Category: RELATIONSHIPS

RELATIONSHIPS: WHEN LOVE IS GONE-THE END OF LOVE

My ex was my first real boyfriend. I met him when I was twenty-one and in my third level in university. I was doing my internship with a bottling company and he was an Engineer who had just joined them after his national service. We bonded quickly and became firm friends. I went back to school after my mandated two months and we tried to keep in touch through emails, text messages and phone calls. Along the line, these channels dried up to a trickle from both sides. One day, he called to tell me he had just bought a car and would like to visit me in school. I was then in final year. I agreed and we fixed a date.

He asked me out officially that day and said he would want us to think of marriage. I was surprised but happy. I liked him and felt he would make a good husband. We courted throughout my service year and I was lucky to get a job in the same city as he was. By then we had been together for almost three years and I had known him for almost a couple more. He spoke to my parents and they were happy for me. We did the first step of the marriage process and moved in together to save on costs in the city. Everything was going on well and I was dreaming of a wedding within the year.

My ex came back from work one evening and said he was tired of the relationship. He didn’t see himself with me in the long term any more. I asked if he was cheating, if there was another woman but he denied it. Strangely, I believed him. He said he had remapped his life and wanted to travel abroad to study. I said I would come with him, I would wait for him but he refused. This was the end he said. He would be moving out in a week and I could do as I wanted with the rented flat. No question could get any better answer from him. I was angry. I ranted and railed at him. After that, I cried and wailed. These were still angry tears. I couldn’t believe it. When I felt like hitting him, I knew I had to leave the house. I stormed out.

I needed to let it out but who could I talk to? Not my parents certainly. My thoughts were so jumbled. After going round in circles, I called my closest friend and confided in her. She was in shock.  I was also still in shock.  I felt numb.  We talked for a while but could not figure it out. I went back home to find the beans I had been cooking for dinner burning. My ex had also left the flat. We had almost set the house on fire but that was not my major problem. I was consumed by thoughts of our relationship. I relived the years, the months, the days. I agonized over every minute, every word, and every action. It had not really hit me, not yet.  I was overwhelmed but looking back, I had not even begun to truly feel what a breakup meant.

I was hoping we would get back together. I kept thinking and saying “I don’t know what I’m going to do.  What am I going to do? Where am I going to start? This cannot be the end.”  My friend had encouraged me not to think about that, to just get through the next few days. But it wasn’t that easy. I was almost as good as married. I had known my ex for over five years. That was more than half of my adult life. I felt anchorless and lost.  My whole life seemed to have been jarred off-course and I was floating with no clue in which direction to head or where to land. I waited for him but my ex didn’t come back. I remember wondering if I should go to work the day after.  What reason would I use to call in?  I get paid sick days but don’t like to lie.  I was heartsick.  True, I was physically sick to some extent – I felt like vomiting and I did. I heaved out everything in me and at the end I was empty and completely exhausted. I kept telling myself to snap out of it. This was my first relationship and I told myself that I was not special.  People suffer breakups all the time and get over it like swatting away a fly.

The next morning, I got to work dazed and spent most of the day chatting on yahoo messenger with my closest friend. She didn’t try to cheer me up because I told her not to bother. I went unto facebook and changed my status. What I did was remove the option of relationship status completely from my page. Don’t get it wrong, it wasn’t that I wanted everyone to know, not at all. I wanted to use that to see if it would bring my ex back to his senses. I told myself this was just a quarrel, a tiff, an ill wind that would soon blow over. It wasn’t possible that my ex was willing to throw so many years down the drain. I kept shaking my head throughout that day that I almost developed a crick in the neck. After work, I dallied in the office delaying the time to go home and also thinking of what to say to him, strategizing.

Finally I walked out and got on the bus. I remember sitting down and beginning to shed tears almost immediately. I couldn’t stop the tears.  I pulled out my sunglasses and put them on. The tears  just trickled out steadily and I tried to stem the flow with a tissue jammed below the glasses. It was almost dark so I did not get much attention from the other passengers. If I did, I didn’t notice. I was lost in my own world of pain. That ride was a blur.  When I got home, I tried to eat but had no appetite.  I don’t remember eating much that first week.  I do remember looking at the clock or my watch several times and at different points in time. It would calculate the hours and days and minutes and sometimes even seconds. I knew it wouldn’t change anything but still, I couldn’t help doing it. This was the end of love.

By Myne Whitman For GidiNoize

 

RELATIONSHIPS: IN MY MIND.

So while having my daily dosage of lovely articles from my favorite sites, I came across this beautiful piece and thought I’ll share it with you all.I wont even lie, I can relate to this article very much and Im sure you can as well.If you’re a guy and you’re reading this well now you know a little more about we girls.Anyways I think Ive said enough,heres the article, enjoy and TRY RELATE! ;)

I’ve built emotional monuments to men in their absence. And while I’d like to be ashamed over that, I know I’m not alone. I’ve seen my girlfriends and their girlfriends do it. I’ve seen it done in movies. We’ve allowed men who aren’t really that present in our lives to be exceedingly present in our hearts. The unrequited lovers. The flaky fella who has time for you every now and again. The ex you didn’t want to be an ex. The one who skipped out after a couple of amazing (or so you thought) dates.

Since there is a dearth of real, actual time spent with these men, we deal with them on a fantasy level. We allow ourselves to paint this perfect picture of them in our minds. And we dream ourselves compatible with this perfect man in this perfect relationship. The only flaw he has is his inability to see just how happy he could be if he only realized you were the illest chick in the world.

The irony for me: there have been occasions when I have departed the fantasy and had some face time with my should-be boos, only to be very disappointed by what that actually looked like. In some cases, I was able to wake up from the dream; in others, I tried to ignore the lack of compatibility and the character flaws that would have been deal-breakers in other men and choose to keep the fantasy torch burning.

In the instances in which I went on to have relationships with these guys, the feeling of satisfaction I got from getting something I had long wanted was often better than the actual dating. And there was some truth in the things I had imagined. They weren’t bad times at all. But I do myself a disservice by letting these men who aren’t really here (*gestures around the room*) be all up in here (*taps head and heart simultaneously*). I’m too dope to give so much to someone who either chooses to or is unable to give the same to me.

I’m not saying all women do this or that men never see too much in a woman because she isn’t really there to be seen. But I’ve certainly seen enough women do this to know it’s not in our best interest. I’ve come to accept that more often than not, when a man isn’t there, I shouldn’t want so badly for him to be. I want to be wanted and if I’m not, then I should want for something else. If you are sleeping on me, then I don’t need to dream on. If someone can “deny themselves the pleasure of my company” (peace to Zora), I can deny them the space in my heart that should be saved for someone who wants it.

 

Source-Clutch Mag Online
 

RELATIONSHIPS: MY LOVE MIGHT COST YOU A HARRY WINSTON.

I love ‘love’. Don’t deny it. No matter how cynical you are, you love it too. Infact you thrive on love; the feeling you get when you’re with your one-year old boyfriend and you get ‘butterflies’, not to mention the time lag between you and your significant other get together contemplating whether it’s time to say those three words and then the story gets deeper. So when it gets deeper, we start depending on promises that rely on the premise of a ‘happily ever after’ story, a solid commitment and of course…exclusivity.

So automatically, we start to measure love. If he hasn’t found the courage to put his bad-boy status on the line and say I love you…it is quickly assumed that perhaps he doesn’t, if he doesn’t bring you flowers and box of chocolates and a heavier gift wrapped bag that contains the real gift on valentines’ day…he doesn’t love you. Or on your birthday he doesn’t get you the Vivienne Westwood bag you’ve been sending both subtle and obvious hints about.
Obviously, if he spends a good chunk of his cash on you; chances are you mean a lot to him but we place a huge emphasis on symbols of love so we consider what people do to interpret the intensity of their love. And the reason we do this is not far-fetched: we know how we feel about them but don’t know what they feel about us so we look out for what they do.
Problem with love is…it is an emotion. Emotions are dependent on words and actions to express feelings. So we rely on words to convey the emotion or use symbols in their place. How many times in a day he calls to check on you or a dozen roses and champagne and expensive gifts are all pretty nice however it doesn’t prove he’s in love with you. He might as well be doing all those right things to cover up something wrong he’s done and spending massively on you would be a nice way or getting rid of his guilt. And it doesn’t help that there’s no crystal ball to inform you of his thought process or why he did what he did..he might as well want to spend to feed his large ego and ofcourse he knows your friends will oooh and ahh when you unwrap your tasteful gift which might also serve as a fast track ticket into your bed and subsequently…ahem. *cough* *re-adjusting glasses*
Right. Okay. So an engagement ring is a symbol of love. He finally gives you a ring to show for the five-year relationship and the promise of a future. The ring, of course is not the emotion itself because that doesn’t automatically fool proof your marriage because anything can happen. Yup. Even with that ring on your finger (I hope not!). And why do you find yourself analysing the clarity, cut, colour and carat (God bless Mr. X if it isn’t a diamond..if you’re Mr. X, I wish you all the best!). Well you do that because a bigger and more blinding rock means this is the real deal..Right? Wrong. What happens if what he proposes..you get your ring but still not satisfied?
Roses are a symbol of love. Even more special if they’re a dozen roses (still don’t understand the dozen roses idea) so what does three roses then symbolize then? Ok maybe he hasn’t called you in two days..worse still, you text him the forbidden ‘we-need-to-talk’ text but he still ditched you to watch the World Cup for 90minutes of HIS time then calls you and gists you about how Kaita has destroyed the hope of the Super Eagles. As if you care. We’ve become so conditioned to the emotion of love by words or actions that symbolize them that as soon as a few of these symbols are missing, we conclude that there is no ‘spark’ in the relationship. If we explained truly the emotion of love, we wouldn’t need an object to convince us.
I’m not saying symbols should be trashed but primary focus on it means we lust after someone and what they can provide to make us feel like desired. But the less dependent we are on symbols to give value to our relationships, the more we open ourselves up to experience love. True Love.

 

RELATIONSHIPS: ANXIOUSLY SEARCHING

I have a sudden urge to write. There is a big lump in my throat which I’m finding impossible to swallow. It’s quite similar to that feeling you get when you are about to unleash an unending flood of tears except there are no tears this time.

I, like millions of other black African women of my age, am anxiously searching. I am scouring the earth in search of my Mr. Right. Well, not the entire earth, I actually mean my Birmingham surroundings and the overcrowded streets of London. But judge me not. It is not my fault; I can’t help it, it’s the way I’ve been programmed. Nowadays my head involuntarily swivels in the direction of any young brother that fits my specifications.

Tall, dark and handsome, that’s all I ask Lord. I am not desperate I’m just eager to know my future. I mean, if for some reason I find myself falling in love with a short, light-skinned, pot bellied brother I’d like to know now so I can prepare myself for the shocking future awaiting me. Just kidding, no way I’m dating a “lightie”…still kidding.

You might be wondering why I’m suddenly so concerned. Well, I’m going to level with you guys, my biological clock is ticking. On my ever so planned out timeline I am two years behind schedule! I’m meant to be madly in love with my Mr. Right by now with both of us on this incredible journey of self-discovery together.

Sounds cliché? Well, can you blame me? This same perfect picture is what gets painted all around me. In church there’s always some new couple celebrating their 1st anniversary proclaiming their immutable love for each other to the entire congregation; recounting tales of how their teenage love blossomed into the fruitful garden that it is today. Or at home, where my mother constantly badgers me with facebook pictures of her friends’ sons who are successful lawyers, bankers, doctors and the like, all looking for that perfect baby-producing-stay-at-home-wife. Even my dad is in on the action! The other day he asked me why I hadn’t been out of the house except for work. My reply was simply I had no one to hang with. To which he boldly said,

“You are a fine girl; I don’t understand why there isn’t a queue of men at my door begging for your hand. You better grab your net and go fishing before all the cat fish are gone and you are left with tiny sardine.”

Imagine my horror when I heard those words! You know it’s time to prepare for your final flight from the nest when your old man is openly egging his little girl closer to the cradle’s edge.

I guess what I’m trying to say is God created us with an innate need to love and be loved. Whether that be with your family, friends or the society as a whole; there will always still be a gnawing space in your heart waiting to be filled by your God given Adam or Eve. I honestly believe that this anxiety I feel is natural and I need to embrace it for what it is and channel it towards moulding myself into the beautiful wife the bible has thought me to be. Finding a life partner is one of God’s greatest blessings and I intend to be ready to receive it when the time comes. But in the meantime, any eligible bachelors looking for a God- fearing young lady who knows her way around the kitchen should please send their CVs to the below email address:

Gods_gift@singleladies.com

 

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