In a city where image often competes with substance, Comfort Booth has mastered the art of being both.
Many first encountered her on The Real Housewives of Abuja, where her colourful mohawk, sharp wit, and unfiltered honesty made her impossible to ignore. But television, as it turns out, is only one layer of a woman whose real power lies in voice — and how she uses it.
By training, Comfort is a lawyer — disciplined, analytical, grounded in structure. Yet beyond the courtroom, she moves fluidly through media, social commentary, travel storytelling, and public speaking. She is that rare blend of intellect and presence; a woman who can dissect policy in the morning and command a room by evening. Abuja knows her as vibrant. Those closer know her as intentional.
And then there is her most compelling chapter yet — menopause advocacy.
In a society where menopause is often whispered about, dismissed, or cloaked in quiet discomfort, Comfort has chosen amplification over silence. She speaks openly about the hormonal shifts, the emotional recalibrations, the physical changes — not as something to endure privately, but as a season deserving dignity, education, and even joy.
Her menopause community — a growing sisterhood of women navigating midlife transitions — meets regularly, not just to learn, but to live. They gather monthly for conversations at their hangouts and share sisterhood.
They discuss wellness, nutrition, intimacy, mental health, and identity. They laugh. They dance. They dress up. They remind one another that this phase is not an ending, but an evolution.
It is advocacy wrapped in elegance.
Comfort’s approach is neither clinical nor alarmist. It is warm. Relatable. Stylish, even. She reframes menopause as a powerful threshold — a moment when women can reclaim their bodies, rewrite expectations, and move through the world with seasoned confidence. For many Nigerian women, particularly in elite and professional circles where appearances are curated and vulnerability is rare, this honesty feels revolutionary.
There is something deeply Vogue about that.
Because true modern luxury is not just about couture gowns or curated brunch tables — it is about autonomy. About owning your narrative at every age. About stepping into rooms without shrinking.
Comfort Booth does that effortlessly.
Whether she is navigating the layered friendships of reality television, standing firm in legal discourse, or hosting a room full of midlife women finding their rhythm again, she remains consistent in one thing: presence. She does not apologise for being seen. She does not dilute her truth to soften others’ comfort.
In amplifying menopause, she is amplifying womanhood itself — in all its stages, in all its textures.
And perhaps that is her most glamorous role yet.
We’ve got the edge. Get real-time reports, breaking scoops, and exclusive angles delivered straight to your phone. Don’t settle for stale news. Join LEADERSHIP NEWS on WhatsApp for 24/7 updates →
Join Our WhatsApp Channel




