If you have never entered Nigerian public transport, congratulations, you still have peace of mind, intact knees, and unshaken faith in humanity.
But if you have… welcome. You are a veteran of a system where logic is optional, patience is tested daily, and your personal space is a myth.
This is not just transportation.
This is character development on wheels.
1. The Sacred Art of Entering the Vehicle
First lesson: the vehicle is never truly “full.”
You may see 14 human beings already inside a bus designed for 10. Ignore that. The conductor will still look you in the eye and say:
“One more can enter.”
And somehow, through physics that scientists have refused to study, you will enter.
Your leg will bend in ways you didn’t plan. Your shoulder will become public property. You will adjust.
You must adjust.
2. The Conductor: Minister of Chaos
Every Nigerian bus conductor operates with three main responsibilities:
- Collect money
- Shout destinations like a town crier
- Argue professionally
Key phrases you must understand:
- “Shift! Shift!!” → Create space that does not exist
- “Hold your change!” → Forget that money for now
- “Oya enter with your change!” → Emotional manipulation has started
They also have a PhD in selective hearing.
Call for your change 5 times – they will not hear.
Whisper “I no get complete”- they will hear from the spirit realm.
3. Pricing: A Flexible Concept
Transport fare in Nigeria is not fixed.
It is:
- Based on time of day
- Your face
- The driver’s mood
- The alignment of the planets
Morning: ₦200
Afternoon: ₦300
Rain falls small: ₦500
You complain: “If you no like am, come down.”
At this point, you will pay. You always pay.
4. The Legendary “Hold Your Change”
This is not a statement. It is a lifestyle.
You enter with ₦1000 for a ₦300 ride. The conductor smiles:
“Hold your change.”
From that moment, your mission in life has changed.
You will:
- Remind him every 2 minutes
- Lock eye contact like it’s a contract
- Mentally calculate your balance like an accountant
If you are not careful, you will reach your destination with:
- No change
- No closure
- And no evidence
5. Passenger Personalities You Will Meet
Every trip is a social experiment.
The Loud Caller
Discussing their entire family issue on the phone. Speaker volume: maximum.
The Argument Starter
“Why is the fare ₦400? Yesterday it was ₦250!”
This will lead to a 10-minute debate nobody wins.
The Spiritual Passenger
Suddenly starts praying loudly when the driver speeds. You will join whether you like it or not.
The Silent Observer
Says nothing. Sees everything. Judges quietly.
6. The Driver: Pilot of Destiny
This man believes:
- Speed is a suggestion
- Brakes are optional
- Horn is communication
He will:
- Overtake like he has extra lives
- Drive with one hand
- Argue and still be accelerating
At some point, you will question your life decisions.
At another point, you will accept your fate.
7. Weather = Premium Suffering
Rain in Nigeria does not just fall.
It upgrades transport problems to Pro Max.
- Fares double instantly
- Mud becomes your new footwear
- Keke drivers disappear like they were raptured
- Everyone suddenly needs to go where you are going
You will stand in the rain, negotiating with your destiny.
8. The Exit Strategy (Very Important)
When your stop is near, you must prepare early.
Because once the bus starts moving fast:
- Your voice will not reach
- The conductor will forget you exist
- Your stop will pass you like a bad decision
You must shout with confidence:
“Driver! Bus stop!!”
Even if your voice shakes, your spirit must be firm.
Final Thoughts: This Is Not Just Transport
Nigerian public transport teaches you:
- Patience
- Alertness
- Financial awareness
- How to stand for 45 minutes without crying
It is not convenient.
It is not comfortable.
But somehow… it works.
Sooo…
If you can survive Nigerian public transport:
- You can survive meetings
- You can survive Lagos traffic
- You can survive almost anything life throws at you
Because at the end of the day, nothing prepares you for life like:
Fighting for your change in a moving bus while shouting your bus stop.