91大神

  • What She Said: What We Hate About Being Married

    We asked women from Kenya, Uganda, South Africa & Nigeria to answer 1 question: “What do you hate most about being married?” From annoying inlaws to a husband who expects his wife to wash his boxers, their responses are universal.

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    For this week’s What She Said, I decided to do something a little different by asking women from different parts of Africa about their marriage experiences. While the answers form a wide range of experiences — from the woman who hates sharing a room with her husband to the woman who doesn’t want to have kids — the truth is that they are similar and show us that our experiences as women in spite of our backgrounds, sexuality, age, religion, etc. are quite universal.

    Name: Eliza
    Country: Uganda
    Age: 25

    鈥楳y husband is mostly progressive online, but expects me to wash his boxers.鈥

    Before I got married, I was looking for someone who was on the same progressive wavelength as I was. I really didn鈥檛 want anyone that would stress me as past boyfriends had. Then I met my husband online and he said all the right things. He also did (and does) some of the right things, but the truth remains that he鈥檚 a man and men, they expect some things from you that they consider mundane. Like he expects me to pick up after him and to do things like wash his boxers. Hell no. 

    Name: Ifeko
    Country: Nigeria
    Age: 38

    鈥淚t鈥檚 having to share a room with someone for the rest of my life.鈥

    I鈥檝e never liked sharing spaces with people. Never ever. On getting married, the plan was to have separate rooms. Unfortunately, that didn鈥檛 happen due to Lagos and other financial reasons. The one time when we got the opportunity to have separate, my mother-in-law came over for a while. She was so mad that we were not sleeping in the same bedroom. My husband tried to tell her it wasn’t her business, but she wasn’t having it. I’d have to add that in-law wahala is another thing I hate about being married. Now that we have children, I’m back to sleeping in the same room with my husband. The worst part is that he snores. Sometimes, I go to the parlour to sleep, but it鈥檚 not just about sleeping at night. There鈥檚 nothing like having a room of one鈥檚 own.

    Name: Efi
    Country: Ghana
    Age: 26

    鈥淚t鈥檚 being married.鈥

    I got married when I thought I was ready to get married which was when I was 22, right after university. After the wedding which I loved and the honeymoon, which I loved even more, I realised that I wasn鈥檛 ready to be married at all. I always have to consider the needs of my husband before doing anything. This is stressful because I feel like I could be out there, having multiple boyfriends, having fun. Some of my single friends from university or high school are living their life. I’m here, preparing dinner at 8pm, watching television with him like we鈥檙e an old couple and then going to bed by 10pm. It doesn鈥檛 help that my husband doesn鈥檛 like stress. We鈥檝e tried to have fun together a couple of times, but he finds nightlife boring and too much. I鈥檇 rather have fun without him too, but if I have the fun, I鈥檒l end up in another man鈥檚 bed. 

    Name: Ireti
    Country: Nigerian
    Age: 45

    鈥淚t鈥檚 people calling me Mrs A, when they can see that I am Ms B.鈥

    You鈥檒l go somewhere and introduce yourself as Ms A, but because they know your husband, they鈥檒l insist on calling you Mrs Y. That鈥檚 rubbish. It鈥檚 the one thing I cannot stand at all. 

    Kaya*
    South African
    Age: 30

    鈥淚鈥檇 have said the flirting, but it鈥檚 the fact that he鈥檚 allowed to flirt and I鈥檓 not.鈥

    We鈥檙e not religious, so everything has been on the table since we got married. Every single thing. At least that鈥檚 what we said before getting married. Five years in, we haven鈥檛 explored much. No threesomes, no open relationships, no foreplay. I was okay with this until recently when I noticed my husband flirt with other women. At first, I wanted to talk to him about it. But I changed my mind and decided to flirt with other men. The reaction wasn鈥檛 pretty at all. So now I asked him, you can flirt, but what about me? He said he鈥檚 a man and he has needs. I won鈥檛 be surprised if he鈥檚 cheating. 

    Hauwa*
    Nigeria
    32

    鈥淢y husband doesn鈥檛 rate my cooking, but he makes me cook because it鈥檚 my duty鈥

    I went into marriage with the belief that the kitchen and bedroom were the two most important places. The kitchen even more because 鈥榯he way to a man鈥檚 heart is through his belly鈥. The catch is, I鈥檝e never been a good cook. I know it, my husband knows it, even my children know it. I recently began to understand that cooking is not a validation of my person and neither does it make me a good wife. I wanted to stop cooking, but my husband has refused. We can afford a cook, but he says it鈥檚 my duty to cook. How can I allow my kids and him eat outside, he asks me. Is this some kind of punishment? I don鈥檛 know. I hate it here. 

    Dorcas*
    Kenyan
    38

    鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 the foolish arguments. Who left soap suds on the wall? Who didn鈥檛 put the toilet cover down? Things like that sometimes become big things.鈥

    When I got married, I imagined that it鈥檇 be a fairytale. I like to think my husband and I are quite compatible. We can go months without arguing. Then something tiny would happen and we would start screaming at each other. We鈥檙e not hot tempered people typically. In fact, we can be very good natured and we don鈥檛 have any issues 鈥 the sex is great, our conversations are great 鈥 but sometimes, those arguments creep in and make us look like fools. Sometimes it is perhaps taking out our stress on each other. Other times, I can鈥檛 even explain it. 


    *Names have been changed to protect the identity of the subjects.

    If you鈥檇 like to share your experience as a Nigerian or African woman across a range of different issues that affect women, send me an email.

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