing anything different, something will change. Maybe next year. Maybe never.

You found this page for a reason. Something in you recognised itself in what you read. You would not have read this far if part of you was not ready.

Perhaps God put this in front of you today. Perhaps you are ready. Perhaps this is the moment.

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