MOCHEDDAH recounts her encounter with a LESBIAN
My encounter with a lesbian – Mocheddah
By Samod Biobaku
If a widely-traveled social scientist was ever in need of
having a long conversation with a gorgeous young lady constantly bursting at
the seams with enough talent and adrenalin to sustain three life spans, then
without batting an eyelid, delectable singer and Nigerian-based entertainer,
Ola Modupe a. k. a Mocheddah would instantly fit the bill.
Mocheddah, the University of Lagos (UNILAG) graduate in Creative
Arts raps, dances, sings and is always eager to explore new grounds.
Given her appetite for adventures and trying out new thing,
many would naturally expect her to have tons of experiences and moments in her
memory bank and she didn’t disappoint when she recently revealed in an
interview with Simply SAMAD, how she was once cornered by a lesbian and how she
eventually wriggled her way out of the sexually-deviant situation. “Yes! I was
walking down the road and a girl just stopped me and said ‘Hi.’ She said I
looked pretty and I thanked her for the compliment. All of a sudden, she began
telling me that she doesn’t stay far from where we met. I didn’t suspect
anything and even told her I didn’t stay far away either. She suddenly began
telling me she likes me and other sweet things and that’s when the alarm bells
started to ring in my head. I was just 15 years old back then. I wasn’t scared
but I was shocked and I just took off before she went further with her sweet
yarns.”
Mocheddah who hails from Osun State also spoke about her
career, her 7-year-old affinity with popular entertainment outfit, record label
and music group, ‘Knight House,’ her singles and how she survived her early
tom-boy tendencies.
At a time when grown men and women still work hard and pray
harder to find and latch onto a reputable record label, Mocheddah had
everything going for her when she was just 12 years old. “I think my career
started in front of the mirror. I loved standing in front of the mirror and I
would just stand there and practice a lot of dance steps as I saw them in
musical videos. I loved music and I always grasped things easily and then I met
Knight House (which consists of Aderogba, Temi Gomez, Lanre Oladimeji, Sabre
and there’s our new intern. He’s been with us for over a year now and then
there’s Mocheddah) at a very young age, which was a good thing. I met them when
I was 12 years old. I became their baby sister and they started grooming me. I
think that was when I mastered the art of doing everything because as young as
I was, I would listen to rap music.”
As pretty as she is, Mocheddah appeared to have a sprinkle
of the ‘tom-boy personality’ within her and this much she affirmed when she
narrated how her brother initiated her into the world of a tom-boy and how her
fondness for her brother further unveiled the boy in her.
“I became a tom boy because my brother was always with me.
I’m the fourth of five children. I have an elder sister, another sister then a
brother, then me, then my younger sister. I was very close to my brother and he
always had a lot of guy friends around and for some strange reason, I was
attached to my brother. My sisters were too busy trying to look beautiful but
my brother was always there for me. He used to use me to practice wrestling
moves. He was obsessed with wrestling. I was always a victim of all the deadly
wrestling moves; like the Figure 4 leg-lock, Didity, Piledrivers, submission
holds and many other finishing moves and he used to use me for all these moves.
I was his playmate and I used to hang out a lot with him and his friends.
Before I knew it, I became a tom boy. My brother was a big rap fan. He loved P
Diddy and I wanted to impress him kind of. I dressed, talked, walked and felt
like a boy. I was strong. I used to climb things.
I was a tom boy for years. I would wear my face cap, baggy
jeans and even sag. I was a bully. I was terrible because I was a big time tom
boy and then later, I started liking boys and all that. I went into the Beyonce
thing and I got girly. I also used to do a lot of role-playing like the
different celebrities that I watched. I would do P Diddy today, BIG the next
day and Destiny child the day after. I even used to dress like them and work on
their moves in front of the mirror.”
With a reputation that smacked of fights, one begins to
wonder if Mocheddah ever went as far as beating boys and she responded to the
question when she said, “Ah! I said I was a bully to the core. There was nobody
I couldn’t beat in school. I was too strong for my peers and most of them just
avoided me because I beat everybody. I even did Taekwondo for a while. When I
fought back then, I didn’t fight the way girls fight dragging and pulling each
other. I used to punch and kick with unbelievable precision and force.”
Her life as a tom-boy however drew to an end when she was 13
years old. “It ended when I was 13 years old. I became a girl but I still had
those tom boy traits buried deep within me. I still had the ‘Look at me before
you talk - Are you okay?’ kind of attitude. The girl in me eventually came out
and I became a girlie girl. I had friends that were girly as well. I started
liking boys too. However, till date, I’m not a conventional girl. I’m very
blunt.”
Interestingly, she was nominated at the 2010 Hip Hop World
Awards and she expressed her excitement at the feat. “It was a good thing. We
didn’t win. I wanted us to win but we didn’t win but it didn’t really change
anything anyway because having a nomination at the biggest music award in Nigeria
was huge. To be nominated along was an achievement. Anybody would have won.
Is Mocheddah in a relationship at the moment? “Naaah! I
don’t like talking about that. I’ll rather keep that under wraps.”
She worked with Otelo of Knight House for her single, ‘If
You Want Me,’ which was dropped in September 2009 and has been receiving
massive airplay and she talks about the song and others. “The song is about you
not changing people; not changing your friends, you not changing your family,
you not changing who you love, you not changing your boyfriend. That’s my
belief. I dropped ‘Uncensored’ but I didn’t drop it officially. I also dropped
‘Shampoo’ with Chuddy K.”
She also gave thumbs up to Ashionye and the rest of the Girl
Power team for being gentle with her and teaching her so much even in such a
short time. “Ashionye and the others were all mothers to me. We were camped and
we never ran out of things to do and I learnt so much. The stages we used were
world class. There was a band. Most of all, it was fun. Nyore, Nikky Laoye,
Ashionye and Bibi taught me so many things. I learnt too much; even how to use
the microphone. I went o different places; Benin,
Ibadan and
related with different people. They were open with me and they all loved me
deeply and I equally loved them deeply. It was a wonderful event and I hope we
do it again.”
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