Let’s Talk To Rema
David Bondze-Mbir (DBM): Thank you for participating. What name would you want to go by? (It can be your real first name or any other name of your choosing)
Participant 118: Rema please
DBM: Hello Rema. How would you describe yourself?
Rema: I used to be a very lively, focused and very happy but not anymore
DBM: How happy are you on a scale of 1 to 10?
Rema: Four David
DBM: What do you want to talk about?
Rema: My daughter and my marriage
DBM: How old is your daughter?
Rema: She will be 10 this year
DBM: And, how long have you been married?
Rema: Almost five years
DBM: What’s going on with your daughter?
Rema: David, I had my daughter at an early age. She is very brilliant and very beautiful. She is the kind of child every parent is proud to have. Unfortunately, I have failed her.
DBM: Parenting can be hard
Rema: When I was dating, my husband and his family got to know I had a child. I was invited to bring her over. She was welcomed with open arms or so I thought
DBM: Okay?
Rema: I was told she couldn’t move in with me. My husband lives with his parents. I had to leave my daughter with her dad because my mum is a busy person. I thought if she couldn’t stay with me, at least, she could spend her vacations with me. But that also turned out to be something that was kicked against by my in-laws. I can count the number of times I have seen her these years David. She is in a different region and far away from me. She calls me every time, asking me to come for her. She sends me messages asking why I chose her brother over her and have abandoned her.
DBM: If your actions and decisions are causing emotional damage to your daughter, then you’re not doing something right
Rema: Yes David. I know as a parent I have failed her and keep failing her daily. She apologizes for wrongs she thought she might have committed, thus, me choosing to leave her with her dad.
DBM: Your daughter’s father, how is his character like?
Rema: He is very promiscuous. And it’s gotten so bad that he allows our daughter to stay with his girlfriends’ sometimes
DBM: Why did you choose a man over your own daughter?
Rema: My husband adores her; it’s just his parents. I know it doesn’t make sense but if I were to leave this marriage, my son would be taken away from me. He’s too young, and knowing them, I may not be allowed to be a part of his life. I feel I will put him through exactly how my daughter feels right now. But then again, my husband isn’t ready to move out of his parents’. He keeps telling me to be patient, and that everything will work out eventually. Not that he can’t afford it but his parents threatened him.
DBM: Don’t get me wrong with this; I understand how you equally want to be happy and feel loved and all that, I do get it. But choosing to become a mother was a duty you decided to take on, with the understanding of it altering your life forever, no?
Rema: Yes, it did change my life from the very beginning. I gave birth to my daughter three weeks after WACCE. I couldn’t get the grades an ‘A’ student was supposed to. Nonetheless, I work in the health sector now.
DBM: Why is your husband staying with his parents?
Rema: Because they want him there. His dad said he hasn’t given him the permission to leave yet, because they need someone to be serving them like his wife served his mother. Because they didn’t raise him to this level for him to choose me over them; and that if he should leave without their permission, they won’t talk to him ever again, not even in death.
DBM: How old is your husband?
Rema: 37
DBM: How old are you?
Rema: 31
DBM: Did you know about his family’s dynamics prior to settling down with him?
Rema: No, not at all. I wouldn’t have. They appeared as the nicest people ever. They made me feel loved. His dad could call me as late as 10 pm, just to convince me to allow them go see my people. His mum would tell me how I was an answered prayer to her. But it was all a big lie. They wanted a slave in their mansion; someone they could abuse without you saying a word. The emotional and verbal abuse from his parents is too much for me now. He feels I shouldn’t pay attention to their utterances because its old age
DBM: So, your husband chose his parents over building a future with you. Your daughter is somewhere crying because she’s been choosing you to choose her, yet you do not see the need to be extra picky, ensuring that you never put a man before your child?
Rema: Yes David, that’s the truth I’m refusing to accept. I don’t know why
DBM: Are you done serving your own busy mother?
Rema: No, on the contrary. I didn’t serve my mother. My mum had maids growing up and still does. I was served when I was with my mother.
DBM: I see. What are you going to do?
Rema: I honestly don’t know! I cry myself to sleep almost every night but I’m confused. I know that I have to step up because things cannot remain as they are but then again, will I be happy if I leave my son behind? Won’t it be choosing one over the other? Will my son not also blame me for abandoning him when he grows a little?
DBM: Again, YOU are their mother. So, what makes you think you have to leave your children behind?
Rema: My in-laws have constantly reminded me that I won’t leave with their grandchild. Because they have the power and influence to make that happen. Also, traditionally, the child belongs to the man where we come from. If I threaten my husband that I’m leaving, he will tell me to leave his son behind.
DBM: This is a man you believe is in love with you, and wants to make you happy?
Rema: I thought so, but I’m beginning to doubt his love for me
DBM: How much time do you want to spend away from your daughter?
Rema: Not anymore David! My life is a mess now; my daughter’s words and tears keep hunting me
DBM: Do you think you made that decision to let go of your daughter out of fear, or for the sole purpose of attaining a deeply fulfilling relationship with your husband and his family?
Rema: The latter David. I believed my husband’s promises of a better tomorrow, my daughter inclusive. I had the assurance he was going to do something about it, and how he dearly loved her and would want the best for her as much as I did.
DBM: Is there room enough at their home to house your daughter?
Rema: Yes, four extra rooms are fully furnished
DBM: Most parents often would try interjecting themselves in the lives of their children for reasons best known to them. Is your husband financially independent and mature enough to function without his parents’ influence in his decision making?
Rema: Yes, financially but maturely, I doubt it. His entire life has been centered around them
DBM: Is there an established zone of privacy in your marital home?
Rema: No, not at all. I’m constantly reminded the home is theirs. I can’t even lock my bedroom door 😄
DBM: Oh wow! And in what instances do you feel the most loved by your husband?
Rema: I can’t say; I can’t even remember if there’s any. Yes, I realized I wasn’t my husband’s first choice for marriage, after giving birth to our son. The hurt from that alone is something I can’t describe. Deep down, I know I shouldn’t have pushed through with this marriage. If I was firm from the beginning with what I wanted, things wouldn’t have gone this far. I would have been a lot happier with my children without marriage.
DBM: Anytime I had denied a desire close to my heart, just to serve another purpose in my life – it only led to hurt. Do you have any regrets?
Rema: My biggest regret however is abandoning my child that I sacrificed so much for, just to stay married.
DBM: What priorities in your life right now are of importance to you?
Rema: My kids please. I don’t want to fail the both of them.
DBM: I see you to be a conscious woman and mother. I don’t think of you to be selfish because you are human with needs and desires. Choosing to start a family with your husband wasn’t a selfish act; you did owe it to yourself to want and pursue what you wanted. A woman who is happy with her love life can equally be happy being a mum
Rema: Thanks for your kind words. I could have done better, if I didn’t allow the fear of starting over creep in. I overlooked so many things just to be married. Those very things are my worst nightmares now. Moreover, I should have found myself before the commitment of marriage.
DBM: I am a little concerned only about the fact that, both your husband and his family knew that you were a single mother. Meaning, there was already a sense of responsibility on your part to your daughter. Why they thought it wise to suggest to you to let her go somewhere else is what is troubling me. Did they truly accept you for you?
Rema: I doubt they accepted me fully. The only conclusion I can come up with is the fact that, I was accepted because we are from the same tribe. Like I mentioned previously, their son wanted to marry someone from a different tribe but they rejected her. (I only found out after I married him). Because nothing makes sense to me. My daughter is not even allowed to spend her vacations with me.
DBM: I guess my last question would be, is your marriage worth all the sacrifices you’ve made?
Rema: A big NO. Funny to say this, but I think he doesn’t love me. Maybe he did before but not anymore
Image Credit: any Lane



Kwame yeboah
Be bold n get back ur happiness back. No law in Ghana prohibit you from taking ur child away after divorce. The mother alys be given the first priority to take care of the child. Wise up,