Friday, December 22, 2006

Marry or Die

Everyone's doing it. Jumping the broom, tying the knot, lugging the ol' ball-and-chain - call it what you will, it just keeps happening: marriage. The incessant influx of wedding websites to Adaure's blog is a very obvious indication that people, especially my people, just cannot seem to wait any longer to join themselves in holy matrimony, 'til death or divorce do them part. And they're taking the single ones along for the ride. From flashy engagement ceremonies in Nigeria to elaborate church weddings in New York, our young men and women are eager to show their love to anyone who will respond to their invitations, and promises of a buffet and open bar. An open bar gets me every time - I can never resist a dance with Monsieur Chardonnay and his friends, Jose, Jack and Sam (Adams, that is). But I cannot help but think that this rush to the altar is just a chain of reactions to the actions of a few deluded couples who think marriage will complete them. A herd reaction, if you will.

I'm not a cynic, and I don't think that everyone who gets married will get divorced (though the stats speak for themselves). I just think that our reasons are wrong, especially among Nigerians. The top three reasons our people get married are, in a word, ridiculous:

1) It is our responsibility as children of God
2) We got pregnant
3) It was just time

The third reason is the one most commonly used by the men. You see, when it is "time", the very next girl who agrees to enter into a relationship with them is inevitably, unavoidably, The One. Excellent strategy, gentlemen. Availability trumps romance, and the messiness of true courtship can be avoided since the girl is almost instantly thrown into planning the wedding. I don't suppose they can be blamed, though. It's the young women who allow themselves to be flattered by a marriage proposition right off the bat. And yes, it is a proposition, not a proposal. Because, you see, for these men, marriage is like a business transaction that must be completed in a timely fashion before the stock value falls. Whose stock? Theirs. If the young lady actually requests some time to get to know him a little better before she agrees to his offer of instant-marriage, it's a deal breaker. Because she might actually discover one or two things about him that he needs to work on before he drags someone into a lifelong contract, in which case he would actually have to become a better man. And that's too much work. Now or never, darling, he laughingly threatens, a sinister glistening in the back of his eye. And the young lady, prodded on by nosy aunts, sisters and her mother, a barrage of websites detailing weddings to die for, and the fact that "nobody has ever been so serious about marrying me before", stupidly resolves that this is God's will for her and agrees to marry this man she barely knows. Five years and four children later, when she realizes that he's been hitting on all her friends, including the maid of honor at her wedding, who was extremely flattered that he would make her his mistress - and potential second wife - so soon, she wonders why life is so unfair.

I speak from experience. But I'm suspicious even of people who eat too quickly, so I backed out, declared that I needed more time. Three months later, he sent me an invitation to his Mediterranean wedding and now, he just pops up occasionally to invite me to be his paramour and ask me why I ruined all our plans. Our plans? Hm.

Personally, I don't think I'm hardwired for that phase of life. I see people exchanging handcuffs - I mean, rings - and I get nauseous. What's so wrong with dating, people? The white man even came up with a brilliant solution for people like me: common law marriage. If you can stick it out long enough, you might as well be married, so he declares that you are. And you don't even have to worry about spending all that money on a frivolous wedding. Brilliant! Of course, Nigerians wouldn't allow that. Marry or die, that's the motto where I come from. But I wonder why anyone wants to marry a Nigerian man anyway. Noncommital, irresponsible, selfish, arrogant, inconsistent, and dishonest - all in a half-assed package that isn't even gift-wrapped. They show their asses right up front - unless they want to get married, of course. Then you have the pleasure of discovering your grave mistake either moments or decades after you've made it, but certainly only after it's too late to do anything about it. Try, and risk the weight of society bearing down on you: your parents complaining that you want to bring shame on the family; your so-called friends waiting to laugh behind your back, even as they commiserate with you on your failed life plan; your children who will certainly be abandoned and forced to go to a badly-funded public school, perhaps helping you sell akara to pay their school fees, or even worse, they will be taken from you and raised by an evil stepmother who gives them whippings for breakfast; your pastor condemning you to hell for even thinking about breaking your vow before God and man. Forget that he broke the vow first; as a woman, you must be the strong one, the cross bearer. Forgive him, and while you're at it, bring him back to Jesus - now that's he's your husband, it's your responsibility to see that he makes it to heaven.

To be fair, Nigerian girls aren't much better either, these days. The country is facing a moral crisis and the future mothers of the nation are getting sucked into this ethical black hole. If they're not marrying for money, they're numb to the immorality of men and, indeed, encourage the underhanded behaviors that take place in the dark of night (or the light of day, depending on schedules and the degree of callousness). Why else would it be all right for a man to employ, for the lack of a better word, confusing methods to approach a young lady? Because in Nigeria these days, men no longer deem it necessary to look you in the eye or even talk to you directly when they want to get you in bed. Like blind cave-dwelling bats, all they need to do now is register your feminine form with their (uncanny) radar before they swoop in for the sex. They toss a flippant greeting in your general direction, then walk right past you and send their personal assistant back to get you. Not your number - you. This happened to me too. Apparently, he thought I was playing hard to get because I kept rejecting his third-party advances. Eventually, when the PA approached me for the fourth time, a nearby security guard took it upon himself to get rid of him and warn me that "these men are touts". But clearly, more than a few Nigerian girls respond positively to these inane gestures - insulting gestures, actually - or the men would not continue to behave thusly. So what does this say about our people? A mass Christian movement, hours spent in communication with God, a culture that supposedly does not support such loose behavior, and still this is what we are?

Methinks I'd rather die than marry that, if I must marry at all.
What say you?

13 comments:

metameme said...

i second that opinion, thank you! i'm she of the shameless gushfest a few posts back, btw. i finally joined the blogsphere... couldn't help but be inspired by yours and others' writing:)

so, i dont know what is WITH this insane wedding fever. it's like a pandemic of some sort. honestly - i just dont get it. how do literate people with an appreciation of statistics as a concept just JUMP into it with such reckless abandon? granted my inbuilt level of risk-aversion is higher than most, but still. i can't really speak for nigeria but i'd certainly say the same is true of east africa.

i know this will sound really horrible and offend some but in the name of free speech and all that good stuff, i think what it is a lot of the time is sex-sanctioning. you know - they want to have sex, but "good" ladies and gentlemen don't do that till their married so, "hey! brainwave! lets get married!" that's honestly the only reason i can think to explain the recent trend of 22, 23 yr old brides and grooms in my country. you barely know what route you want your life to take at 22, much less who you want to spend the duration of its entirety with!i have nothing but respect for the no-premarital-sex school of thought, btw - but dont let that be the "when to get married" deciding factor.

as for the frantic-rush-to-the-altar older crowd... i dont know. just... have we learnt NOTHING from our parents? god.

lala said...

Haha! You are some kind of funny my dear but you really do bring up important stuff. One thing is at our age, I'm 30 ... marriage is like the next step. You have your education and career in line, now you want the babies. Nothing wrong with that, to me. But the problem is, a lot of people have never bothered to reach deep in themselves and know who they really are. They still judge themselves by what society has determined to be the right thing so thats what they must do. Never say never, Ms. Kulu, cos when that fine brother comes and sweeps you off your feet, all this your shakara oloje will end by force :)But keep hitting us with the truth, we love you.

Confused Naija Girl said...

i love your posts. my friend and I have been discussing about the same thing, my friend even blogged about it.
its true. I hope someday , thins will change in naija. i ssee that the younger generation might be changing (slowly but surely)

NaijaBloke said...

Come to think of it,u guys are refering to pll particularly ladies getting married in their early 20s.Can anybody ask their grandparents and parents how old they were when they got married,cos our parents were getting married at a pretty young age and it just that ppl r getting married late in Nigeria now cos of the situation in Nigeria.
Most of the young ppl that r jumping the broom nowadays are either done with or almost don with either their education and careers and decided that it is definately the next step.

Like I always tell my mum(she always tell me to shut up though),not everybody will be successful in life,so it applies to marriage as well,not everybody will get married.

Merry Xmas Aunty KULU ..u know thatz what ur new niece will be calling u soon ..LOL

I will be hanging with friends for xmas o,we r already planning a house party for Xmas day with lotz of BOOZEEEEEEE ..so I have been dropping hints for them at work that I might come in late on Tuesday and with an hang over...U can imagine working on Boxing day ..damn I miss Naija

kulutempa said...

@meta: you're absolutely right with about the sex sanctioning theory, particularly among the right wing. and that's just unfortunate. i went to school with a bunch of missionary kids, and so many of them get married even before they're done with college, to people they've been dating their whole teenage lives. i look at them and wonder, why would i fall in love with and want to marry a kid??

@ lala: i find your blog very informative, esp the things you read. that's just an aside. re: your contention that this is just shakara oloje that i'm doing, i dunno, mayn...i hate feeling trapped, and that's all that marriage represents to me. but that's me; i respect people who feel like that's the next step in their lives. i just don't think i'll ever feel that way about that particular step; there'll always be other things i could do.

@ confused: i have to disagree with you on that issue. i think the younger generation is degrading every second. maybe it's because they don't have good examples to look toward. God knows my issues with this whole marriage thing stem from examples that adults set in my life. the young boys and girls i know are rotten through and through, when it comes to sex and things of that nature. that's just my p.o.v.

@ naijabloke: the issue here is not age, it's level of enlightenmnent and common sense. russians used to get married at age 12; does that mean it makes sense for 12 year olds to get married today? have a great christmas, man...working on boxing day no sweet sha, but na you come america, i sure say them no drag you! lol...E.Z!

Doc A said...

Auntie Kulu, now that is my problem with everything, sometimes i dont feel people actually take time to get to know one another before rushing it. Its like this couple I know, both turning 30, been together 3-4yrs and there's all this pressue from both their fam to get married, but truth be told their relationship absolutely sucks, but because they are from teh same area in naija, its a match made in heaven for the family! I predict a wedding in a yr and a divorce in 5yrs max!

Unknown said...

Thats what life is all about its a vicious circle. U are born, go to school, grow up, get educated, work, marry, have children, children go to school, get educated, work, marry, the cirlcle continues!! Its inevitable!! Its just that our society makes so much noise about getting married and try to pressurize us into jumping the broom sooner once u start approaching the big 30.

Anonymous said...

Hey I gotta say that I’m 24 and happily married. I have to admit that if deportation wasn’t looming, I probably wouldn’t have gotten married so soon, but I love him and would have stayed with him even if I didn’t have to worry about immigration shit. I gotta admit the issues abound, but still a very sound decision, for me.
We can't really put an age on when it's right to get married...frankly I’m repulsed by the "next step" argument. Isn't part of becoming an adult realising that you are the only one that can put such constraints on your life? There is no "next step" unless you want there to be one.
I really fucking hate when I talk to my aunt and she tells me that I'm going to leave my husband and come to my senses and marry an Igbo man. Tufia!!! “Noncommital, irresponsible, selfish, arrogant, inconsistent, and dishonest - all in a half-assed package that isn't even gift-wrapped”-Huzzah for truth...your every word was accurate.
You have no idea how many times I’ve searched my soul for the answers to why women stay with these types of scum bags. I get lectures about inconsequential bullshit like tattoos, piercings, drinking and smoking. But rape, inscest, child molestation and adultery are part of “being a man.” FUCK THAT NOISE! When did morality take a back seat to culture? When did lawlessness become a staple of that culture?
To the idiots that marry for sex- it's just that-sex. If it takes having premarital sex to figure out whether your other is the one...then just FUCK!
Man, this subject gets me going because I’ve seen this all first hand. I have a girlfriend who's doing an arranged marriage because her parents said it's time and she like mu-mu really believes that shit. She's been dating for the past 6 years and has lied to them about it, saying that she hasn't had a boyfriend.
People, we're not 12. Who and when we marry is not a decision that’s to be left up to society and family. It’s a personal, true and deep commitment and I hate how it’s become a frivolous pastime to solve the ennui of youth. Complacency is a cancer that is rotting our people from the inside out. We’re simply hollow shells of humanity, but who has time for change? Apparently decency is a luxury.

NaijaBloke said...

Happy new year aunty Kulu ..where u been dey abi dem dan marry u off to one chief in Zululand ni ..LOL

Hope u r aiight sha

Anonymous said...

forgot to comment on this one when last I read it, but yes it was as though you were in the room with us when my guy told me those exact words: "It's time" ... all with this wild look of anticipation and Im just lookin at him with a big fat shioo of an expression.
Anyway that was funny.as always

Anonymous said...

can you imagine that my own mother said that it is better to get married and get divorced than never get marriedat all. i guess she is raelly despairing cos im 27 and have no husband and no visisble way of getting one, so in short put up with any old rubbish as long as you get married sha!!

Anonymous said...

To all my intelligent ladies out there, please learn from my own STUPID mistake by not feeling pressurred to get married because you are fast approaching your thirties or are in your thirties.

Though you may be eager to tie the knot and be called Mrs X or be included in the "married people" category, take the time to know the character of your boyfriend/fiance before accepting a marriage proposal.

Make sure you are fully satisfied with the way he treats you both in private, public and around his family.

Don't ignore any traits exhibited by him that may cause problems in the future.

Be honest within yourself.

No mattar the circumstances, don't let any man talk you into marriage when papers are involved even if he marries you the proper way. The sad truth is you will never know if he truly loves you and that is a horrible feeling to have the rest of your life.

Let him who has ears...listen and learn!

Anonymous said...

this piece is hilarious! thank you for shedding insight into this debacle of social theater. the performance must be exposed. until we step off stage, these "marriages" will continue to be the most vintage reality television: scripted and predictable in public, a hot mess behind the scenes.