91大神

  • I Gave My Husband Most of My Life and Started Working at 53

    I regret listening to my husband.

    Sharon* (53) and Bayo* (55)made the joint decision to have her be a stay-at-home mum just after getting married. This decision, which she now regrets, has defined the tone for years of her marriage. In this piece, Sharon tells us how this decision changed her husband and their marriage and what her biggest lesson from the experience is. 

    This is Sharon鈥檚 story as told to Eloho.

    I was twenty-seven when we got married. My husband and I dated for about two years. There were mixed signals in the beginning, but the love felt so good that I convinced myself that it was worth it. I knew I wasn鈥檛 the only woman he was dating. I wasn鈥檛 even sure I was his favourite. Back in the day, women my age believed that if we stayed long enough, we might be the 鈥渓ucky鈥 our husbands married.

    His sister and I had a great relationship, and she always said she was rooting for me.

    He didn鈥檛 seem controlling at first. In fact, he was sweet, even after the wedding. At the time, I had just finished NYSC and landed a full-time job at the British High Commission. If I had remained there and built my career, I鈥檓 sure my life would look completely different today. I genuinely thought he would support that path. I think he did too, initially.

    Things changed gradually. After our first child, I had to be away for about three months; I can鈥檛 even remember why exactly. He didn鈥檛 complain then. He behaved just like any new father would.

    The shift happened when both our schedules got busy. He was a journalist, always travelling, and I was working full-time as well. We had a conversation about it and somehow concluded that it would be best for me to stop working. The agreement was that he would set up a business for me to run so the transition wouldn鈥檛 be difficult.

    To his credit, he kept that promise. We tried many businesses, but entrepreneurship just wasn鈥檛 my calling. I had so many ideas, learnt different crafts, opened shop after shop; clothes, accessories, hair. What I really needed was structure, but I didn鈥檛 have the words for that back then. He always funded the start of every idea, but the support usually ended with money. After a while, my husband got tired of the trial and error. That鈥檚 when his extended family started moving into our home, and things became almost impossible for me.

    At one point, we had over eleven of his cousins and nieces living with us, plus our five children. Cooking felt like catering for a small hostel and there was no privacy. I wasn鈥檛 working, so I was part of the list of people he was financially caring for. I also had a family who needed support occasionally. Looking back, I should have set boundaries with them, too, the same way I should have with his relatives.


    Also Read: I Caught My Husband Destroying the One Thing That Could Save Our Marriage


    Once the number of dependents grew, he turned bitter. He started saying my family were ingrates and that I was the worst of them all. Before asking him for money for anything, even groceries, I had to prepare myself emotionally because I knew an insult would come first.

    My husband would say things like,
    鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do anything for yourself鈥
    鈥淒o you know how hard it is to make money?鈥
    鈥淚f not for me, where would your family be?鈥
    It was humiliating. And this was the pattern for years.
    And mind you, this was not a faithful man.

    Things are worse now. My children and I had to move out of the country because of how bad things got. Some days, I wonder if we should have stayed in Nigeria. He barely sends enough money for our needs and complains every time he does. The insults still come, just with a new twist.

    I don鈥檛 know how he expects someone who hasn鈥檛 worked in over twenty years to find a good job in a European country suddenly. I鈥檓 trying, but the jobs I can get aren鈥檛 ones he would proudly talk about. Some days, I feel like he sent me here so he could freely continue whatever he鈥檚 doing in Nigeria. It鈥檚 depressing.

    My children are teenagers now. My eldest is 18 and has a job, thank God. I鈥檓 waiting for all of them to finish school and find their footing. Then I鈥檒l start finding my way out of this marriage.
    I鈥檝e tried my best. God knows I have.

    If I could change anything, it would be this: I should have been proactive. I should have done more for myself. There is no bigger mistake than putting your whole life in a man鈥檚 hands. I tell my daughters this truth. My mother thinks I鈥檓 painting their father in a bad light, but what exactly am I hiding from them? They see what is happening. Sometimes they鈥檙e the ones bringing me stories of him cheating.

    I鈥檓 exhausted. I feel guilty about how things ended up, but I can only move forward. It may feel late because of my age, but I鈥檓 determined to push through and build whatever future I can.


    Read Next: What She Said: I Lost Myself Trying to Be Everything for Everyone

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