HH PEOPLE

Menu
  • Home
  • Features
  • Cover
  • Food
  • Health Tips
  • Career Story

My Biggest Opp Wears Clouds

By Anjolaoluwa Oladipupo, United Capital

HHPeople Editorial by HHPeople Editorial
July 1, 2026
in Features
0

Everyone talks about having an opp.
For some people, it’s an ex. For others, it’s Lagos traffic, NEPA, or that colleague who somehow finds “gentle reminders” enjoyable.
Until last Sunday, I genuinely thought I was living an opp-free life.
Then the rain flooded my apartment.
It started as one of those Sundays that feels like it’s going exactly as planned.

It was Mid-Year Thanksgiving, and I was genuinely excited. My outfit ATEEE, my hair was on point, and I was looking forward to spending the day exactly how I liked it. Church first, then home to my small chops and one giant piece of chicken, a couple of episodes of The Last Dance, some work, and a quiet evening before the new week.

In other words, intentional living.

Church was beautiful. We danced, sang, and thanked God for bringing us through the first half of the year. It was the kind of service that leaves you convinced God is ushering you into a beautiful second half of the year.

Then the rain started.

Not ordinary rain.

Lagos rain.

The kind that floods roads so badly you step outside and start wondering if the clouds have a personal grudge against the city.
The downpour delayed the end of service, but no one seemed to mind. We simply kept praising.

Eventually, the rain eased enough for everyone to head home.
Finding a ride was another matter entirely.
The roads were flooded. Gbagada Expressway looked like it had temporarily become a river, and traffic had given up on moving.
Still, I wasn’t worried.

“One bus,” I told myself. “I’ll be home.”

When I got to my compound and saw water everywhere, I barely reacted.
“The rain must have been heavy,” I thought.

Then I reached my front door.

My three-bedroom apartment was flooded.
The first thing I thought about wasn’t my TV.
It wasn’t my couch.
It wasn’t even my wardrobe.
It was my office laptop.
My laptop is usually either inside my work bag on the floor or sitting on my reading table, and in that moment, I genuinely couldn’t remember where I’d left it.

I’ve never felt relief quite like spotting it safely on the table.

Then I looked around properly.

The water wasn’t ankle-deep.

But it also wasn’t something I could simply mop away.
My entire Sunday had just been replaced by an emergency.
My first instinct was to call for help.
Surely someone had a pumping machine for situations like this.
I called one plumber.

Then another.
Then another.
The response was almost identical every time.
“It’s raining.”
Nobody wanted to come out.

Which, if you think about it, is almost funny. The people whose job was removing water wanted nothing to do with water that day.
So my gateman and I accepted our fate.
We started packing water.
Bucket after bucket.
For hours.
Every now and then, I’d stop and convince myself we were making progress.

Then I’d look around and realize the house disagreed.
By Sunday night, after nearly six hours of scooping water, I admitted defeat.
This wasn’t a ME problem.
I needed a machine.
Around noon on Monday, someone finally agreed to come.
₦35,000 later, my apartment was dry.

Well… drier.

The flood was gone, but the real damage was only beginning.

There were clothes to sundry, appliances to inspect, gadgets that refused to come back on, and furniture that now carried the unmistakable smell of a weekend I’d rather forget.

I’m still avoiding adding up the full cost.
Some forms of denial are surprisingly comforting.
What surprised me most wasn’t even the flood.

It was how quickly an ordinary Sunday became one of the most expensive weekends I’d had in a long time.

I had planned for chicken and small chops.

Life planned pumping machines, repairs, and replacement costs.
It’s funny how we think financial planning is only about preparing for the big things; a house, retirement, buying a car, travelling the world.

Sometimes, it’s simply about surviving the unexpected.

Before last weekend, conversations about emergency funds and investing for the future sounded like one of those responsible-adult topics you nod along to before changing the subject.

Now they make perfect sense.

Not because anyone expects their living room to become a swimming pool.
But because life has a habit of introducing surprise expenses without sending a calendar invite.

I’ve heard people say everyone has an opp.

Maybe they’re right.
Mine just happened to arrive with dark clouds.

And while I’m hoping we never cross paths like that again, at least I walked away with one lesson.

The future isn’t only built by planning for the things you hope will happen.

It’s also protected by preparing for the things you hope never do.

Post Views: 57
Previous Post

My Biggest Opp? Empty Land.

Next Post

How to Settle Your Beef with Artificial Intelligence

Next Post

How to Settle Your Beef with Artificial Intelligence

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Always Stay Informed

Always Stay Informed, Talk To Us Subscribe for weekly updates from our team on lifestyle, industry news and valuable tips for your health.

Instagram

[instagram-feed num=9 cols=3 showfollow=false]

About Heirs Holdings

About

We are an African proprietary investment company driving Africa’s development through long-term investments in key sectors. We operate businesses that rank among the top three in their sectors

Heirs Holdings is a leading pan-African investment company. Its investment portfolio spans the power, energy, financial services, hospitality, real estate, healthcare and technology sectors, operating in twenty-four countries worldwide.

Heirs Holdings is inspired by Africapitalism, the belief that the private sector is the key enabler of economic and social wealth creation in Africa. Driven by this philosophy, Heirs Holdings invests for the long-term, bringing strategic capital, sector expertise, a track record of business success, and operational excellence to its portfolio companies.

HH People Team

Editorial Board

Editor in Chief – Clari Green

Editor – ‘Deoye Falade

Technical Lead

Akindamola Akintola

Cover Design 

Victor Oga

Contributors

Cover stories

Abiodun Ikubaiyeje

Other Contributors

Priscilla Okorie

Chidinma Ofoma

‘Deoye Falade

Jessica Chukwukanne

Zainab Olagunju

Ngozi Eyeh

Ikeoluwa Feyisetan

Nonso Okafor