Lydia Jazmine drops her ultimate boyfriend wishlist

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Lydia Jazmine has just released the official job description and let’s just say, the bar is now somewhere between “romantic gentleman”


If love were a job application, Lydia Jazmine has just released the official job description and let’s just say, the bar is now somewhere between “romantic gentleman” and “emotionally fluent billionaire with good texting habits.”

The Ugandan songstress has once again stirred conversations about her love life, not because of fresh dating rumours (yes, the internet has tried to link her to half the music industry before), but because she decided to spell out very clearly what she wants in a serious partner. And this time, she didn’t whisper… she posted.

According to Jazmine, her dream man is not just about charm or good looks. He’s emotionally available, fully committed, financially supportive, and brace yourself, actually communicates. Think morning calls, goodnight messages, quick replies, and zero mind games. Basically, the kind of consistency that makes people double-check if he’s real or just a well-written character from a romantic drama.

In her words, nothing beats a man who “knows what he wants and chooses you loudly.” Translation? No secret situationships, no confusing energy, and definitely no disappearing acts that belong in magic shows not relationships.

“Nothing is sexier than a man who knows what he wants and chooses you loudly. Morning calls. Good night messages. Quick replies. No mind games. No leaving you guessing. He gives time, attention, effort, and money. He makes you feel safe, valued, and noticed. And when he’s committed, he’s all in, on you and you alone,” she wrote.

Her bold declaration comes shortly after she revealed that she once ended things with a man who wasn’t serious about their future. For Jazmine, vibes alone are no longer enough; she’s now all about intention, effort, and a partner who shows up fully emotionally and otherwise.

Fans, of course, wasted no time turning her wishlist into a discussion. Some applauded her for setting standards that scream self-worth and maturity, while others jokingly asked if applications are now open and whether references will be required.