The N50,000 Controversy: Never Marry A Man Who Has Television But Has No Vision

When I met my wife, my salary was N33,000 monthly. That was what I earned as an entry level hire then. Yes, I agree that N33,000 that time had more value than the same amount now.
However, to put things in proper perspective, a SIM card around the time when I got married in 2002 was about N20,000. My salary was therefore just a bit more than the cost of a SIM card. I recall that banks actually gave loans to customers to buy 'handsets' then.
My wife was in her final year at Olabisi Onabanjo University when we decided to get married. I was 27 and she was 25. I'd been working for barely two years. I didn't have a car when we started dating but later I was able to 'buy' a Volvo 340 DL through a miraculous intervention.
The dealer gave me the car and I paid in two instalments- with the first instalment six months after I got the car. I remember driving the car the first time to Olabisi Onabanjo University where she was and she and her friend hitching a ride back to Ibadan from Ago-Iwoye.
I slept off on the wheel, veered off the road and almost went off a cliff. My fiancee and her friend were also fast asleep!
I just moved away from my parents home to a two-bedroom flat I rented at Ashi in Ibadan. My rent was N27,000 per annum and the flat was part of 8 flats within the compound similar to a civilian barrack. That was the best I could afford then.
We stayed in that N27,000 per annum flat for a long time. We jointly agreed that we should not stay in a house where we can't afford to pay the yearly rent from a month's salary or income.
From there, we moved to a 3-bedroom bungalow that was N50,000 per annum and later increased to N100,000 per annum. We agreed not to buy things on credit. If we can't pay cash for it, it means we can't afford it.
The first time my fiancée (now my wife) visited me in that 2-bedroom flat, all I had was just a 14 inch Sharp television which I bought in the University. I had that Sharp TV for many years even after we got married and only gave it away a few years ago.
But my wife saw beyond that television. I had no furniture in my sitting room during her first visit. My sitting room was overlaid with a beautiful wine rug and any visitor had to sit with me on the rug as we watched my 14 inch TV delicately placed on a 'stool'.
A short while after, I was part of a 4-man 10k per month esusu contribution team and I used my 40k 'esusu' contribution to purchase my first piece of furniture- a black leather couch- which you see in the attached picture. We were not yet married when these pictures were taken.
I cherished the furniture so much that I never sat on it. Only my fiancee (wife) was allowed to sit or lay on it. I remember I bought that furniture from a showroom opposite Group Medical at Mokola, Ibadan.
As we planned for the wedding, a few of my friends were scared for me. They felt it was too early and I didn't have 'anything'. My wife was writing her project. I couldn't afford a ready-made suit for the wedding.
I went to Ekotedo where a tailor who was introduced to me sewed my suit and that of my best man, Kola Fabeku. I bought the striped material from Mandillas in Lagos. My wife's wedding gown was sewn by a young male fashion designer around Agbowo.
I couldn't afford a new leather box to carry my wife's items during the 'engagement' ceremony so I borrowed from Titilayo Tijani who got married a few months before us. My wife magnanimously put some old clothes in the box. I couldn't afford the list given to me on a 33k salary.
On the engagement day, I locked up the box with a padlock and put the key in my pocket. During the ceremony, they wanted to open it so as to look at the clothes I bought for my wife but I joined them in looking for the key.
After the ceremony, I took back half of the tubers of yam I bought and a bag of salt. Our new family needed the food more than them.
We got married and my wife would later go for her National Youth Service. I knew she couldn't be idle so I saved up some money to open a video club for her. That Video Club called Colours was very popular at Ashi. My wife also did events planning and decorations.
I followed her some weekends to decorate events while I emceed a few. My Volvo 340DL carried potted plants, balloons, tyre rims and other decor items. We kept those items in our spare room. I converted the car to a cab in the evening where I plied Sango-Apete axis in Ibadan
When I closed from work, I removed my jacket and tie, put on a fez cap and resumed as a cab driver. We needed the money. Some weekends, I turned it to a charter cab and plied long distance trips. Those were the days when the songs of Gbenga Adenuga were popular.
My wife knew that money alone does not a good marriage make. She saw beyond the present and looked far into the future. I was a dreamer and I still am. I told her about my goals. So she saw beyond my 14 inch television and saw my vision.
Never marry a man who has television but has no vision. She knew that if you marry a man whose main obsession are the things he possesses, then get ready to become part of the possessions. A woman should be more concerned about a man's prospects than his pockets.
If he has prospects, he is perfect for you.
Never define a marriage by the size of a man's pocket but by the largeness of his heart. If he's good, the lack of money will never diminish his goodness. If he's bad, the presence of money will never amplify his goodness.
A man can be poor in terms of quantifiable treasure but rich in character. Some people are so poor that all they have is just money. I am not trying to diminish the role of finance in romance but that is not the principal thing.
A chest full of treasures does not mean a woman will be treasured.
You have to make a choice- either to marry a man who possesses things or marry a man who is possessed- by a beautiful vision of tomorrow. If all you can see is my today, you have no stake in my future. Marry a man you believe in. Equally important, marry a man who believes in you
Don't marry a lazy man. Don't marry a foolish man. A foolish man doesn't think things through. His thinking capacity is low. He makes poor decisions about a lot of things. A foolish man is more concerned about now than tomorrow.
Marry someone who has a greater thinking capacity than you. Be more moved by the depth of a man's intellect than by his financial prowess. Marry a man who values you more than his valuables. But then, by all means, marry based on your convictions.
If you desire not to settle for a man who earns less than N50,000, do so without guilt. Each person will live with the consequences of their choices.
We have been through difficult times. My wife and I have eaten white rice sprinkled with just palm oil and salt before. We couldn't afford to cook stew or even meat. We waited for a child for 8 years. But our commitment got us going. Money is useless in certain circumstances.
Money does not guarantee a lifetime of happiness. A lot of rich people will willingly give up their wealth for happiness. The rich also cry.
16 years on, we are not certainly where we were before. I continue to dream and she's still in love with this dreamer.
I told her recently that I look forward to a period where I will take her on a vacation for a whole year- all around the world. That's my next dream. And it will cost more than N50,000.

(I wrote this article 2 years ago on Nov 3, 2018).

Bayo Adeyinka

@threadreaderapp unroll
You can get my books by sending a DM to @Rovingheights . The books are great value for your money.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Bayo Adeyinka

Bayo Adeyinka Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @greaterbayo

2 Nov
The Gatekeeper Strategy & Other Ideas - (5)- With All Thy Getting, Get Lagos

Let’s do a little bit of history.

In 2003, the party at the centre, PDP, launched a powerful political onslaught to ‘capture’ the South West States of Oyo, Ogun, Ondo, Ekiti, Osun and Lagos States.
It was a blitzkrieg that swept off all the Alliance for Democracy-led South West States and left only Lagos standing. Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu was the Governor of Lagos State then.
Using Lagos as pivot, Tinubu fought, expanded his influence in the Region and clawed his way back until a point all the States in the South West were back to a party in which he was a founder- the Action Congress. He was able to do this because of the immense resources of Lagos
Read 26 tweets
30 Oct
What Next After The Protest?- The Gatekeeper Strategy & Other Ideas - 4

I shared my thoughts on raising money in the last write up. Now, I want to deal with something that has been a constant refrain in our politics. This is a major reason decent people stay away from politics.
4. Tackling Electoral Violence and Thuggery

I had my introduction to political violence and thuggery during my foray into campus politics during my undergraduate days.
When I contested the first time for the Presidency of the Students Union, someone I knew closely and asked me to step down for one of my opponents. I refused. He told me point blank that if I refused, they would kidnap me and won’t release me until the election was over.
Read 27 tweets
28 Oct
What Next After The Protest?- The Gatekeeper Strategy & Other Ideas - 3

I discussed the Gatekeeper Strategy in the last update. I now want to share my thoughts about one of the factors I believe is very important when seeking political power.
In 2018, a 29-year old Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez won her election as a United Dtates Representative by defeating 10-term incumbent Joe Crowley. It was a really big upset and she is the youngest woman ever to serve in the United States Congress.
While putting her strategy together, she said, “You can't really beat big money with more money. You have to beat them with a totally different game”.
Read 18 tweets
27 Oct
Leadership Reflection : How To Live Forever 

One of the greatest abilities of exceptional leaders is their capacity to build for the future. A true leader always thinks tomorrow even though he lives today. The present is too little to contain the exceptional leader.
His realities may be in the present but his sight is set on the future. That is why he is always a step ahead of others. He doesn't live in today- he lives in tomorrow. People can't stop talking about them because of how they lived in tomorrow for tomorrow.
If your actions are just for the present, your memory will not endure. That is why it is easy to forget so many leaders.
Read 17 tweets
26 Oct
What Next After The Protest?- The Gatekeeper Strategy & Other Ideas - 2

In the first part, I gave a background and referred to the October 1945 Pan-African Congress which held in Manchester, United Kingdom exactly 75 years ago.
In this post, I want to propose a few thoughts on how to move ahead. I believe these are critical steps to be taken if we don’t want the gains of the protests to go into oblivion.
1. It’s Time For Political Engagement
You have echoed loudly but to make that transition into being a voice, you need political power. Real change can only happen through the ballot box.
Read 23 tweets
26 Oct
Monday Motivation: A Letter From Prison That Was Never Delivered

Exactly 3 years ago on October 26, 2017, I was at Kirikiri Medium Prison (now Correctional Centre) where I was handed a letter (see actual letter posted).
It was a letter of anguish. Though written in smattering English, it was meant to invoke deep pity for the author and spur the recipient to action. The inmate who wrote it wanted help in securing his freedom.
I was at the Prison with @Lamboginny to secure the freedom of 27 inmates whose fines we paid by raising the sum of N850,000 for them via social media.
Read 13 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!