Tag: Wedding

  • Plan your wedding within your means – Francis Ewherido

    Plan your wedding within your means – Francis Ewherido

    Francis Ewherido

    I went to visit a banker friend recently. When I got to his office, I met his usually cheerful female subordinate moody. I was curious. I later found out she is getting married soon and had ran out of cash. Her wedding budget is N10m, while her salary is N1,800,000 per annum. My friend says that her fiancé probably earns less. So, together, their income is about N3.2m per annum. From the look of things, not much assistance will come from their families because both of them actually support their parents in the upkeep of their families and education of their younger ones. Yet they want to spend an amount more than their combined salaries for three years for their wedding!

    I felt like sitting her down for the pre-wedding lecture I normally give my marriage course participants. But I refrained for two reasons. One, she never told me she had any problem, so I did not want to be a meddlesome interloper, as the lawyers say. Two, when people about to wed are in that mood they are only interested in one thing: the person who is ready to give them the money, not unsolicited advice. They just want to follow their hearts. Regrets can come years later when they reminiscence.

    But if I have the opportunity to talk to her, this is what I will tell her (It is a season of weddings anyway and others might find the information useful). One, when you are planning your wedding, include a financial plan, encapsulated in a budget. Marriage is one institution where you need planning to get results in all spheres: family planning, financial planning, career planning, children’s education planning, retirement planning. It is planning and planning all the way.

    Like all budgets, your wedding budget should be in two parts: expenditure and income (receipts). To come up with your expenditure profile, you write a list of all the items you intend to spend money on and attach figures. The total sum is your expenditure. Your income, on the other hand, comprises your money in the bank and other financial instruments like stocks and treasury bills. Your anticipated income minus expenses between when you draw your budget and when your wedding will take place can also form part of your income. But promises of financial or material support cannot be included in your income segment until such promises are redeemed.

    In fact, I advise people preparing for marriage not to expect assistance from any source. If it comes, it becomes a welcome relief, if it does not; you are not disappointed, disorganized or thrown off balance. Sometimes, assistance does not come from where you are expecting it; it comes from unexpected sources. In rare cases, it does not come at all. Anyway, when you are done with your budget, check whether you have a surplus budget (where your income outstrips your expenditure), balanced budget (where income and expenditure are about the same) or deficit budget (where your expenditure is more than your income). If you have a deficit budget, you need to adjust your expenditure until your budget is at least balanced. That is what my friend’s subordinate and her fiancé should do, because it is not good for you to start married life on a financial deficit.

    Two, we said earlier that you should write a list of items you need for your wedding, but do not just write your list; write it in order of priority from the most important item, the ring, which you will exchange on your wedding day, to the least important item, which can be anything, depending on your value orientation. Prioritizing is important because if you start buying the items in order of priority and run out of money because of wrong projections or price fluctuation, you would at least have taken care of the important item. Priortising is also a very good way of balancing an inadvertent deficit budget. Priortising makes you to live within available resources without upsetting the apple cart.

    Three, you should not borrow money to do your wedding. In fact, you have no good reason to borrow to do your wedding. My friend’s subordinate wanted to take a loan of N2m, but my friend refused to endorse the request. I fully support his stand. Marriage is not a business, so why borrow to do it. Simply work within your available resources.

    Four, do not do your wedding to show off. That is one of the reasons why people borrow. Virtually every married person has come to realize that marriage is an individual race. There is no competition, if you truly understand the marriage institution. You simply decide how to live your life to suit your circumstances. You get a taste of the personal nature of marriage on your wedding night. After all the ceremonies, when it is time to go to bed, you are all alone with your spouse; your life of individuality begins. The crowd of family members, friends, well wishers and even mischief makers will not be there

    Five, do not allow anybody to force you into unnecessary expenditure. That is another reason why people borrow money to do their wedding. You have cases where parents, parents-in-law, uncles, aunts and prominent relatives belong to clubs and associations that only take certain kinds of drinks or food. Such special arrangements invariably lead to additional costs. I usually advise my class that anybody who is going to distort their budget must supply the additional fund. If not, they should stick to their original plan. The heavens will not fall. After all, the wedding would have taken place earlier. Wedding reception is just an embellishment.

    There are many ways to cut cost if you run out of cash. You can reduce the number of your guests, go for cheaper reception venue, reduce or eliminate expensive drinks, rent a wedding gown instead of making one, get friends/relatives to do the cooking instead of engaging a caterer, etc. I always tell young people not to worry about their humble beginnings. I can show you many billionaires today who got married while living in a single room, who borrowed suits or their wives hired weddings gowns, who could not provide enough food and drinks at their receptions. But today they can feed multitudes. When you are clear about your destination, your beginning is inconsequential.

  • Let the wedding bells toll – Francis Ewherido

    Let the wedding bells toll – Francis Ewherido

    Francis Ewherido

    I have been waiting for this with bated breath and now it is official: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are engaged and they will be married in May 2018. My dominant thought has always been positive it would happen, against all odds, because they seem to be genuinely in love. In addition, Prince Harry’s only two previous major relationships collapsed because the women involved, Chelsy Davy and Cressida Bonas, could not withstand the intense media and public attention and scrutiny. It was probably with the mindset of these two failed relationships that Prince Harry set out from the beginning to protect his future wife from unwanted attention. But beyond that, being older than the other two women and being already in the limelight probably helped Markle succeed where Davy and Bonas failed.

    As little children growing up, Prince Harry always looked carefree and more adventurous than his elder brother, Prince Williams. May be it was just natural or he knew quite early that he is unlikely to be a future king, being the second child of their parents. But I feel he was just being himself. Even though he is royalty, he refused to be trapped in the royal “prison.” This reflected partly in his romantic adventures as he grew older. He just seemed to follow his heart. He has previously dated a rock star, a model and an actress from far and near before ending up with Markle, an actress and a black American. There is nothing wrong with any of these ladies, but they are not the typical girls you expect a British Royal to date. And Africa seems to have a special place in Harry’s heart. Davy is Zimbabwean, Botswana is his favourite holiday destination and now he is engaged to an African American

    From the wild partying prince, Harry has become a very mature man, who knows what he wants. Even though he had to get royal approval from his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth and his father, Prince Charles, he is engaged and about to be married on his own terms, not papa’s or grandmother’s terms. The way Prince Charles enthusiastically announced the engagement, I get the feeling that this is the kind of freedom he would have preferred to choose his own wife, not the “arrangee” marriage he had with Princess Diana. Ultimately, though, he is now with the love of his life, Camilla, but there were just too many dents along the way.

    There are some big lessons for many parents to learn here. Today, many marriages-to-be are on hold because of ethnic, religious and other sentiments. The truth is, we all want our children to marry into circumstances and environments we are already accustomed to and comfortable with. But the bigger truth is that we cannot live our children’s lives for them. They must chart their own paths. After all, they are not going to come to us to rent our manhood to impregnate their wives or their mothers’ wombs to carry the pregnancies.

    Prince Harry and Markle are also primarily planning the wedding, with Buckingham Palace secondarily involved. These days, especially among the high and mighty, parents plan and execute their children’s weddings to massage their egos and suit their personalities, not that of the couple. And please spare me this foolish class consciousness. The nitty-gritty of marriage knows no class. That is why marriages across board flourish or fail. Prince Harry already seems to know this.

    This engagement also teaches us another lesson in this part of the world. The kind of money some people in public offices steal in Nigeria shows they are not only stealing for themselves, but generations unborn. We worry about generations we will not live long enough to see. But not Harry and Markle; they just want to live for the moment and enjoy their union. They are in love and so are getting married. They are going to give birth to children who will be categorized as blacks (even though they are three-quarters white and only one-quarter black) in a society that has not entirely weaned itself from racism. It is going to a novelty in the British Royalty. Markle is also going to be the first British Black Royal. How is the British society going to handle Markle? That is their problem. Prince Harry has found love and vowed to protect Markle with utmost vigour. That is all that matters. The seemingly carefree but focused and strong-willed Harry just wants to have a happy marriage; who can blame him?

    Didn’t he grow up watching his parents trapped in an unhappy marriage? Why should thunder strike one position twice? As for the black royals they will beget, they will have to grow up, chart their own path and sort out themselves. If they are strong-willed, focussed and self-assured, like their parents, they will be defined by the content of their character and not the colour of their skin. But that too is not for Harry to worry about, unlike our aimless thieving lot.

    Prince Harry and Meghan Markle met only July 2016. A little over a year later, they announced their engagement. Harry dated Davy for about seven years, but the relationship did not culminate in marriage. Sometimes, people ask how long courtship should last. While it should not be for eternity, it is difficult to put a categorical timeline. Sometimes, the stars align when people meet and hit it off as Harry said of himself and Markle.

    Sometimes, two hearts simply melt into and beat as one and marriage becomes a formality. Again sometimes, people court for five years only to hit a dead end. At other times, people date for years only to find out they are on a wrong road. Time and circumstances sometimes play major roles. But I have always believed that the divine hand of God is the ultimate decider because marriage is of divine creation. Where Harry and Markle fall in all of these is in the belly of time. But for now the bible says we should rejoice with those who rejoice. I am genuinely happy for the newly engaged and I wish them success in the beautiful but treacherous terrain called matrimony.

    It is not done and dusted yet. A lot of adjustments have to be made on both sides. She has to convert the Protestant Church of England, become a British citizen and make wardrobe adjustment to suit her new role as a royal. She has to relocate to the UK. Will she continue acting? What roles can she take? Prince Harry too knows full well he is getting married to an American, not a Briton and has to have that in mind. He too needs to accommodate the Markle he already and the one that will unravel with time. I pray they come good.

  • #TheCasuals: You should see these pictures from Yomi Casual’s wedding

    Believe it or not, Yomi Casual’s wedding to his beau, Grace is one of the most talked about weddings of 2017. Check out the

    There’s so much appeal and delightfulness from the pictures trending all over Instagram like a celebrity wedding that it is.

    Celebrities like Lilian Esoro, Bryan Okwara, Ubi Franklin, Destiny Amaka, Alex Ekubo and others were in attendance.

     

    Check out the pictures below

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BaPM3hKHlb3/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BaPLz00He_T/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BaPLbaSHgrM/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BaPK-31nydm/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BaPKupGn7Hu/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BaPKRHfn2zE/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

  • How Timi Dakolo surprised bride on wedding day

    What will be your reaction when your favorite singer shows up on your wedding day to perform for free? An identified Nigerian bride went on her knees seeing Timi Dakolo singing his hit song, Iyawo mi at her wedding.

    Weeks back, Dakolo had announced on his social media pages that he wanted to surprise some couples at their wedding ceremony.

    The talented singer fulfilled his promise by performing for free at some random wedding ceremonies. Last weekend, Dakolo went on a trip to Abuja to surprise another couple. The bride could not handle the astonishment seeing Timi Dakolo. She went on her knees in sheer amazement.

     

    Watch the video below

     

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BXQNhSyhgb7/?taken-by=thenewsgurung

  • Photos: Osinbajo, Saraki, Dogara, Obasanjo, others attend Amosun’s daughter’s wedding

    Photos: Osinbajo, Saraki, Dogara, Obasanjo, others attend Amosun’s daughter’s wedding

    The ancient city of Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital on Saturday witnessed an usual gathering of elite members of the Nigerian society, politicians, captains of industries and service chiefs for the society wedding of the daughter of Governor Ibikunle Amosun, Miss Ayomide Amosun, and Mr. Oladipupo Dabiri; son of former House of Representatives member and Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari, on Nigerians in Diaspora, Abike Dabiri – Erewa.

    The African Church Primary School, Ita Iyalode, Abeokuta, the venue of the traditional engagement and Nikkah ceremony and Muhammad Buhari Presidential Estate where the reception took place was filled to the brim with the high and mighty in Nigeria’s political and business class.


    The Acting President Yemi Osinbajo prayed for harmony and blessings of God upon the couple while his wife, Dolapo who supervised the cutting of the wedding cake also prayed God to grant them “joy, happiness and favour” in their marriage.

    The officiating clergy, Abdul – Rahman Ahmad, who is the National Chief Missioner, Ansarudeen Society of Nigeria, in his brief sermon, said marriage is an institution ordained by Allah and advised the couple to have the fear of Allah in dealing with one another and love each other.

    Chief Obasanjo in his brief remarks, congratulated the parents of the bride and groom as well as the couple, urging them to have the courage to understand there would always be friction in marriage and said when it occurs, they should deploy effective communication to resolve it.

    In his words: “Marriage is sweet but it must have a time of friction and when frictions happen please I urge you to iron it out immediately, do not let it last more than 24 hours and the only way you can do that is through communication. Always maintain good communication,” Obasanjo said.

    Also, Speaker Yabuku Dogara advised parents to spend their energies to training the child, attributing high rate of moral decadence and loss of values to bad homes.

    He said marriage is ordained by God and must be sustained by man, explaining that the family remained the most important institution on earth where discipline takes root.

    In his words: “The rate of crime in the society is not because our security agencies are inefficient but because most parents have failed to properly train their children.”

    As parents, we must deploy our energies at properly training our children because bad homes bring about a bad society,” Dogara said.

    Eminent Nigerians that witnessed the wedding include the National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) who was represented by former Finance Commissioner (Lagos State), Olawale Edun, Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Dogara, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode (Lagos), Senator Dino Melaye, former Managing Director of GTbank, Fola Adeola, Senator Gbenga Ashafa, Governor Rotimi Akeredolu (Ondo), Governor Yerima Shettima (Borno), Governor Abdul – Azeez Yari (Zamfara), Governor Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo), Governor Godwin Obaseki (Edo), Minister of Solid Minerals, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Governor Bello Masari (Katsina). Others are Governor Abubakar Badru (Jigawa), Governor Ahmed Abdulfatah (Kwara) and Senator Gbenga Ashafa.

    Others are former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Alfa Belgore, former President Obasanjo, Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, the Oba of Lagos, Oba Rilwan Akiolu, Chief Bisi Akande, Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed, his Finance counterpart, Kemi Adeosun, Chairman of the defunct Interim National Government(ING), Chief Ernest Shonekan,

    Chief Femi Majekodunmi, the Alake of Egbaland, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, the Olu of Ilaro, Oba Kehinde Olugbenle, the Osile of Oke – Ona Egba, Oba Adedapo Tejuoso, the Olowu of Owu Kingdom and Oba Adegboyega Dosunmu.

    Also in attendance are father of the groom Bayo Dabiri and mother of the groom, Abike Dabiri – Erewa, and her husband, Segun Erewa, Minister of Science and Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, former Commonwealth Secretary, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, Senator Olorunimbe Mamora, Minister of Transport, Rotimi Amaechi, former Inspector General of Police, Musiliu Smith, former Attorney – General and Minister of Justice, Prince Bola Ajibola, Senator Lanre Tejuoso and Commissioner of Police Ogun State, Ahmed Iliyasu.

    The Grand Entrance of the Ooni of Ife #DabiriAmosunWedding and #ErewaAmosunWedding #vvipevents #ebonylifetv #aaxdd

    A post shared by VVIP Events (@vvipevents_eltv) on

    Others are business mogul and industrialist, Alh. Aliko Dangote, his counterpart in the oil sector, Femi Otedola, Minister of State for Petroleum, Ibe Kachikwu, Chief Femi Falana, former Ogun State governor Gbenga Daniel, a former Governorship candidate in Ogun State, Prince Gboyega Isiaka, Minister of Labour, Dr. Chris Ngige, ex – Deputy Governor Femi Pedro (Lagos), Founder First City Monument Bank (FCMB) and Olori – Omooba of Ijebuland, Otunba Subomi Balogun, former Governor Lateef Jakande (Lagos), General Alani Akinrinade (rtd), Senator Daisy Ehanire Danjuma, Senator Grace Ita – Giwa and Interior Minister Abdul – Rahman Danbazzau, former Governor Adams Oshiomhole (Edo), Governor Okezie Ikpeazu (Abia), Senator Anthony Adefuye, National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. John Odigie – Oyegun, Afenifere chieftain, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Chief Kensington Adebutu, former Governorship candidate of the Labour Party in Ogun State, Prince Jide Awosedo, and Prof. Pat Utomi and the nation’s Post Master – General, Chief Bisi Adegbuyi.

     

  • Lovely pictures from Folorunsho Alakija son’s wedding in England

    A widower and father-of-one, Folarin who’s the son of Nigerian billionaire, Folorunsho Alakija married his woman Nazanin in a lavish wedding on Saturday in Blenheim Palace, England.

    Aliko Dangote, Toyin Saraki and other dignitaries attended the event.

    See more photos here…

     

  • What 2face did to couple’s wedding after party

    Nigerian pop icon, 2face Idibia is not just talented, he is also known for the amazing way he connects with his fans. The African Queen singer yesterday crashed newly wedded Yemi and Chidinma Ojo’s post wedding celebration during his visit to Magodo.

    The singer was at a certain Emporta Suites in Magodo for the Campari Dare to mix festival . The football lovers were happy and excited to see him.

    Watch the video below

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIlP7oji88k&feature=youtu.be

  • VIDEO: Ahmed Musa weds girlfriend few weeks after divorcing first wife, Jamila

    Super Eagles and Leicester City forward, Ahmed Musa has tied the knot with his new heartrob, Juliet Ejue.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the 24-year-old who recently divorced his wife Jamila, a mother of two, has now settled with his new wife.

    According to reports, the love birds have been dating for over two years now.

    Juliet is based in Lagos and she is from Calabar. It is also reported that the football star had paid off his former wife by giving her one of his houses in Kano as well as a recent model Honda car. Musa and Jamila lived on the same street in Kano before they started courting.

    Although the player has continued to receive heavy criticisms over the decision, Musa responded when he queried why they are judging him. “Who are you to judge the life I live? I’m not perfect and I don’t have to be! Before you start pointing fingers, make sure your hands are clean #JULMUS,” he wrote recently on his IG page

     

    See wedding video below:

  • Of clay, building, fresh, and dry fish – Francis Ewherido

    By Francis Ewherido

    Many young people preparing to go into the matrimonial institution are only preparing for their wedding not their marriage. For the few who might not know the difference, wedding means marriage ceremony (that brief ceremony, traditionally, at the registry, or in the church/mosque, that joins you as husband and wife) while marriage is that life-long institution you step into after your wedding.

    Marriage is primarily for companionship and many new entrants also do not know this; that is why tension builds up after a few years, if children or the “almighty” male child does not come. And when the children do come, we have a responsibility to bring them up properly to be useful to themselves, the family and the larger society. This is called parenting, a task many of these new entrants are also not well equipped to do.

    In honing your parenting skills, the first point of reference should be your own upbringing; what, in your opinion, are the pros and cons? The problem here is that you have only one upbringing and so you view parenting from the “prison” of your upbringing. What you do here as a smart young parent is benchmarking.

    First, the young couple should look at their individual upbringings dispassionately and pick the best aspects of both to form the foundation of their children’s upbringing. Then, they can look without. They should look at how their cousins, other relatives and neighbours were moulded. There surely are a few tricks to pick from them. Add these to knowledge from books and other sources. Finally, throw in the ultimate book on parenting, the Bible (at least for us Christians) and you are ready to hit the road.

    Parenting, like driving, is applied social science. It is learnt, not taught. No matter the number of books you read or the knowledge you acquire, you cannot do parenting in the air.

    You apply it to children you beget or under your custody and that is where the next challenge comes. Social science is firm and uniform that every human being is a combination of nature and nurture. How much influence each wields in the ultimate character of a person is still a matter of individual conjecture, but we can continue to live with that. What is important here is that you give birth to children whose nature (physical and innate) you have no control over.

    You have no control over the height of your children, their complexion, the size of their limbs, the size of their sex organs, etc.; the only major power God gave us, in this regard, is to naturally pre-select the sex of our babies. Also, some children are innately stubborn and no amount of beating and intimidation can change the stubborn disposition. Some are extrovert or introvert and remain so all their lives. No amount of nurture changes that.

    So as a parent, you must realize that you are limited, ab initio. But the good news is that within the limitations, you have enough elbow room to mould your children to enable them flourish and realize their full potentials and fulfill the purpose for which God created them, which might be different from your wishes and expectations. Our children are clay in our hands. Ours is to become great potters to mould them rightly into shape.

    But unlike clay that is inanimate, our children are human beings. Unlike clay that you mould into what you want, you are expected to mould them into beings that can fulfill their destinies. Many parents have realized this, which is why parents do not force their children to study law, engineering, medicine, etc., these days. You can only encourage them, you cannot force them. Some children who were railroaded into studying these traditional courses are now fashion designers, actors, musicians and experts in other endeavours where their innate abilities lie. Not that the knowledge they gained from what they studied is wasted; every knowledge comes handy at some point.

    Like clay, we have a limited time to mould our children, which must be well utilised. Unlike clay, you cannot soften human beings to be remolded. That is why the wise one, King Solomon, wrote that there is time for everything (Ecclesiastics 3:1). Those of us from the Niger Delta know, as part of our upbringing, that you can bend a fish only when it is fresh. Once it is dry, you cannot bend it, you can only break it and the outcome is unpredictable. Only God has the power to break a dry fish with 100 per cent accuracy. This should guide parents who need to “break” their teenage or adult children who have grievously derailed.

    But what does this tell the young parents? You have a limited time to bend your fresh fish; to mould your clay. Remember, bend you must because if you do not start drying the fish early, it will go bad. Mould you must your clay, because if you do not, it will cake. Children are most pliable and amenable in the first 10 years of their lives; that is also when parents can exert the most influence: straightening the crooked parts and smoothening the rough edges. It is the time to lay the proper foundation that the building (child’s life) will rest on.

    If properly laid, defects in the superstructure (later parts of the child’s life) can easily be corrected. But a human life is not like a building with a defective foundation that you can just pull down and rebuild afresh. With us, once time is gone, it is gone. That is why we must get it right from cradle to 10 years. Let me grudgingly raise it to 12 years and even gamble and add age 13. Beyond that it is an uphill climb trying to correct a child’s defective foundation. You need a huge dose of divine intervention.

    Parenting includes providing food, shelter, clothing, education and other necessities of life that require money. This poses a major challenge for young parents. These days, especially with the economic situation in the country, both parents need to work to make ends meet.

    Meanwhile, they also need to devote time to their young children. Parenting, especially in the early stages, cannot be outsourced. Both parents therefore need to come up with arrangements that enable them to earn a living as well as have quality time for their children. After the first 10 years, it does not mean parenting challenges are over. Even the Bible acknowledges that children do stupid things. But the bible also admonishes to train a child in the way he should go and when he grows up, he will not depart from it (Proverbs 22:6). Parenting is a lifelong assignment, but a firm foundation at the early stages, makes the task easier in later stages.

  • Banky W, Adesua Etomi set for wedding Introduction

    Banky W, Adesua Etomi set for wedding Introduction

    Earlier today, the new love birds in town Banky W and Adesua Etomi took to their social media handles announcing their engagement. According to reports reaching TheNewsGuru, the showbiz personalities will be having their wedding introduction this Saturday , May 6th 2017.

    Their parents reportedly met earlier today and are already planning for their wedding slated for November 2017.

    Dating speculations trailed them when the duo appeared in the romantic comedy, The Wedding Party .Only a few people in their circle knew about their secret love affair. All the speculations and rumours has now been put to rest, as they are set to hold their own wedding party.