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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Family / Roles In The 'nigerian' Family (34381 Views)
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Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Onegai(f): 8:09pm On May 15, 2016 |
Tearoses, ronald4lif and anyone else, Please don't use any Nigerian celebrity to attempt to reason about marriage. I don't wanna say much, but if you knew just a quarter of their shenanigans, you would have beaten up Tiwa Savage and Teebillz for making you waste your mb mentioning their names. Even the Nigerian celebrities with "wonderful" marriages give one a headache when you finally start seeing bits and pieces of the truth. Intact, anyone who is popular in Nigeria should never be used as a standard for morality or a rallying cry about anything in society. Unless of course it's hypocrisy. ![]() Some of the stories are slowly trickling out (you think Teebillz hasn't lived off other women in his past, you think Tiwa hasn't been a hustler willing to do a lot to get ahead? Actually, that was one of the things everyone liked about her: very determined to be a success). Infact, just pray for Nigeria. This corruption we are fighting started from our homes. The most important question one should ask your future husband or wife isn't about "who's gonna wash the dishes" but "how much do you earn". You need to be able to match their lifestyle to their paychecks and accept the level of hoe-ism you can live with. Someone who will do anything for money is someone you're never going to able to make see reason. When a man has played his good looks towards sleeping with and driving the car and full access of cash for several women, what equality do you wanna preach to him?? When a woman has also slept with her father's agemates and spent more money than you have seen in your life, how do you expect her not to be scornful that with your basic salary, you are lording it over her ![]() But a few hea 2 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by raumdeuter: 12:03am On May 16, 2016 |
Tearoses and onegai Well said. After the initial hot head, i the next few weeks calmer heads and reasoning would follow and you would see that both of them Tbillz and Tiwa are just 2 irresponsible individuals What both of them had done to get to where they are today are things no average person would do or be proud of |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 9:32am On May 16, 2016 |
Apologies I have been MIA ![]() Good morning everyone ![]() |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Nobody: 10:35am On May 16, 2016 |
Okikiki: Check your email. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Nobody: 11:20am On May 16, 2016 |
Mindfulness: Done. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Nobody: 11:26am On May 16, 2016 |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 11:30am On May 16, 2016 |
raumdeuter: How many times do you do these things in a week/month? How many people actually do these tasks themselves? Can we also share pregnancy and breastfeeding? raumdeuter: Well, this thread was never about that. We now have more of 'I want women to keep their traditional roles while they also contribute financially' |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 11:38am On May 16, 2016 |
[quote author=postmann post=45604125][/quote] I can't quote you. Kindly re-post so I can respond. Thanks 1 Like |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 11:59am On May 16, 2016 |
Acidosis: First, this post has no correlation with this thread. Secondly, don't you think a woman establishing her husband is going against the 'natural' order of headship? And if a husband does the chores, does it strip him of his headship? |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:02pm On May 16, 2016 |
HaneefahRN: Agree it depends on the mentality of the couple. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:13pm On May 16, 2016 |
raumdeuter: Why this myth that a husband who is the sole provider is working 24hrs a day to make ends meet? In Nigeria, people rarely have side businesses they physically attend to everyday after their 9 - 5 so a sole provider works same hours with a co-provider. That said, these women said their husbands no longer provide (what he has) once they see their wives are willing to contribute... E.g. 1: a husband buys shoes of N150k while his wife is cutting costs to pay their daughter's fees. This wife is also responsible for feeding and they do not pay rent. E.g. 2: a husband does not drop any money for taking care of their kid because she doesn't ask. E.g. 3: another husband expected his wife to pay 50% of their mortgage (she earns half of his salary & has not seen the documents of the house till date). She also took a loan to furnish the home and takes care of feeding. (I think this is every a different case) These are three examples I can remember. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Acidosis(m): 12:23pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: Yes Meanwhile, a woman establishing her man can be done in many ways. Personally, I don't think I would be comfortable to beg my wife for money. The best I could do is to "borrow", and make a refund with interest. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:26pm On May 16, 2016 |
raumdeuter: And are the women not trained to do all the chores and answer yes sir to the men while at it? The society has mapped out the duties... Men: Provide/give bullshit Women: Chores/take bullshit I am sure no woman whose husband provide will ever complain she does the domestics alone (even if it is much for her). It becomes an issue when Party A expect B to handle part of his/her area and is inflexible. I remember a thread of a man whose wife stayed late in her shop (so she wasn't effective at home) and still wasn't contributing to the family purse. It is either she started contributed or stop selling. No eating cake and having it. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:28pm On May 16, 2016 |
Acidosis: * So you believe a husband shouldn't do chores; ok * Should a wife contribute to the family purse? |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:33pm On May 16, 2016 |
Mindfulness: Absolutely the crux of this thread. You can also add you stay at home and expect her to come from work and work for you at home, then there is something doubly wrong. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:35pm On May 16, 2016 |
ronald4lif: @Bold, what if you are solely responsible for finance and she is solely responsible for domestics? |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:38pm On May 16, 2016 |
raumdeuter: The problem i had with Teebliz was 1. He brought their shit online 2. He was stealing from her. All these he slept around, she did not cook, she slept with ABC b/4 marriage, edible caterer, cocaine and drugs, verbal abuse etc. are non-issues to me. (for their class). |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 12:42pm On May 16, 2016 |
I tried not to tie 'equality' in this discourse because it is very broad and not white and black. I was more focused on 'roles' |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Nobody: 1:01pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: It is and it also reveals the misunderstanding in all of it. People think it is about money and power or authority or even feminism when in fact it is about time, energy and the well-being of the person you are actually supposed to love, respect and honor. Which husband would want his wife to work double as much as he does and still expect her to be happy, healthy and beautiful? You can also add you stay at home and expect her to come from work and work for you at home, then there is something doubly wrong. I have seen such a marriage. The woman died very young. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Acidosis(m): 1:04pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne:A man MUST do chores. But a man must not be relegated exclusively to HOME work. A woman can contribute to the family purse if she has the means. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 1:30pm On May 16, 2016 |
Acidosis: You have issues with a husband staying at home for a while.... 1. A man loses his job unfortunately and has to stay at home a while till he gets another 2. A man works from home 3. He earns the proverbial N200k and wifey earns N1m and someone needs to stay at home with the kids a while. What is your take on the above ? |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 1:31pm On May 16, 2016 |
Mindfulness: RIP to her. Next you hear women get older than their husbands not looking at the fundamental issue. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by ronald4lif(m): 2:06pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: In such arrangement then I don't mind rolling on equal footing but I don't know if there's any such thing as sole domestic responsibility. Maybe not to me coz I don't see the possibility of staying in a house I don't partake in the domestic affairs. That will be me seeing the house dirty and untidy etc and not clean it coz I foot the bills. This is ludicrous and practically impossible. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 2:10pm On May 16, 2016 |
ronald4lif: Ok, I get you. @ Bold: Very possible. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by postmann: 2:11pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: quote author=bukatyne post=45597137]@postmann: Stop feeling important ![]() I tagged the two peeps who made me actually start the thread. They felt the culture of women looking up to their husbands as providers was obsolete. Will get back to your epistle. #modified: I was actually expecting more proponents of rigid gender roles. I think you are mixing up a househusband & a husband who is domesticated. bukatyne: In as much as I really don't fancy talking about the lives of married couples, let me just say this; from the little I read, Blizz was the manager, getting her contracts and all that. So he was gainfully employed, however bad a manager he was notwithstanding. But we all know the lives of celebrities. We all know the hardest test for mankind is to successfully manage wealth and fame. So I believed she forgot the Tiwa on stage was only a myth, a stage act with camera rays and lenses projecting a shadowy substance of what she isn't. She forgot she was a wife. Probably. bukatyne: He wasn't a parasite. He was her manager. Managers do a lot in managing their artists. Or maybe you were expecting him to be a Don Jazzy or make his earnings in a completely separate venture from hers. bukatyne: Was president Jonathan the head of the Ijaws even when he was president? Being arguably the richest and most influential didn't make him the head of the ijaws, rather the head was Edwin Clark. A child may become educated and richer than his uneducated father, but he cannot usurp his father's role as the head. And yes, a wife earning more than her husband by no means make her the head. And if you want it in a stronger phrase; women and leadership make a poor couple. bukatyne:Don't allow the modern day working settings becloud you, my dear. From the earliest of times, women have always worked and contributed in small scales to their families. From weaving to light farming. And when they inherited fortunes from their fathers, it became their husbands'. Women contributing to the homes financially or materially has always been. But until the feminist uprising it was never seen as an avenue for authority usurpation. bukatyne: Your husband only. And the woman is the manageress of the home. Be her the president of the Federal Republic Nigeria and her husband a stay at home, good-for-nothing retrograde. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by raumdeuter: 2:14pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: WHy should the husband provide what he used to do when he was the only one working now that they have 2 hands 1. Does a man who work not have rights to buy himself shoes, Ask the wife, how much shoes she has bought herself since she started making money. So he couldn't buy shoes before now what is wrong with him buying shoes. If the house need 500K per month and the man was the only one providing it, Are you expecting him to continue dropping 500k even when the wife is making her own money? 2. If the husband is dropping money for something else why should he drop money for taking care of the kids? If he pays the rent, buys the cars pay the bills should he also pay for the kids? So what does the wife do with her own money? 3. So why is she having a problem with paying half the mortgage of the house she stays in? Does anyone stay free anywhere in the world? If she doesnt want to pay half the mortgage would she park out and stay elsewhere for free rent?? |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by raumdeuter: 2:20pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: That post was about asking for equality in everything not picking one part to ask for equality. If you are a senior accountant that take more responsibility and a colleague who takes less responsibility. Doesnt complain but when it gets to getting official car, she starts asking for equality Maybe women would do better to start asking for equality to do the heavier energy sapping chores, doing the proposals and buying rings, equality in paying for dates, equality in doing tough courses I would be impressed the day women ask for equality in joining the military, equality in number of people fighting Boko Haram, equality in digging wells, working on oil rigs and not just equality in cozy office jobs |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by Nobody: 2:21pm On May 16, 2016 |
Just got back in from the city I was standing on the platform and the train drew in There was a gentleman in front of me when the doors opened He stood back and beckoned that I entered the carriage first There was only one empty seat I stood back a little and he beckoned again and asked me to take it Then I remembered this thread and equality and everything else If that man had rushed to get that seat, I know the kind of looks people would have given him Yet he probably needed it more than me, I dont know Some things men just do and some things women just do |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 2:25pm On May 16, 2016 |
raumdeuter: He doesn't anymore..... instead of contributing half, he contributes nada raumdeuter: And he buys the shoes when it is time to pay school fees? A man has the right to buy whatever he likes.... however, there is time for everything. It is same as a woman changing her bags and shoes while the husband is hustling to pay rent & fees.. Should the proverbial man start dropping zero? raumdeuter:The husband does nada because the wife would not ask. I do not know who handles the rent though. Every other bill, the wife handles because she doesn't ask him. raumdeuter: She has a problem paying half & fully furnishing a house she has not seen the documents while she handles the feeding and all other expenses. She earns half of his pay. I want to believe you are just playing the devil's advocate. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by bukatyne(f): 2:27pm On May 16, 2016 |
tearoses: raumdeuter: Thread was never about equality, it was about roles and the new 'myth' in town that men no longer handle finances once their wives are contributing. |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by raumdeuter: 2:28pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: The stealing from her, we cannot say for certain, Its only Tiwa that said it. I am certain if he also had a 50mins video he would say some damaging things should we believe every of what he says too? I have heard before on this forum that spouses cannot steal from each other or is this only when its the woman doing the taking? https://www.nairaland.com/42446/woman-steal-husband/3 https://www.nairaland.com/146868/steal-spouse https://www.nairaland.com/1294705/what-wife-steals-money-she https://www.nairaland.com/593165/does-taking-money-husband-make/1 https://www.nairaland.com/1257382/what-wrong-taking-money-hubbys I believe the same set of people who supported wifes "taking from their husband, Would be mad Teebillz "took" from Tiwa. So where is this equality? |
Re: Roles In The 'nigerian' Family by raumdeuter: 2:31pm On May 16, 2016 |
bukatyne: This thread is about equality. Equality is the undertone. A wife contributes "equally", shouldnt a husband contribute to domestic work"equally" to ensure no one is not treated unequal |
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