GH Living
“I Knew I Was Home”: TikTok Creator Shares Emotional Ghana Experience
An emotional TikTok video by U.S.-based content creator Tashah Nicole (@tashahnicole) is trending after she described Ghana as the place that finally gave her a sense of peace, belonging, and emotional grounding she says she had searched for her entire life.
In the now-viral clip, Tashah speaks candidly about her struggle to leave Ghana after multiple flight changes, revealing that she was scheduled to return to the United States within 48 hours but felt deeply conflicted about departing.
“The peace that I feel in my soul right now,” she said, questioning whether she was ready to let it go.
According to her account, stepping onto Ghanaian soil—particularly in Accra—marked a profound emotional shift. She described Ghana as the place where her “nervous system feels calm,” adding that the sense of inner peace she experienced made everything she had been searching for “finally make sense.”
“I stepped foot onto the soil here, and it’s like my whole world was shifted,” she said. “I knew I was home.”
Though visibly emotional, Tashah explained that she ultimately decided to return to the U.S. temporarily, not out of a desire to leave Ghana behind, but to prepare for a longer-term stay.
“I have to go back because I need to set up things for me to be able to be here long term,” she said, explaining that the feeling of home would not leave her now that she has experienced it.
Her reflections resonate with a growing number of diaspora Africans, African Americans, and global travelers who have increasingly described Ghana as a place of spiritual reconnection, emotional healing, and cultural grounding.
Over the past decade, initiatives such as the Year of Return and Beyond the Return have positioned Ghana as a welcoming destination for the African diaspora, with Accra often highlighted as a hub for creatives, entrepreneurs, and wellness seekers.
Tashah also hinted at exploring other global destinations, including Bali, but made it clear that, for now, Ghana holds a unique place in her journey.
“Ghana is home. Ghana gives what I’ve been searching for for so long,” she wrote in a caption accompanying the video.
As her story continues to circulate online, many viewers have shared similar testimonies in the comments, reinforcing Ghana’s growing reputation not just as a tourist destination, but as a place people come to rediscover identity, peace, and a sense of belonging.
GH Living
“Malaria Almost Broke Me in Ghana”: YouTuber Shares Harrowing Experience With the Deadly Disease
Popular YouTuber Romain Toko has shared his ordeal with malaria in a deeply personal video published recently.
Toko detailed how, after just six months in Ghana, he had to do battle with the disease caused by a mosquito bite.
In the video, shared on his YouTube channel @romaintoko, Toko recounts how a single mosquito bite led to days of intense chills, body pain, dehydration, vomiting and physical exhaustion, an experience he describes as one of the most difficult since relocating to West Africa.

Toko explains that despite taking multiple preventive measures, including mosquito sprays and nets, a small gap in a window net left him exposed.
Symptoms, he said, escalated rapidly, particularly at night, prompting medical testing that confirmed malaria. He underwent a three-day pharmaceutical treatment, which helped control the infection but left him severely weak, with limited appetite and energy.
Seeking to regain his strength, Toko also tried a traditional herbal steam treatment using neem leaves, a common local remedy, which he says aided his recovery when used carefully in conjunction with medical care.
In his message, Toko stresses that malaria is not “just a fever” and warns travelers, expatriates, diaspora returnees and families planning to move to Ghana or other parts of Africa not to underestimate the disease.
He urged consistent mosquito protection and early testing, noting that malaria remains a daily reality for millions across the continent.
By sharing his unfiltered experience, Toko hopes to educate and protect others, while offering a realistic perspective on life in Ghana beyond the curated social media portrayals.
Watch Toko’s full video below
GH Living
Diaspora Returnee Shares Day 6 Reflections on Life in Ghana: “The Peace Here Is Different”
For many in the global African diaspora, the dream of returning to the continent often comes with a mix of excitement, anticipation, and unspoken fears.
But for Jaleah Jenneth (@wholeharmonyhealing), a Ghanaian-born woman who spent nearly 20 years in Gary, Indiana, before repatriating, the reality unfolding in her first week back has been unexpectedly grounding: a deep, baseline peace she says no one fully prepared her for.
In a heartfelt Instagram video posted on her Day 6 in Ghana, Jaleah opens up about the profound shift she’s experiencing — not in perfection or constant ease, but in a quiet, foundational calm that now lives beneath everything.
“Nobody told me how peace becomes your baseline,” she shares. “Not perfection. Not ease all the time. But a grounded peace that lives underneath everything.”
Breathing deeply against the backdrop of children playing in the distance, Jaleah describes a noticeable physical and emotional release:
“I’m breathing different, feeling different and I’m loving it… My shoulders are starting to relax. Like I can take a deep breath.” She contrasts this with the shallow breathing and constant tension many carry in the West, calling the difference “unexplainable.”
Born in Gary, Indiana, and having lived in the United States for most of her life, Jaleah has visited Ghana several times before. Yet, settling in full-time has revealed a new layer of serenity — one that transcends the hustle, competition, and pressure to prove oneself.
“Here, if you know, you know,” she says. “There’s no need to compete or try to prove anything.”
Her message is consistent with the growing diaspora community — both those already living in Ghana and those still planning their move. Many returnees and expats quietly share similar experiences: the initial culture shock often gives way to a surprising sense of relief, safety, and emotional spaciousness once the adjustment settles.
Jaleah’s video arrives at a time when Ghana continues to attract thousands of diaspora individuals seeking not just economic opportunity, but also cultural reconnection, spiritual grounding, and a slower, more community-centered way of life.
Her candid reflection serves as both encouragement and gentle preparation: peace is available — but it requires presence, patience, and a willingness to let go of old patterns.
“I’m here for it,” she concludes with a smile. “Follow along the journey.”
For the diaspora community home and abroad — from the U.S., UK, Canada, Europe, and beyond — Jaleah’s words are a reminder that repatriation is not just about logistics or lifestyle; it’s about rediscovering a deeper sense of belonging and calm that many never knew they were missing.
Watch the full video here: Jaleah Jenneth – Day 6 in Ghana
GH Living
The Real Cost of Living in Accra 2026: Diaspora YouTuber Delivers the Hard Truths No One Wants to Admit
For the growing number of diaspora returnees, expats, and prospective movers considering Ghana in 2026, a new YouTube video is going viral.
The video is offering an unflinching, no-filter look at the true cost of living in Accra — and why so many newcomers experience financial shock after arrival.
In her candid 13-minute video titled “Cost of Living in Accra 2026 — The Hard Truth No One Tells You”, content creator Obinjeo Talk (@ObinjeoTalk) breaks down the financial realities that often catch even the most prepared diasporans off guard.
Far from discouraging relocation, the video aims to equip viewers with realistic numbers, practical survival strategies, and mental preparation so they can thrive — not just survive — in Ghana’s capital.
“This is not to scare you — it’s to prepare you,” Obinjeo emphasizes early in the video. “Accra can be beautiful, peaceful, and full of opportunity… but only if you understand the true cost of life here.”
Key areas highlighted in the video include:
- Rent & Housing: Prices have become highly competitive and unpredictable. New tenants often pay significantly more than previous ones, and landlords frequently charge premium rates based on perceived foreign status or accents. Online listings can be misleading, with many properties shown in flattering lighting but revealing issues like poor maintenance, unreliable water/electricity, and limited security upon arrival.
- Food & Eating Out: Market prices have risen sharply due to transportation and supply chain costs. A simple plate of food that once cost GH¢25 now often ranges from GH¢60–80. “Food fatigue” — the boredom of cooking daily — pushes many toward frequent eating out, quickly draining budgets.
- Transportation: Ride-hailing apps are far more expensive than expected, especially with surge pricing and long distances. Buying a used car sounds practical, but frequent repairs and maintenance costs can become a major burden.
- School Fees: Diaspora parents expecting affordable private education are often shocked by the high costs of top-tier schools, uniforms, books, and meals. Annual increases are common, and families with multiple children face multiplied expenses.
- Lifestyle Creep & Hidden Costs: From imported groceries and air conditioning bills to constant social obligations (weddings, funerals, fundraisers), cultural expectations and the need for backup solutions (inverters, generators, water pumps) create a web of ongoing expenses. “Ghana spends your money even if you try to sit quietly at home,” Obinjeo notes.
The creator stresses that living in Accra is not cheaper than abroad — it is simply different. While some costs (e.g., heating, mortgages) are lower, others (rent upfront, transportation, schooling, utilities, and backup systems) are significantly higher. Many returnees leave not because they dislike Ghana, but because “the mathematics finally catches up with them.”
Despite the challenges, the message remains hopeful:
“If you understand the system, plan ahead, and adjust your expectations, Accra becomes manageable. It becomes beautiful and deeply rewarding.”
Obinjeo offers practical advice for success: budget in dollars if earning abroad, diversify income streams, live outside trendy zones, negotiate boldly, drop the need to appear successful immediately, and resist the Instagram version of life in Ghana.
For anyone considering a move to Ghana — whether from the US, UK, Canada, Europe, or elsewhere — this video serves as essential preparation, reminding viewers that clarity and realism are the keys to building a fulfilling life in Accra.
Watch the full video here: Cost of Living in Accra 2026 — The Hard Truth No One Tells You
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