If you're a single lady and have been under pressure to find a man that will put a ring on your finger.
This is the time to get your acts together and position yourself
properly. Stop playing hard to get, especially if you know that age is
not on your side and it's worse if you are not even a beautiful girl.
This lady selected men when she was young.
Now men are 'scarce' for her. See her story below:
Show Me The Market Where They Sell Husband, I Will Buy One...
I have heard the question ‘are you married?’ more than the birthday
wishes I receive annually. At first, I used to sheepishly answer ‘no
oooo, not yet’, then I continued to ‘very soon’.
After a while, I
started claiming it by fire by force, claiming that the man is on his
way to meet me. All these haven’t changed the fact that some years down
the line, I am still not married.
I have been in relationships that were good and some bad. The good ones
happened when I was much younger and not ready to settle down; but the
bad ones have taught me the lesson of a lifetime. My last one got me
dishing out my money on a regular basis. All he had to do was come up
with some story of being unable to carry out some projects due to some
financial incapability. I was earning twice as much as he earned, would
take a cab to and from his place on weekends. Sweet Lover Boy would just
stand by the cab and wave me bye when he was leaving. I would cook his
favourite dishes too; all he had to do was say what he wanted to eat.
All these were with myvery hard earned Naira. I never missed a moment
to surprise him – buying gifts, calling him hourly- all because I wanted
a ring on my finger.
It eventually collapsed after I met his mum. Because, seemingly for no
reason, she did not like me and found me not worthy of her son. It was
too late to count my losses. How can I forget? He even lost his job
mid-way into our 8 months relationship and yes, the virtuous woman in
Proverbs 31 would have had to contest with me if she had a face. I was
fending for both son and mother. Lover boy would always complain of B if
he got A and complain about D when I made sure he eventually got B.
Before you start saying ‘maybe, you are not good looking’, I dare say
that if it was beauty that kept a man, then Prince Charles would never
have left Diana. I am 5’7 and pretty. However, the men I have met after
my ‘tales in hell’ relationship are either married or about toget
married. That is not a life I would want for myself. Before you also say
maybe you gave too much away by cooking his meals or being generous or
sympathetic, I say to you ‘how can you please the world’?
The guy I dated before Sweet Lover Boy got mesomething new every time we
met, took me to places I had only dreamed of, but I never got him
anything. At a point, he felt I was stingy. I never called with my
airtime despite his purchases of same for me. When we eventuallybroke
up, he told me to my face that I did not love him. In retrospect, I
loved him, but I was with the mindset that giving a man anything would
cheapen the reason of their existence. Ithurt me when we broke up and
then I resolvedto give and give and give and give in my next
relationship.
Almost all of my friends and colleagues are married, and from the look
of things, it seems like a good place to be in. The ‘my husband’, ‘my
wife’ tales are good to listen to sometimes.To love and be loved is the
sweetest thing that could ever happen to anyone. I desire that. In the
meantime, I am where I am, fasting and praying for this man.
Like couples long for a child and ache at the sight of toys or children
parties, I long for an engagement ring and to splatter my wedding
pictures on Facebook (whether high profile or not), I long to gist
others about ‘my husband did this or said this’ (whether true or not).
Until he comes, I am here, focusing on other things, moving my life
forward, being a better person every day. Technology has a bank for
sperm or eggs for couples experiencing infertility, sadly, there isn’t
any for men.
So, friends and colleagues, church members and distant relatives, until
you show me the market where to buy one from, please stop asking me if I
am married.
By Helen Smith