How Chidinma Stopped Crying
and Started Expecting.
Chidinma Okafor is 34 years old. She and her husband Emeka got married in 2019. They decided to start trying for a baby immediately — they were both ready, their home was ready, their hearts were ready.
One year passed. Nothing. She went to her first specialist. Tests came back. Everything looked "normal." But normal wasn't working.
Year two — she started the injections. Ovulation induction. The mood swings were so severe Emeka didn't know how to talk to her. She gained weight. She cried more than she had ever cried in her life. Two rounds. No result.
Her mother-in-law started making comments. Not out of cruelty — but those comments landed like knives. Emeka defended her always. But she could see the quiet worry behind his eyes at night. She started sleeping facing the wall so he wouldn't see her cry.
I remember sitting on the bathroom floor after the second failed cycle, looking at the negative test, and telling God: "I don't understand. I have done everything. I don't understand." My husband knocked on the door after twenty minutes. I told him I was fine. I was not fine.
— Chidinma O., Enugu StateFour months later, her closest friend Adaeze visited from Lagos. Over dinner, she placed a bottle on the table. "Chidinma, before you do anything else — try this. 90 days. Promise me."
It was GRAZER Herbal Capsules for Women. Chidinma had heard of herbal products before. She was skeptical. She was tired of hoping. But she was also exhausted from not trying.
Month 1: Her period came on the exact day it was supposed to — for the first time in two years. No cramps. No flooding. Just a clean, regular cycle. She sat in the bathroom staring at the calendar in disbelief.
Month 2: She felt different. Her skin was clearer. Her energy was back. Emeka noticed before she said anything. He asked if she was okay. She said: "I think so. I actually think so."
Month 3: She was late. Four days late. She told herself not to hope. She had been disappointed too many times. She bought the test at a pharmacy two towns away so no one she knew would see her.
I held the test in my hand for a long time before I looked. Then I looked. Two lines. Two clear lines. I slid down the wall onto the bathroom floor — the same bathroom floor where I had cried so many times — and I held my face in my hands and I said "Thank You" over and over until Emeka broke down the door thinking something had happened. He held me on that floor for twenty minutes. Both of us crying.
— Chidinma O., Enugu State · Now mother of twins, Adaeze and Emeka Jr.Chidinma's twins were born in 2024. She sent us a photo of them sleeping in their crib with a message that simply said: "Tell other women. Don't let them suffer as long as I did."
This is why we created GRAZER for Women.
This is why we will not stop.
