What鈥檚 it like navigating a marriage in which you have to endure disapproval from your spouse鈥檚 family 鈥 especially in a family-centred society like ours? That鈥檚 been Ese鈥檚* reality for the last ten years.
She talks about enduring hate from her in-laws, believing her previous miscarriages are linked to spiritual attacks and how she navigates her situation.
As told to Boluwatife
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There鈥檚 a saying popular among Nigerians: 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 marry the man, you marry his family鈥. It means that family approval, specifically from the in-laws, is necessary for a marriage to work.
I didn鈥檛 have the approval of my husband, Yinka鈥檚 family when we got married in 2014, but I didn鈥檛 think it would be a big deal. After all, Yinka* loved me and insisted we didn鈥檛 need his family to be happy together.
Funny enough, I鈥檇 known Yinka鈥檚 family long before we got married. My mum and Yinka鈥檚 mum were friends. My mum sold women鈥檚 shoes and Yinka鈥檚 mum was her good customer. As a teacher, she was always buying shoes.
I used to help my mum at her shop whenever I was home from school, and it sometimes meant following her to drop shoes at her customers鈥 houses. That was how I first met Yinka. I was 12 years old, he was 14, and he was my first crush. I remember drawing his name on my hand with a biro and scrubbing it off immediately after so my dad wouldn鈥檛 catch me.
But Yinka and I didn鈥檛 become friends until four years later when I resumed at the same university he attended. My mum had told his mum about my uni admission and both mums decided he should help me secure off-campus accommodation since he knew the area better.
I still liked him, and it looked like he liked me too. We hung out regularly. By my third year in school, we officially started dating. He graduated some months after we started our relationship, and it was at his graduation party that his mum figured out we were dating.
His mum had brought coolers of party rice 鈥 normal for university graduation ceremonies 鈥 and I was running up and down helping to share the rice and take pictures. She knew me, of course. But she realised my running up and down was more than friendship. She called Yinka that night to ask if we were dating, and he said yes. Her response was, 鈥淥mo Igbo? Why?鈥 I鈥檓 not even Igbo, but I guess it means we鈥檙e all the same to her.
Yinka thought she was joking and laughed it off. She also didn鈥檛 pursue the issue. I guess she thought it was just a fling. But she realised he was serious when he took me to visit her 鈥渙fficially鈥 a year later in 2011. That鈥檚 when the problem started.
The thing is, Yinka is the last born of five children. Plus, he鈥檚 the only boy and his dad died when he was a baby. His mum had it tough raising them, and for some reason, she thought his marrying from another tribe 鈥 specifically Igbo 鈥 meant she wouldn鈥檛 鈥渆at the fruits of her labours鈥. According to her, Igbo women only know how to eat their husband鈥檚 money, lack respect and also won鈥檛 let the man鈥檚 family come close.
Of course, I didn鈥檛 know these were her reasons then. I know now because I鈥檝e heard it repeated to me several times.
She had a bold frown on her face all through that first visit. This was the same person who used to dash me money as a teenager. After Yinka and I left, she called him on the phone and told him to end the relationship. He told me about it, and I innocently thought I just needed to show her how hardworking I was.
I decided I鈥檇 start visiting her every weekend to help her out with chores. The second time I visited, she asked me if I didn鈥檛 have anything to do for my mother at my own house. No one had to tell me to stop going.
His sisters also snubbed all my attempts to be close to them. I鈥檇 call, send birthday text messages and even visit to help out during major events, but it was obvious they didn鈥檛 like me. Even then, I didn鈥檛 think the disapproval was serious. My parents liked Yinka and our mums still talked.
In 2013, Yinka proposed.
The night of the proposal, his mum called mine and told her there was no way the marriage would happen. It turned into a shouting match, and my mum called me that same night to return the ring. That night was so dramatic. How many women have you heard say they cried all through on the day of their proposal?
Yinka had to take the issue to his mum鈥檚 pastor. The man spoke to her and told us to go ahead with the wedding planning. Yinka鈥檚 mum respected her pastor and kept quiet. My parents were another matter. They didn鈥檛 understand why I wanted to die there when the man鈥檚 family didn鈥檛 want me.
In the end, the wedding happened because I got pregnant. Me, my mum and husband, kept it from my dad because he would鈥檝e never allowed the wedding to happen.
My husband鈥檚 immediate family didn鈥檛 attend the traditional wedding in my village. It was his uncle and some people from church who attended. On the white wedding day, my mother-in-law brought her own live band and divided the reception hall into two. Our DJ was playing music on one side, and her live band was playing on the other side. The DJ had to just take the cue and stop the music. Yinka鈥檚 sisters and mum also refused to dance with us when it was time for the husband鈥檚 family to dance with the couple. Instead, they went to dance in front of the live band as their friends sprayed them with money.
Yinka just kept telling me to 鈥渃alm down. They鈥檝e done their worst.鈥
I should thank my in-laws for drawing me closer to God because these people started attacking me two days after the wedding. I had a dream where one of Yinka鈥檚 sisters hit me with a cane. I woke up with a stomach ache and had a miscarriage three days later.
I thought it was a coincidence, but I had three more miscarriages over the next three years, and they always happened after a dream where I鈥檇 see someone in Yinka鈥檚 family. When I noticed the pattern after the third miscarriage, I told my mum and we started visiting pastors and attending prayers. I prayed o. Almost every weekend, I was at one church or the other for a vigil or deliverance session.
I have two children now, and both times, I fasted almost all through the first three months of pregnancy. I also didn鈥檛 tell Yinka until the third month because I didn鈥檛 want him to tell his family. He didn鈥檛 even know the spiritual battle I was facing. I only told him about the first dream. His response was, 鈥淎re you saying my sister is a witch?鈥 So, I just focused on winning the battle in prayers.
I still see his family members in my dreams sometimes, but I always give it to them hot hot. I don’t joke with my prayers.
We moved to a different state in 2019 and now only see them during family occasions where they give me weird looks and taunting words. Me, I just mind myself.
I also don鈥檛 report them to my husband because what use is it if he starts fighting with his family? Won鈥檛 that prove their reason for hating me in the first place?
I wonder about the reason for all the attacks and hate. It鈥檚 not like Yinka is one millionaire. He鈥檚 just a civil servant, and I contribute equally to the home鈥檚 expenses. Sometimes, I even convince him to send them money so it wouldn鈥檛 be like I鈥檓 the only one 鈥渆ating his money鈥. But I guess you can do no good in the eyes of people who are already determined to hate you.
*Names have been changed for the sake of anonymity.
NEXT READ: As a Woman, I Shouldn鈥檛 Be the Breadwinner




