"I Am Not Desperate" — Ashmusy Breaks Taboos, Reveals Egg Freezing Journey Saved Her from the Wrong Marriage
Popular Nigerian media personality and skitmaker Amarachi Amusi, widely known as Ashmusy, has opened up about her decision to freeze her eggs, declaring that turning 30 has not made her desperate for marriage.
Speaking during a candid appearance on the Echo Room podcast, the digital creator revealed that she recently took the medical step to safeguard her future dream of motherhood. This decision, she explained, has completely alleviated the societal pressure often placed on Nigerian women as they enter their thirties.
Ashmusy admitted that before undergoing the procedure, she came dangerously close to tying the knot with a partner she knew was wrong for her, driven entirely by panic over her "biological clock."
"Honestly, most women who rush into marriage early do so because of the myth of the biological clock," Ashmusy shared during the episode. "With that rush, you now end up getting into the wrong marriage. I almost did. I knew the man wasn’t my ideal husband, but I wanted to get married to him because he was ready, and I was desperate to give birth before I clocked 35."
Now, however, the influencer feels entirely secure in her timeline. She stated that her frozen eggs act as an insurance policy, allowing her to wait for the right partner without fear.
“I want to get married, but I am not desperate," she added. "Just in case the right suitor doesn’t come, I am already safeguarded... In the next 3 to 10 years, I can confidently go for insemination and have my mixed kid. I want to have a mixed kid."
The Culture Review: Ashmusy’s Egg-Freezing Revelation Is a Massive Win for Nigerian Women
Let’s be completely honest: in a deeply traditional society like Nigeria, a woman turning 30 unmarried is often treated like a national emergency. Family gatherings turn into interrogation sessions, and the societal whisper network starts counting down her "expiry date." By speaking so openly about freezing her eggs, Ashmusy didn't just share personal news—she threw a grenade into a longstanding cultural taboo.
Her transparency is incredibly refreshing and necessary. For decades, the fear of the biological clock has trapped countless brilliant, successful Nigerian women in toxic, unfulfilling, or downright abusive marriages simply because they felt running out of time was worse than being unhappy. Ashmusy admitting she almost fell into that exact same trap out of sheer desperation normalizes a struggle that millions of women experience in silence.
The Power of Choice: Medical advancements like oocyte cryopreservation (egg freezing) are decoupling motherhood from marital status. Ashmusy is using her platform to show young African women that financial success can buy them something far more valuable than designer bags: time and reproductive autonomy.
However, her commentary isn't without its polarizing edges. Her explicit desire to use artificial insemination down the line specifically to have a "mixed kid" is already raising eyebrows across Nigerian social media. Critics will argue it leans into a subtle form of colorism or exoticism, while others view it as just a harmless personal preference.
But regardless of how you feel about her specific family blueprint, the core message here is historic for the Nigerian entertainment landscape. Ashmusy is decoupling motherhood from desperation. She is reminding women that it is infinitely better to freeze your eggs in a clinic than to freeze your happiness in the wrong marriage.




