
My father-in-law nearly turned my wedding into a spectacle. If my mom had seen what he did, it would have been an unending fight between them. I know my mom and her no-nonsense attitude, so immediately the issue happened, I approached my sister and told her never to mention it to my mother—and I’m grateful she never did.
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My father-in-law, right from the start, wanted to make the marriage about him and what he wanted from me. He gave us a huge dowry list and said there was no way he was going to reduce it. I didn’t tell my parents about it. I thought my soon-to-be wife and I could handle it, but this man said no. He never reduced the amount or took a pin off the items list.
A week to the traditional marriage, he changed the venue for the event. At first, we had agreed we were going to hold the traditional marriage in another house close to his. His house was small and didn’t have the aesthetics for the wedding, so he suggested we use a neighbor’s house.
Just a week to the event, he called me. He said, “I’ve thought about it, and it’s not good that we’ll do the traditional wedding over there. Let’s just buy some paint and get a few artisans to put this place in order. We can do it here.”
I was a little frustrated, so I asked my wife-to-be to handle it. When his daughter approached him, he got angry that he had spoken to me like a man and I was involving a woman. “Is that how you’re going to do in your marriage? You’ll bring your wife into every issue?” he asked me. “I spoke to you man to man, so why is your wife asking me questions?”
This issue dragged on for days. He still insisted that he wanted the wedding at his own compound, or else he wouldn’t attend. So, as late as 12 a.m. on the morning of our wedding, painters and carpenters were at his residence, giving the house a quick facelift for the wedding to happen there.
I was angry and nearly called him out on the way he was treating us, but my wife-to-be asked for patience, and I listened. In the morning during the wedding, a lot of people got their clothes stained with paint. You touched a wall, and your fingers carried paint. You sat on a surface, and your clothes picked up paint. It was frustrating, but he sat there laughing as if he had won a lottery.
The traditional wedding was successful. In the afternoon, we carried on with the white wedding. My sister was put in charge of the gift table. While the reception was going on, I could see my father-in-law talking to my sister and leaving repeatedly. I thought it was just about questions and answers, so I ignored it.
Just before the reception ended, my sister came to whisper in my ear that my father-in-law had collected all the cash gifts that were presented, saying I had agreed with him to collect them. I told her to go back and retrieve them because I knew nothing about it.
After the reception, I asked my sister, and she said, “He didn’t give them to me. He insisted he would talk to you.”
My wife called him on the phone, asking why he did that. He was rather angry that she would even ask him such a question. “Did your husband tell you to ask me that? Ask him if he paid for all the paint we used. Ask him if the carpenters were paid in full. I used my money for all that, so I’ve collected it.”
The call was on loudspeaker. My wife kept asking, “Dad, what kind of embarrassment is that? Do you want to disgrace me in front of my in-laws?” He answered, “They should rather be embarrassed that their son didn’t pay all that money.”
I didn’t say anything but asked my wife to be calm about it. She called her mom and reported it. Her mom was shocked and added that they had paid everyone and even used her own money to settle the last outstanding payment.
So from that day, I knew what I had to do. I knew that if I was going to enjoy my marriage, I had to cut him off. During the thanksgiving service the next day, I kept my distance. When he tried talking to me, I pretended to be busy. By the time we were leaving his home, I blocked his number and told my wife, “From now on, everything that has to do with your father, please count me out of it. He’s your father, not mine.”
He has tried calling me on several occasions. He has called my wife and asked her to give the phone to me, but I declined, and my wife was also blunt. She said, “After stealing his gift, you think he’ll laugh with you?”
When our first child came, a boy, we didn’t invite him to the naming ceremony. He kept asking for the date we were going to do it. My wife kept telling him she wasn’t sure until it was done. He said we had disrespected him. He tried calling me with his wife’s phone, but immediately I realized it was him, I cut the call. He kept asking my wife, “So one day when any issue comes, will your husband seek my help?”
I responded to him in my head, “Are you the only father alive? I would rather talk to a stranger for advice than a man like you.”
What Nobody Tells You About Divorce
I don’t know how the future will turn out, but I don’t think I’ll ever bring this man any closer to our marriage. What he did was enough to shake the foundation of our marriage. It was enough for me to hate my wife for it. Why must she have a father like him? This could have caused a huge fight between us, but I kept calm and instead cut him off. It’s going to remain like that as long as it brings us peace.
—Sarfo
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You’re a man. This is so good to read when I see people making an effort to keep their peace
I never thought I would be the kind of person to question the loyalty of someone I loved so deeply. For years, I believed trust was something that came naturally in a relationship, something you didn’t have to fight for or second-guess. But life has a way of testing even the strongest beliefs, and mine was tested in a way I never expected.
It started with small things—subtle changes that were easy to ignore at first. My partner became distant, more protective of their phone, and less emotionally available. Conversations that once flowed effortlessly became short and forced. At first, I blamed stress, work pressure, or even myself. I told myself I was overthinking, that I needed to be more understanding.
But deep down, something didn’t feel right.
The feeling grew stronger each day, turning into anxiety that I couldn’t shake. I found myself overanalyzing every little detail—late replies, unexplained absences, sudden changes in routine. It was exhausting, both mentally and emotionally. I felt stuck between wanting to trust and fearing the truth.
I knew I needed clarity, not assumptions.
That was when I decided to take a step back and approach the situation differently. Instead of acting out of fear or jumping to conclusions, I focused on finding the truth in a way that wouldn’t destroy me in the process. I reached out for guidance and support—someone who could help me understand what I was dealing with and how to handle it wisely.
The process wasn’t about invading privacy or doing anything harmful. It was about gaining clarity, observing patterns, and understanding behaviors that I had been ignoring. I started paying closer attention—not just to actions, but to consistency, communication, and emotional connection.
What I discovered wasn’t easy to accept.
There were clear signs that my partner had been emotionally involved elsewhere. It wasn’t something dramatic or obvious at first, but the evidence became undeniable over time. Conversations lacked sincerity, priorities had shifted, and there was a clear disconnect between words and actions.
I won’t lie—it hurt deeply.
There’s a different kind of pain that comes with realizing someone you trusted has not been completely honest with you. It shakes your confidence, your self-worth, and your understanding of the relationship. But as painful as it was, I also felt something unexpected…
Relief.
Relief that I was no longer living in confusion. Relief that I wasn’t “overthinking” or imagining things. Relief that I finally had the clarity I needed to make a decision about my life.
That clarity changed everything.
Instead of reacting with anger or desperation, I chose to handle the situation with calmness and self-respect. I confronted my partner—not with accusations, but with facts and observations. The conversation was difficult, but it was necessary. And in that moment, everything became clear.
There was no more denial.
What followed wasn’t easy, but it was empowering. I made the decision to prioritize myself—my peace, my dignity, and my future. For the first time in a long while, I felt in control again.
Looking back now, I realize that what I needed wasn’t just answers—I needed strength. Strength to face the truth, strength to accept it, and strength to move forward.
This experience taught me some powerful lessons:
Trust your instincts — if something feels off, it’s worth paying attention to.
Clarity is better than confusion — even painful truth is better than endless doubt.
Self-respect matters more than holding on — never lose yourself trying to keep someone else.
You deserve honesty — always.
Today, I’m in a much better place—mentally, emotionally, and personally. I’ve grown stronger, wiser, and more aware of what I truly deserve in a relationship. The experience didn’t break me; it rebuilt me.
If you’re in a situation where you feel uncertain, confused, or emotionally drained, I want you to know this—you’re not alone. It’s okay to seek clarity. It’s okay to ask questions. And most importantly, it’s okay to choose yourself.
Because at the end of the day, peace of mind is priceless. SEFTYHUB HELP. ME. OUT
SEFTYHUB @GMAIL COM were you can reach them
Y’all better tighten your spiritual belt. Such a person can cause a kind of trouble that will have you groveling at his feet. Hold God oh! Hold him tight