Friday, May 25, 2012

At 38, she plans to marry man as old as her dad…

With Auntie Agatha, gataedo@yahoo.com, agatha.edo@gmail.com, Tel: 08054500626 Dear Agatha, I have been urging my first daughter to bring a man home for marriage. She is almost 38. Although the most beautiful of my three daughters, she appears to be the one having the most difficulties in sustaining any relationship. Men come and go. I haven’t seen a man who has stayed with her for more than six months at most. Her two younger sisters are married and have children of their own. Severally, I have heard her crying in her room, but there is nothing I can do to help her beyond praying for her. Two years ago, her father tried matchmaking her with the son of his best friend who also is unmarried at 42. We thought it would work between the two of them, but were warned in the church not to allow them continue with the relationship. Our pastor said, the boy in question has a very short lifespan and our daughter would become widowed within a month after their marriage. They had no choice, but to go their different ways. The man got married to another lady early this year and nothing has happened to him. My daughter feels very bad about it. She thinks the pastor lied about the prophecy to make way for the daughter of his relation who the boy eventually got married to. Now she is dating a man who already has two wives and from all indices has made up her mind to marry him whether we are in support of her decision or not. The father and I have done everything to make her see reasons, but nothing we say appears to be having the right kind of effect on her anymore. How do I convince her not to marry this man who in addition to having two wives is almost of the same age with my husband. A friend of mine told me to go and appeal to the man to leave my daughter alone. I am actually considering going as soon as I hear from you. Please help me. Madam Alice. Dear Madam Alice, Frankly, in her current state of mind, there is nothing you say or do now that can make her change her mind. It would take the grace of God to stop her from continuing with her decision to marry this man. At 38 and with her younger sisters all married, she feels time is not on her side. The only man that was sufficiently interested in her and who would have married her was driven away by the prophecy of a pastor. In her shoes, how would you feel especially as no man has ever been around her for more than six months at a go? This isn’t time for you or her father to insist on her not marrying the man she has made up her mind to marry. Instead, adopt diplomacy in this matter. You need to understand her pains as well as disappointments. You as woman must appreciate that until this moment she had done everything you wanted and how her obedience to your wish as pronounced by the pastor has affected her. She cannot be happy seeing the man who wanted to marry her in the arms of another woman; the man she was told would die within a month of their marriage. It would have been a different matter if the man had truly died according to the sayings of the pastor, but that he has been married for sometime now and is still alive has really complicated things for you. You must understand that she is very bitter and has lost hope in everything you, her father, and the church represent. Having done everything your way until now, she feels it is time she does things her way. Even if you are not comfortable with her decision, learn to take each day as it comes. Being her mother, you know her better than anybody. It is this knowledge you must rely on to make her listen to you. But before you even try attempting to terminate her current relationship, what alternative do you have for her? It isn’t just enough asking her to drop this man, but you must be prepared to provide her with options. For instance, you could split them by asking your daughter to change location. Sending her abroad to start life afresh is one sacrifice you and your husband can consider. It would help you achieve your desire of stopping her from making the mistake of marrying a man who already has two wives as well as create a new environment for her to meet new people. It would also remove her from immediate scene of seeing this her ex-boyfriend and his wives. This way, she would heal faster than if she remained in Nigeria. In addition, you would still be able to preserve your relationship with your daughter. As it stands now, you risk losing her love and respect by your decision not to support her choice of a husband. Offering to sponsor her trip and stay abroad would help her realise that you mean well for her and that if you could change the world to make her happy, you would since have done it. If you cannot afford a European country, you and your husband can consider an African country. She actually needs a change of environment to remain emotionally stable. Going to this man would only complicate things for you in terms of your relationship with your daughter. It is your daughter you have business with not the man. Every man has the right to desire any woman; it is usually the job of the woman to say yes or not. He proposed to your daughter and she accepted. He has not done anything out of the ordinary. The fact that you don’t subscribe to polygamy doesn’t make it wrong or illegal. Your daughter would rightly feel you are interfering too much in her life. Don’t forget that at 38, she is an adult and who by right should be in her husband’s house making her decision. The fact that she is still single doesn’t mean you should not recognise her right to her decision. She really doesn’t need your consent to marry this man because it is her life and decision. The fact that she agreed to listen to you all these years is because she is a responsible lady. The way you talk to and tailor the life of a young woman in her 20s is different from a 38-year-old woman. Stop trying to live her life for her. Granted, you are her mother, but she is also an adult and knows what is good for her. If you want to intervene, it must be done with so much wisdom and caution. This is why you must give her positive alternatives to the choice she is about to make else you would be unwittingly pushing her to the very direction you don’t want her to go. As a mother, you also need to pray your daughter into happiness. One thing is to give her an alternative to her decision; another thing is for you to pray for her. There is no doubting that from your story, your first daughter has some spiritual challenges, which you as a mother isn’t paying too much attention to. If you don’t get on your knees fast, even if she goes there, things might not really work for her. It is time you moved out of your cocoon and seek the face of God on behalf of your daughter. Look back into your family, your husband’s family for clues into her problem. What is happening to her isn’t natural. Also, find out from her if she has offended any man in the past; one who swore to deal with her. You must find out where the leak is from to enable you know what your prayer points would be. She needs your help because this battle is beyond her. It is the reason all young girls pray to have their mothers alive. Cry to God for His help. It isn’t too late for her to find her missing rib. This is a step you have to take on your own. Fast and go on personal vigil for your daughter. If God wants you to seek the help of a pastor, He would direct you appropriately. You must first get rid of her spiritual dustbin before sending her abroad or talking to her. It is very important. Good luck.

Tired of playing second fiddle to his mother…

Agatha, gataedo@yahoo.com, agatha.edo@gmail.com, Tel: 08054500626 Dear Agatha, I don’t like my husband’s family one bit. His mother is arrogant while his sisters are busybodies. I have done everything in my power to make my husband stop his family from coming to our home, but he remains adamant. He is the first and only son, so he feels a sense of responsibility to his family. According to him, his mother suffered to bring him and his three sisters up after his father died while he was still in primary school. He said his father’s second wife, who was in the car with his father when he met his untimely death remarried shortly after the incident, but his mother decided not to because of her children. He said the children of the second wife who remarried aren’t doing so well. And that the man she later hooked to did not allow her to bring in the children she got from her previous marriage. He has warned me to either learn to love his mother as my own or walk out of the marriage. The fact that he is willing to sacrifice our marriage and me to please his mother is so annoying. This is a woman who will come to the house without notice or any consideration for how I feel. Most times, she turns down my food on the grounds that she doesn’t eat too much pepper on account of ulcer she had when she was still struggling to bring up her children. The most irritating is that she treats my husband as a baby simply because she claims he reminds her of her late husband, and whenever she is around she insists on cooking his special meal. At times, my husband actually asks his mother or sisters to cook him this soup. Whenever he is ill, his sisters dot on him as if I am incapable of attending to him. They will begin to ask me some funny questions, as if I am incapable to attending to my own husband. And sometimes, when they are all together and discussing, they all go into a silent mode once I come in. Whenever I ask my husband why they do that, he says the issues are personal to his sisters and their homes. Agatha, am I not part of their family too? The sisters would rather wait to tell their problems to my husband rather than tell me who is a woman like them. What more, the sisters without permission from me, would come during the holidays to take the children away with them. As a matter of fact, my husband insisted the children would attend the school owned by his immediate younger sister. Even though the school is good, I felt bad that he didn’t factor what I want for my children into his decision. I also have siblings I would want my children to spend time with, but nobody cares to consider my feelings. His last sister in school never ceases to ask for money. I feel like a complete stranger in my home. I am fed up after 12 years in this marriage. I don’t like playing the second fiddle to his mother and sisters. I want my man to myself. Is it too much to ask? Patience. Dear Patience, Precisely what do you want your husband to do? Drive away the woman who gave up her own life to see her children through the most difficult times of their lives? The woman who risked hunger to ensure your husband is the success story he is today? Where would you be if she didn’t toil to make the man you married and father of your children, your dream man? Would you have married him if he were a delinquent or a never do well man? Would you have even looked his way, let alone marrying him? Before gold becomes the beautiful and precious ornament women and men spend so much on, a goldsmith has to endure the pains of intensive heat to make it attractive. Without the sacrifices of his mother, her determination to endure whatever life throws at her for the sake of her children, you will never have met him the way you did. For the simple reason that she was able to produce a man you fell in love with, with whom you have children and has been your soul mate for 12 years, appreciate this woman. Thank goodness you are a mother too, so you have first hand experience of the pains and joy that go into rearing children. Having successful children doesn’t begin and end with bringing them into the world, as you must have found out, it takes so much from the woman to ensure her children stand out. The simple fact that she trained four children without the help and support of a man means she went the extra mile, putting in more than the average woman, more than you are currently putting into the training of your children. How would you feel if the wife of your son tells him to stop you from coming to the house simply because she feels you are eating into her space? Every mother deserves to enjoy the years of her hard labour on her children. To deny your mother-in-law of her right is simply wickedness. No matter what you think she has done wrong, accord her the chance to benefit from all her years of toil. It couldn’t have been easy for her to single handedly bring up four successful children. Even if you don’t approve of everything she does, learn to appreciate her good point. This is because like you, she isn’t perfect. We are fallen angels, hence imperfect before our God and creator. What makes the world go round is the amount of sacrifices that one is willing to invest into it. How would you feel if your brother’s wife is treating your mother the same way you are dealing with your mother-in-law? Even if she is very wicked, your love for her son can make you overlook that aspect of her, after all she isn’t staying with you on permanent basis. And from what you have said, she hasn’t done anything that you should complain about. Cooking her son’s favourite soup isn’t out of place. And as a woman who has stayed in the family for 12 years, how come you haven’t mastered the act of cooking your husband’s special meal? A wise woman would have done so long ago to appease her husband when angry. The fact that you haven’t bothered to learn something your husband likes so much underscores your general attitude towards him and those things he likes. Therefore you are the one giving your mother-in-law the chance to invade your kitchen and home to cook for her son. If you were particular about the things your husband likes, she won’t be babying her son the way she does. Furthermore, if you have tried a little bit to act your role as the wife of their only brother, your sisters-in-law would have naturally tilted to you when in trouble. Being the wife of their only brother and knowing that one day their mother would be no more, you would have been their natural choice of a confidant. Check what you are doing that is wrong with a view of making amends. Frankly, the women in this family aren’t the problem, but you. There is obviously something troubling you that you are yet to come out in the open with. Whatever it is, allow it go if you desire peace in your marriage. If they wanted you out, they would have done so since. The fact that they go about their businesses without making life difficult for you is proof that they don’t have any fundamental issue with you beyond the normal differences people have about each other. For instance, there is no big deal if your husband insists on sending his children to his sister’s school as long as the standard is good, a fact you readily admits to. Don’t forget the four of them have been through a lot and their experiences have made them so close. Any attempt by you to come between them would boomerang on you, because of all the years of being alone with their mother. He is their only son and brother, so his children are the true representatives of their family. If she isn’t complaining, why should you bother? And if you want your children to spend some time with your own family members, rather than act rudely, why not discuss your preferences with your sisters-in-law? After 12 years, you should have a kind of relationship with them that makes it easy for you and them to discuss as freely as possible. Issues like this are what new wives complain about, not a woman who has spent over a decade in her husband’s house. You should have long gone past the issues you are playing up by now. Just perish the thoughts; you cannot have this man to yourself. He is not just your husband, but their father as well. Learn to share him with his family. Good luck.