Tag: Marriage

  • Side chicks and a new paradigm – Francis Ewherido

    Side chicks and a new paradigm – Francis Ewherido

    By Francis Ewherido

    Richard Mofe-Damijo (RMD for short) needs no introduction; he is our Warri Bros. He has huge followership on social media, so you cannot wave aside whatever he says or does. It reverberates in many places, including our home front (Effurun-Warri and its environs). Recently, he made a post, which is still reverberating.

    He advised wives: “sidechics are family members. They sit within your husband’s friends and colleagues, when he invites them for your occasion. They know you, but you don’t know them. Every woman whose husband is successful has one.” My understanding of the post is that modern wives should come to terms with the fact that their husbands have or are likely to have side chicks. So they should accept them the way their grandmothers accepted their grandfathers’ concubines.

    Before I continue, let me pause and give RMD a 60th birthday shout out. He was 60 years old last Tuesday and he is very ecstatic about it. His parents never made it to 60. I can imagine his anxiety as 60 years approached. But every man (and woman) has his own race. He has passed where his parents came short. I wish him many more fruitful years in health of mind and body. Happy birthday, Bros.
    Initially I did not want to get involved in this side chicks matter, although I did engage some people privately. As I grow older, I am tending to respect other people’s choices and mind my business more.

    Everyone has his individual battles and I am concentrating more on mine. But some information about what is happening to young marriages around Warri-Effurun and its environs prompted this response because RMD’s post might unconsciously add to the problem. Many young marriages around the area are allegedly troubled and collapsing and two of the people, who reached out to me, blamed the trend partly on infidelity.

    RMD is an Urhobo man and I fully understand where he is coming from. Our forefathers had concubines (side chicks) who were known to their wives. When they were going out and told the household to lock up at bedtime, the message was clear: I will not be back tonight; I am spending the night with my concubine. No questions were asked. I found out late in life after my father had passed on that he had a half-sister he never mentioned to us before he died. But my grandfather’s philandering was elementary compared to many of his contemporaries.

    Christianity came with a new culture. This Christian culture involved not only getting married to one wife, but making a vow before God and his church to be faithful to her “till death do us part.” But this new culture could not get rid of the culture of side chicks. Some church leaders and knights still had (have) side chicks and even second wives and families. But while Christianity did not stop the practice of side chicks, many men now did it Nicodimously (and hypocritically, some would argue), not with the impunity and openness of our forefathers.

    I was in my pre-teen when a man brought his girlfriend to his matrimonial home and introduced her as his relative. The wife pampered and took her everywhere introducing her as “my sister-in-law.” The nephews living with him knew the truth because they never knew any such female relative, but they dared not betray their uncle and benefactor. The charade continued until the wife caught them in bed in the act. She had forgotten something at home and came back from the office to take it when he stumbled on her husband and her “sister-in-law” in bed. Now see what happened next. She wanted to leave the marriage, but her mother reminded her that “your father had concubines, so what is the big deal?” My own mother rebuked her, “w’ekpa (you are a fool) you want to leave your marriage because your husband cheated? Go and unpack your belongings now before I beat the nonsense out of you.” You see the different generations of women and different mind sets.

    As far as I can recall, the intolerance for husband’s concubines was already there in the 70s. Where the men only married their wives in the traditional way, they had freedom to marry more wives and have side chicks. In truth, it is dumb to accuse a traditional man of infidelity when he never took any vow to be faithful to one woman in the first place. But men, who married their wives in the church, had no such freedom. I remember their wives always reminding them that they exchanged wedding rings and vows. That did not deter some of them from having side chicks, but it did create marital problems.

    RMD does have his points, but things have changed. The wives of today are not the same with wives of those days. They are not ready to tolerate side chicks. They are territorial and do not want to share their husbands. Some are ready to walk away from the marriage. So RMD’s template will not work with many of today’s wives.

    So what do we do? Allow infidelity to continue wrecking marriages? Two of the people who reached out to me, as I mentioned earlier, said the marriages of young people are collapsing like a pack of cards in Warri-Effurun and its environs and they blamed the trend majorly on infidelity and domestic violence. Many young people in their 20s, 30 and 40s are already divorced or separated. This has grievous implications for the Urhobos, Itsekiris, Ijaws and Isokos, who majorly live in these areas. Large scale breakdown of the family unit can endanger the future of these ethnic groups. Many youths from these areas already exhibit symptoms of children from dysfunctional and broken homes and it is already a cause for concern. Any ethnic group or culture that wants to endure needs strong family units. The family unit is the bedrock of any society; destroy it and the society is gone.

    Where do we go from here? There are some tips I give people preparing for marriage. One, “In marriage, only one spouse changes and that spouse is you.” What do I mean? In life, we have habits and character traits, which combine to form who we are. If your habits, character and actions are the stumbling blocks in your marriage, change. Do not expect any change from your spouse.
    Two, your marriage is bigger than you and your spouse. Therefore, subsume yourself and your interests to ensure your marriage works. Three, you vowed to love and cherish your spouse. If you habitually do things that cause your spouse distress, you are not acting in love. Four, to have stability in your life, especially young married people, you need stability on the home front; do everything within your power to ensure this stability.

    Finally, I debunk the myth that every successful man has a side chick. It is not true. I know successful (whatever the criteria for measuring success are) men who have no side chicks. I also know artisans, who earn less than N60,000 a month, but have many side chicks. I agree that success, like carcass, attracts many flies, sorry women. Sometimes the pressure is suffocating, but at the end of the day having a side chick or not is a decision every married man has to make.

  • Sexual Affinity in Friendship, Marriage: The Contradictions, By Michael West

    Sexual Affinity in Friendship, Marriage: The Contradictions, By Michael West

    By Michael West

     

     

    In recent times, some of the issues I attended to are inimically cancerous to good relationships and marriages. Issues treated below are some of the root causes of the problems plaguing several young marriages.

     

    Turning Bedroom to ‘War Room’

     

    Previously, I had published a letter by a reader of this column, Mrs Anonymous, wherein she stated her pains and frustration in her marriage as a result of near nil sexual intimacy. According to her mail, she had been married for 10 years but all has since not been well especially in the bedroom. I did promise to attend to her issue today because I’m aware of several of such cases in town. Regularly, I do receive complaints from married women expressing frustration and near depression situation as a result of sex starvation running into months and years. This unwholesome development has turned many bedrooms to ‘war rooms.’

     

    To start with, there are a number of factors that often lead to the unsavoury experience of women in sexless and loveless marriages. I’m taught by life experience that most of the issues militating against homes have always been there from the onset. Except otherwise concealed, the bad traits are noticeable during courtship but people often take them for granted.

     

    Many people shy away from holding “moments of truth” discussions during their courtship where honest and frank talks about basic issues affecting finances, in-laws, parents, likes and dislikes, beliefs, and more importantly sex, ought to have been settled before going into marriage.

     

    In the case of Mr. & Mrs. Anonymous, they did talk on some issues but sex was taken for granted. “No woman will ever think that a man like my husband won’t be a horse rider in the bedroom. The few occasions we talked about sex was all fun. Sir, before we married, it used to be our mutual fantasy spending romantic moments together. We really had nice and fulfilling sex while dating.”

     

    She said her husband declined to speak with me but on my request she offered the contacts of her sister-in-law and his former colleague at work both of who volunteered some thoughts on the issue. The younger sister to Mr. Anonymous said their mom had more than twice intervened in this issue and it’s like “My brother has undisclosed reasons for treating his wife that way. To me, the woman is awesome and we appreciate her in the family. Until my brother speaks out, we are as confused as his wife in this matter. I asked him sometimes ago that what will be his reaction if my husband is treating me the way he’s treating his wife. He kept silent.”

     

    His colleague at his former place of work who is said to be his close friend actually supplied the much needed information. Hear him: “My friend found himself in marriage unprepared. There were three women he was talking with at the same time; Mrs. Anonymous was his third option. We, including him, never believed she will accept his proposal because she’s classy, and the most beautiful of the three. Her family is well-to-do with connections in high places.

     

    “While his preferred choice was still playing a hard nut to crack and choice number two was busy attending international conferences not having his time, it was this woman that gave him attention and affirmed his request, a development that really wowed all of us. Unfortunately, his heart was never fully with this angel of a woman but with his favourite. As we speak, he still laments missing the lady despite that both of them are now married.

     

    “I have advised him to cultivate affection for his wife which he said was difficult. He said he had tried doing it but he couldn’t find the spark to ignite the passion. Sir, if it is possible, I don’t mind to swap my wife with his (laughs). We envy him for being lucky to have such a beautiful woman but just imagine the irony of life.”

     

    When I probed further to know if his friend has ‘sidekicks’, he laughed and simply declined comments. “Sir, only him could confirm or deny that. Every man has his way of managing his life.”

     

    Warning: please stay where you are celebrated and not where you are tolerated. This is for both sexes. I hope Mrs. Anonymous and her ilk will decode this message. I will explore other ways to resolving this issue, God helping.

     

    Friendship with Sex Benefit

     

    There’s a growing fad among some friends (male and female) who engage in occasional sexual intimacy as a benefit of their friendship. These friends, I learnt, are not involved in proper dating or courtship; they are just good friends. They may be neighbours, colleagues at work, schoolmates, group or professional mates, club/society members, business partners etc. However, they are available to respond to the emotional needs of their friends whenever the need arises especially if his/her spouse/partner is not around or the friend is not in a relationship.

     

    I understand it’s a convenient way of staying comfortable in friendship as there’re no commitments involved. Therefore, there’s no fear of heartbreak in sight because no expectations or obligations are demanded. Also, there’s no hot or cold jealousy as both parties are not “mutually involved” in relationship. It’s mere friendship with a ‘benefit’. They serve as confidants to each other, render shoulders to cry over and bosom to lean on in moments of despair or loneliness. It’s strange but true. Interestingly, it is fast gaining ground.

     

    A regular reader of this column who shared her experience with me said more women are embracing the option because it “saves you from the frustration and tormenting attitudes of the so-called partners who are never serious or faithful in relationship.” This brand of friendship involves singles, engaged and married. It’s a way designed to ease emotional tension, control mood swing and engender mental stability.

     

    Her words: “I have been jilted a number of times by guys to whom I gave my all. I’m really a hard nut to crack for men but for how long can one stay single when indeed one needs a man to marry? I went into relationships with guys that had endured my hard-to-get attitudes only for them to become uncommitted or playing games. I discovered later that I was wasting my precious time because the affairs were stagnated.

     

    “The moment you demand to know what next especially at the beginning of the year, they either accuse you of mounting pressure on them for marriage or they clearly tell you that they have some set goals for themselves in the New Year which unfortunately do not include you or the relationship. At my age, I decided to stay off commitment with any man until the coast is clearer. And if I have an urge for sex, I have a trusted male friend who is available to take care of me. He has his own relationship, too.

     

    “Sir, to maintain sanity and be focused, one has to devise a means to save her life. Most of the guys out there are not serious at all. In my office, two of my colleagues just struck such a deal among themselves. There’s no sense of belonging in this game. You owe yourselves no obligations or commitments. Sex doesn’t happen all the time, it’s just for needy moments only. It is still a normal friendship but with occasional benefit of sex or romance.”

     

    I can’t pretend not to know about this strange affair but it’s hardly being talked about until recently. I think it is wrong! You are either in a relationship or you are not. There’s no middle road in relationship: you are either involved or you are not. It is a veiled act of sexual incontinence. Human reasons may rationalise this compromising friendship, however, it should be discouraged. Patience, self-esteem and the use of matchmaking connections or platforms backed by prayers will ultimately turn things around positively.

     

  • Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and the frictions that destroy marriages in the new age

    Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and the frictions that destroy marriages in the new age

    Marriage they say is not a bed of roses. Marriage has grown. Marriage that we know has turned into a big boy. Marriage is now pompous. Marriage is no longer practised the way we know our parents did. The yardstick of our parents can no longer be used to measure marriage in this age of ours.

    We live in a new age where everything, occasioned by technology, is moving fast, including marriage. Since we find ourselves in a fast-paced world, no one is ready to take nonsense. As they say, you only live once (YOLO), so much that life has become too short to live it in nonsense.

    Since no one is ready to take nonsense in the new age, marriages are now dying at an alarming rate as though there is some sort of marital Coronavirus killing them.

    In 2016, official statistics suggested that the dissolution of marriage in Nigeria was uncommon. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, only 0.2% of men and 0.3% of women legally dissolved their marriage.

    However, according to a report in 2018, separation rates in Nigeria recorded a 14 percent increase. In another report published in 2018, a total of 3,000 divorce cases were recorded in Badagry, Lagos.

    Meanwhile, in a 2019 report titled ‘Deciphering the high rate of Divorce in Nigeria’, Kano state alone had over 1 million registered divorcees. Morealso, according to a news report, a visit to the Social Development Secretariat, Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) revealed that a total of 20 to 30 cases of divorce are reported at one of the offices daily.

    Furthermore, records at the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court showed that over 2,000 divorce cases were filed between the year 2019 and February 2020, with an average of 30 cases being entertained every day, even as the Court is trying hard to reconcile couples through arbitration panels.

    Findings further revealed that the figure is higher at the Customary Courts, the Alkali and the Sharia Customary Courts within the FCT.

    The foregoing statistics paints a gloomy picture of marriage, and gives insights into the state of marriage in Nigeria, and indeed across the globe.

    We have seen marriages of not just the poor, but also those of the stupendously rich and wealthy collapse. If the marriages of Bill and Melinda Gates, Jeff and MacKenzie Bezos, and that of Elon Musk and other stupidly rich billionaires can collapse, it is, therefore, safe to say money alone is not enough to keep a marriage.

    But, what is enough? Why are marriages failing as though unripe fruits falling from trees? Why does ‘I do’ turn into ‘I no do again’. Why do once lovey-dovey partners grow cold? What is going wrong with marriages?

    Needless to say, two persons coming together to spend the rest of their lives together in the union of marriage, must expect to have friction.

    Those who have managed the frictions that come with being married well deserve some special medals. They have helped to keep the marriage institution sane, giving hope to single people that it can be gotten right.

    Frictions in marriages are the issues that crop up as a result of two unique individuals coming together in the union of marriage. The ability to manage frictions goes a long way to show if a marriage will survive or not.

    More importantly, the frictions that come with marriage are now managed more differently than our parents did.

    To manage frictions, and save a marriage, partners have to be retrospective, examine themselves and understand what is causing frictions in the marriage.

    The experience of marriage has presented some issues witnessed firsthand that can destroy any marriage in this age.

    1. Backing out on terms

    One of the issues that can destroy any marriage in this age, is backing out on terms. What does this mean?

    Aside from the vows partners take at the altar or in the courtroom during the marriage ceremony, marriages are consummated on personal terms.

    Before taking the marriage vows, partners must have first agreed on these personal terms that may have to do with health, hygiene, finances, career, children, how to raise the kids, general upkeep and wellbeing of the home, how to run the home and what have you.

    Backing out on terms is a recipe for disaster in the marriage.

    This is bearing in mind that in every relationship, there is always the fool’s part to be played. You can think you ‘set leg’ for your partner and they fell to marry you. They will not continue to fall in the marriage. Deception can get you married but deceptions cannot keep a marriage.

    After the ceremony, reality will set in so much that you may now need to be deliberate to make the marriage work.

    So, stick to terms that brought you together in the first place, through thick and thin. If there be need to renegotiate terms, it should be for collective good, and a collective agreement, not a decision taken by one party and forced down on the other.

    2. Not prioritising your partner

    Another issue that can destroy marriage in this age that immediately follows backing out on terms is not prioritising your partner.

    At the end of the day, every human being is an emotional creature, no matter how hard some may appear.

    Some partners make the mistake of pricing their job, material belongings costlier than their partners, thus giving more attention to them more than they do their partner.

    Partners must, as important as making other things work, create time for each other. Partners must understand each other’s needs and mostly tilt towards fulfilling them. Know what your partner wants, and do it for them, even if it means sacrificing. In doing this, partners should not be inconsiderate; they should know when a sacrifice is being made, and be appreciative.

    Partners should know the love language of their partners. Words of affection may work for some partners while actual actions may work for others. Some partners value gifts, acts of service and physical touch. When you know what works, loud it.

    In whatever job you do, your partner must fit in. The job should afford you quality time with your partner.

    Spending less or little time with your spouse kills marriage. Being too independent minded kills marriage. Love for party, money, impulse buying and spending, partying, financial indiscipline kill marriage. There should be a balance.

    If you made the decision to marry, from the onset, you must have created a space in your life for your significant other. Once this changes, everything changes.

    3. Unwillingness to learn

    Use what works in your marriage. What works for and in marriage Z may not work in marriage B.

    Three plus three gives six, so is four plus two and five plus one. If four plus two to give six does not yield the desired result in your marriage, drop it. If it is five plus one to arrive at six that works in the marriage, use it, always. Worse is to force two to plus three to give six. It won’t work!

    Two individuals who came together for marriage must learn how to learn, must learn how to unlearn, must learn how to shift grounds and use what works. No one is perfect, they say, but they also say, learning makes perfect. A partner that always sings the chorus of no one is perfect, is a partner that is unwilling to learn. While a marriage may not achieve perfection, achieving excellence is possible.

    If it is the approach of your partner that works, the other partner must learn over time to drop the approach they adopt and do not get results with to learn the approach with which to get results.

    Plus, marriage is not a place for opposing principles. Partners are meant to cooperate and not compete. Partners should, therefore, be ready to learn from their partner; learn to accept and adopt principles that work and drop those that do not work.

    It is a mistake to remain stagnant and expect to be loved the way you are. Love itself, in this new age, as well as money as mentioned earlier, is not enough to keep a marriage. Partners have to be deliberate.

    When a partner is unwilling to learn, especially learn how to get things right, make things work, pray from Abuja to Australia, pull down the wall of Jericho, the marriage will collapse.

    There is the temptation to become more hardened after correction. This should be avoided by every means possible.

    How does a computer learn new things? Bit by bit!

    4. Antagonism and rebellion

    In this age, everyone wants to marry their bestie or at least, their partners should be their bestie. As stated earlier, partners are meant to cooperate and not compete. A partner wants to be sure that their partner got their back.

    There should not be opposing energies in the home. Unhealthy competition, always opposing your partner, will destroy any marriage. If you are always against your partner, and always resist what not may, sooner than later the marriage will hit rock bottom.

    Marriage is not a place for antagonism, not a place for resistance to the authority of that of the husband nor that of the wife.

    Rebellion, especially calculative, and when premeditated, has killed many marriages. If partners continue to ferment trouble, nowhere else sweet wine will come from, they will have to drink sour wines.

    5. Bringing third party in

    Bringing third party, especially an unprofessional one, into a marriage is a recipe for failure.

    An unprofessional third party will only magnify your problems. A third party, if not professional, will make a two-dimensional (his side and her side) issue become 3-dimensional or even multidimensional. Partners that have not been able to resolve two-dimensional issues, what luck do they have when issues become multidimensional.

    When issues start going to third parties, they start getting out of hand.

    6. Sweeping issues under the carpet

    Issues are the bane of marriages. Issues partners refused to address today, will resurface tomorrow to haunt them. So are habits.

    Therefore, it is not safe to sweep issues under the carpet. No matter how difficult a partner might appear, a spouse must always find an avenue to discuss issues. Do not draw conclusions when you have not discussed an issue with your partner. Do not make preemptive assumptions and do not take preemptive decisions when you are yet to hear from your partner.

    Discussions should be approached with the view to build, not to destroy. Every issue should be approached positively, in a positive light and with a positive mindset.

    Discussions between partners should observe the principle of quantity i.e. structured to be informative as required, and address the current purposes of exchange.

    Discussions should also observe the principle of quality i.e. nothing and nothing but the truth should be said. In observing the principle of quality, do not say what you believe is false and do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence.

    Also, in discussing issues in marriage, partners should observe the principle of relevance i.e. a partner should ensure that all the information they provide is relevant to the current discussion; therefore, omitting any irrelevant information.

    The principle of manner should also be observed as well. In simple terms, the principle of manner is to be clear. If this is observed, misunderstandings would be minimised. Misunderstandings should be properly addressed, especially from its onset, and not allowed to flourish.

    Whereas the previous principles are primarily concerned with what is said, the principle of manner is concerned with how what is said is said. Body language counts a lot. A partner may say a dozen but what the other picked is the body language, maybe the lackadaisical attitude.

    The bottom line is that, if an issue should come up, it should be deliberated exhaustively, devoid of insults. Partners should be able to address issues without recourse to overt or covert insults.

    While there is no place for violence in marriage, repeated insults could lead to violence. Most importantly, do not dare your partner, especially when they are angry.

    In a nutshell, partners should know what to say, when to say it, and how to say it. Too much and careless talk can kill a marriage.

    In all, there is always a place for shifting grounds. The place of discussing issues is a place for shifting grounds, and in shifting grounds, it should be resolving on what works, and not resolving on what practice in the marriage has shown won’t work.

    Resolving for what won’t work is a recipe to destroy the marriage.

    In all, the channel of communication should be left perpetually open in a marriage. Marriages end when there is a breakdown in communication.

    7. Manipulation

    Marriage is not a place for manipulation. Marriage is not a place where you exert devious and dubious influence on your partner and you expect the marriage to remain whole. People can get away with manipulating people in business, in politics, and what have you, but not in marriage, especially in this age.

    If you disrespect your partner, expect them to get angry. If you continually disrespect your partner, expect them to continually get angry. If you disrespect your partner and expect them not to get angry, it is manipulation.

    When you decide to always play smart, the day your partner decides to stop playing the fool’s part, the marriage hits the brick wall.

    8. Gaslighting

    Gaslighting is mad. Gaslighting chokes; it restricts airflow; it is what makes a partner go crazy easily.

    In marriage, as noted in sweeping issues under the carpet, always say what you mean, and mean what you say. Do not say one thing, and when your partner reminds you, you meant something else. It drives a partner crazy.

    Backing down on your words or always twisting them when it matters most, drives people crazy. You should be able to say a thing and stand by it when the need arises. You should be able to be the person of your words. When you manipulate your partner psychologically, they will start questioning their own sanity; expect them to go mad, someday.

    If you do not want madness in your marriage, avoid gaslighting your partner. Nobody loves to be played.

    9. Unrepentance and unforgiveness

    Repentance and forgiveness go hand in hand, so also unrepentance and unforgiveness. Where there is an unforgiving partner, there is always first an unrepentant partner.

    Mistakes are bound to happen, whether partners like it or not. When mistakes happen, forgive.

    But, making mistakes should never become a habit. When mistakes become habits, a partner, no matter the strength of character, would be worn out; patience and tolerance will thin out.

    A geography class on the weathering of rocks teaches that repeated wetting and drying of rocks causes exfoliation. Exfoliation over time can reduce rock to nothing.

    The rule is, do not get in the habit of always giving red flags. Do not get in the habit of wrongdoing always. Do not get in the habit of always making mistakes. Most times, one red flag, one wrongdoing, one mistake is too much a burden to bear.

    It is inhuman to continue in bad habits, and expect a partner to die in silence. Partners should know that for every action, there is always a reaction, whether expressed overtly or not. Repeated actions and reactions lead to a chain reaction. Negative chain reactions have destroyed marriages.

    Not changing for good, but staying put and expecting a partner to accept you for who you are, is a recipe for failure.

    The worse a partner will do is to try to play down or water down an offence. An unforgiving partner, most times, is made by an unrepentant partner.

    At this juncture, it is important to point out that divorce is not entirely bad. In many instances, it has been a relief to a dysfunctional or unproductive marriage. However, if it’s possible to prevent a divorce, it is advisable to do so by all means.

    You should know your partner. You should know what they can do and what they cannot do, and make your marriage work thereby.

    PS: The institution of marriage has come a long way to exhaustively dissect issues therein in one piece. If you know any issue affecting marriages, or you have advice for married people or those intending to get married, leave a comment below.

  • Marriage not on my priority list -Wathoni

    Marriage not on my priority list -Wathoni

    Big Brother Naija, BBNaija star, Wathoni has taken to Twitter to speak up against the stereotype fans have given her.

    Since the reunion show kicked off, Wathoni has been tagged as being desperate for a relationship and marriage with housemates.

    TheNewsGuru reports that Wathoni has been entangled with Prince, Brighto, Kiddwaya and Tochi.

    However, the mother of one said she is not desperate for marriage or relationship contrary to what most people think.

    According to her, she hardly thinks about marriage, stating that the stress of dating is also “one hell of a ride for her.”

    Her tweet read: “Funny, strange, scary how I hardly think about marriage. Like the stress of dating and all is one hell of a ride for me.

    “Contrary to the stereotype I have been given (well I am probably responsible #misunderstood) , it’s really not on my priority list.

    “You can label me whatever makes vilifying me more convenient for you.”

  • I feel like a failure, Kim Kardashian opens up on crash of third marriage

    I feel like a failure, Kim Kardashian opens up on crash of third marriage

    Popular American TV reality show star and entrepreneur, Kim Kardashian, has lamented over the crash of her third marriage.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Kanye and Kim got married in 2014 and have four children. Sadly, in February 2021, the news of their divorce was officially made public.

    In the penultimate episode of ‘Keeping Up With the Kardashians’, Kim opens up about her relationship with Kanye West.

    The episode, which follows the family on a trip to Lake Tahoe, shows Kim breaking down into tears in a rare emotional moment about the unravelling of her marriage.

    Asked about how her marriage is doing, she responds, “There’s no fighting. Now it’s all calm, so I just roll with it. I just honestly can’t do this anymore.”

    The model and businesswoman said that her husband moves around a lot but she cannot do that. She continues, “Why am I still in this place where I’m stuck for years? He goes and moves to a different state every year. I have to be, like, together so I can raise the kids.”(sic)

     

    However, she applauds her now-estranged husband, describing him as “an amazing dad” and hopes he finds a partner who could more easily satisfy his desires.

    “I think he deserves someone that can go support his every move and go follow him all over the place and move to Wyoming,” she says to her siblings. “I can’t do that. He should have a wife that supports his every move and travels with him and does everything, and I can’t.”

    Kim also expressed shame over her third divorce. She was formerly married to music producer, Damon Thomas, between 2000 and 2004. From 2011 to 2013, she was married to former NBA player, Kris Humphries, from whom she filed for divorce after just 72 days of marriage.

    “I feel like a failure, that it’s a third (expletive) marriage,” Kim says. “Yeah, I feel like a loser, but I can’t even think about that. I want to be happy.”

     

  • I am not interested in the institution called marriage–Denrele Edun

    I am not interested in the institution called marriage–Denrele Edun

    Eccentric media personality, Denrele Edun will be celebrating his 40th birthday in a few weeks.

    The zany entertainer has averred that his mother once brought him diamond ring to propose to a lady.

    “I am not interested in the institution called marriage. I can say this because I am in control of my decisions. I set my principles, follow my guiding philosophies and do only what I want to do. I have not been lucky with love. I give out a lot of love but I do not get the same measure back. It is very hard to find people who genuinely reciprocate the kind of love I give.

    “I know people will question my sexuality because we live in a society where people are constantly under pressure and different forms of discrimination. Recently, I saw a story claiming that I was in a relationship with a male artiste but I don’t react to such claims anymore. I just want to be myself. I will not get married and still be unhappy. I am currently dating myself. My mother once bought me a diamond ring. She just wanted me to settle down. I have sacrificed a lot to take care of my family. I have been shouldering responsibilities since I was 11 years old”, he told Punch.

     

  • Etinosa Idemudia’s second marriage hits the rocks

    Etinosa Idemudia’s second marriage hits the rocks

    Controversial actress, Etinosa Idemudia has confirmed the crash of her second marriage to Ighorosa, a Benin-based lawyer less than a year after they tied the knot.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that the pair got married in September last year and welcomed their first together in December.

    Etinosa confirmed the collapse of the union on Saturday while reacting to a blogger who had earlier announced the crash of the marriage.

    In a now-deleted Instagram post, the movie star had called out the blogger for also divulging the news of her pregnancy months ago.

    “This ‘old witch’ again! I really do not want to reply you but I feel you will never stop if I ignore. You were the first person to publicise my pregnancy that was barely trying to survive past the first trimester due to its complication. I kept quiet,” she wrote.

    “Now you have come again and I know you have receipts and you won’t dare us to deny. I don’t blame you, it’s the close friend, the insider who is feeding you. May God forgive that person.”

    She, however, applauded the blogger for “getting this huge burden off my chest.”

    “Everyone is going through something including you. Thanks for getting this huge burden off my chest. You tried. But from now on, avoid me, Stella. T for Tenx,” she added.

    This is not the first time Etinosa’s marriage will collapse.

    The comedienne was said to have married a military officer at the age of 22 but the union crashed over claims of domestic violence.

     

  • It will be difficult to remarry after Ibidun’s death-Ituah Ighodalo

    It will be difficult to remarry after Ibidun’s death-Ituah Ighodalo

    Ituah Ighodalo, founder of the Trinity House Church, says he might not marry again following the demise of Ibidun, his wife.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Ibidun died of heart attack in her sleep last year few weeks to her 40th birthday.

    In a recent interview, the cleric said marrying another woman would be “a difficult thing” because he had already given “everything” to his late wife.

    Ighodalo also added that he is simply fixated on his ministry, future, and grooming his children.

     

    “It’s a difficult thing. Ibidun and I had a phenomenal relationship and I gave her everything, I don’t have much to give to anybody… I’m sorry. I just want to focus on my future, look after my children and have God minister to me,” he said.

    Before her demise, Ibidun had opened up on undergoing 11 IVFs, the pressure over her fertility journey, and her quest to find happiness, all of which she said birthed her fertility foundation.

    Asue Ighodalo, the cleric’s brother, had also narrated how Ibidun’s mother built a house and planned to give her the key on her birthday as a gift before the appalling death.

     

  • Pastor Ighodalo opens up on remarrying after Ibidun’s death

    Pastor Ighodalo opens up on remarrying after Ibidun’s death

    Senior pastor of Trinity House Church, Pastor Ituah Ighodalo has opened up on remarrying following the death of his wife, Ibidun.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Ibidun, owner of a popular event company in Lagos State, Elizabeth R, died of cardiac arrest in her hotel room in Port Harcourt, Rivers State in June 2020.

    Aged 40, Ibidun graduated from the University of Lagos and settled for adoption after going through eleven unsuccessful IVF.

    Blessed with two cute kids, Keke and Zenan, Ibidun floated the Ibidun Ighodalo Foundation to bring succour to those who cannot afford expensive pregnancy procedures.

    Meanwhile, since the death of Ibidun, Pastor Ighodalo has forged ahead with family, ministry and life endeavours.

    He said in an interview with Silverbird TV that marrying another woman would be “a difficult thing” because he had already given “everything” to his late wife.

    Pastor Ighodalo in the interview stated that he and his late wife had a phenomenal relationship.

    He further revealed that he gave her everything and no longer has much to give to anybody else.

    Pastor Ituah concluded by saying he is now focussing on his future and raising his children.

    “It’s a difficult thing. Ibidun and I had a phenomenal relationship and I gave her everything, I don’t have much to give to anybody… I’m sorry.

    “I just want to focus on my future, look after my children and have God minister to me,” he said.

    TNG recalls that the cleric had in July 2020 organized a concert in honour of his deceased wife’s posthumous birthday.

    The cleric’s brother, Asue Ighodalo recounted how Ibidun’s mother built a house and planned to give her the key on her birthday as a gesture of love before the shocking death.

  • My 40-year-old marriage “still dey leak” – Charly Boy

    My 40-year-old marriage “still dey leak” – Charly Boy

    Charles Oputa, popularly known as Charly Boy, says his 40-year-old marriage to his wife, Diane has not been easy and “still dey leak” though they are not giving up on each other.

    Charly Boy, who took to his instagram to give an insight into his marriage, said that every marriage has its issues, including his, adding that he and his wife agreed to never give up on each other.

    Charly Boy said further that “marriage is management “and not everyone will get married.

    “Some people think say marriage na moimoi. How dem fit know say no be everybody God create go marry.

    “I don swim many rivers for dis my 40 sometin year marriage. Don’t for one minute think our marriage is made in heaven.

    “It has been through Hell many times over, we still dey patch am, e still dey leak.

    “We have our issues, problems and challenges (never for public consumption). We disagree on many things smtimes.

    “The ONLY Thing we basically Agree on, is never to give up on each other. We both go die here I think,” Charly Boy stated.