An estranged
couple coincidentally attended a couples’ summit in Lagos. They had
walked in separately but were already falling head over heels for one
another by the end of that summit. The magical effect of that event was
enormous, as many other marriages regained life right on the spot.
The major problem is that people are getting married for various funny reasons and this goes back to haunt them later. If someone gets married because “all her friends are getting married,” and they are not compatible, when issues start to come up, then they start to run helter skelter. But my take also is that if you have chosen to marry a person, then make the most of it and make your home habitable. For women, I always say, “a wise woman builds her home.”
More dramatic
reunions played out at its 2015 edition which held June 27th in Lagos.
The brain behind that summit, Mrs. Tinuola Agbabiaka, a lawyer and
trained relationship expert, tells of the initiative that has saved
hundreds of relationships and homes in this interview with Vanguard:
Tackling sensitive issues such as marriage can be quite complicated; what’s your strategy?
What we do is balance things. We do not just assume it is the man or the
woman that is the problem. At PCLI, we educate, teach and assist to
change people’s perception about issues when it comes to relationships.
And because these days there are so many doctrines, there is a lot of
hurt in the home. Look around, you must know someone who is either going
through a bad relationship, has gone through a bad relationship or will
go through a bad relationship.
How has your experience been so far?
The task has been tough but fulfilling because by the time someone who
is into a bad relationship cries out, it has really gone deep because it
is perceived a private affair. So the first instinct is to try and
shield it and manage it yourself and then when they decide to speak,
they may be talking to people who would rather condemn or tell them what
they are going through is nothing compared to what another person is or
has gone through.
And when you hear all the bad stories only, you’d almost believe that
there is no good story anywhere. What we are trying to do is to teach
people to manage their relationship in such a way that it is inspiring,
despite its challenges. That’s for genuine partners, anyway.
People hardly seek help in marriage in this part of the world; isn’t that affecting your ministry?
You’re right but that hasn’t really affected us. When PCLI was five, I
clocked 40. So, I launched my book as well as got people together to
testify, knowing well that with relationships, people don’t want to
admit openly that they have issues. But to the glory of God, many were
willing to.
I remember you had a particular couple with a dramatic experience at that anniversary, can you recall what happened?
Yes. That couple was on the verge of divorce when they attended that
summit. In fact, it was the husband’s friend who invited and paid for
them to attend and when they eventually came, they didn’t come together.
To the glory of God, they left together at the end of that programme.
They danced, participated in fun games and other activities.
Three years after, I was at a burial ceremony when a man walked up to me
and said ‘thank you’. I was shocked because I didn’t know him. I later
got to know it was this same man. The husband said when it was time to
dance and he held his wife, he had tears in his eyes. According to him,
staying out together was a start in resolving the issues they had.
Another one was a colleague at work. By the time I met him, he told me
that his marriage was over. Then, we got talking at every opportunity.
On my birthday, his wife and he were also there to testify.
Have you noticed divorce is on the increase even amongst couples who courted extensively...
I have, and I must say a major problem is the foundation. The Bible
says: if the foundation be destroyed, what can the righteous do? It
would be nicer if things were done properly from the home. In other
words, as a mother, you must teach your child the right values. And you
can’t teach what you don’t have. You must teach a lady what to look for
in a man. Don’t marry for money. Money can’t buy love or happiness.
It just hurts that people make silly mistakes with marriage.
But don’t you think too much emphasis is being placed on the girl child than on her male counterpart in building the home?
The man was the first to be created but when the woman was made, she was
made differently and she came with extra gifts. She can reproduce,
multiply and so on. On the other hand, there is a limit to what the
woman can do.
Yes, there is a lot of role for the woman or the girl-child but it’s a
two-way thing, which is why we are coming up with a programme targeted
at young male adults. The purpose is to raise Godly husbands because
there are not many out there right now. And the problem is that you
can’t give what you don’t have. Who is teaching them? Who is their role
model?
There are so many bad examples that even the good ones are almost
embarrassed to rise up to say the right things. You find a man who helps
his wife iron her clothes because he sees it as a duty but how many
persons can he tell that to without being labeled a ‘woman-wrapper’? And
a lot of times, you find out that most of the programmes out there
focus on financial strength. But financial strength does not make a home
otherwise all rich people will have happy homes. We have to teach our
men how to be proper husbands and treat a woman well.
You find parents telling their girl-child to keep their virginity but
the boy is allowed to roam with his weapon of mass destruction. They
simply tell him to use a condom. This is wrong.
What inspired the two issues of concern at your recent summit?
Respect for the man, as well as money management, are very key in any
relationship or home. You see, a man craves respect from his woman and
the woman wants love. Respect your man, he will love you.
The second issue, money, is the most divisive issue in the home next to
sex. It comes in different dimension. You find men who are jobless these
days and the woman has to become the breadwinner.
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