
I am not from a rich home. My mother single-handedly raised my siblings and me. Nothing about our lives came on a silver platter. Growing up, I sold things and helped my mother hawk them just so we could survive.
There were nights I cried myself to sleep, asking God to make a way where there seemed to be no way. I have quarreled with my siblings because someone took the leftover rice I did not eat the previous night, reheated it, and ate it before I got home. Life was hard. That is all I am trying to say.
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Today, I am a beautiful young woman, and I have been talking to this man for years. From the way things are going, I know he wants to come over, see where I live, and finally meet my family.
That is where my problem begins.
My mother, my younger siblings, and I all live together in a single room. It is cramped. It is small. There are “Ghana Must Go” bags everywhere because there is hardly enough space for our belongings. It is not the kind of place you proudly invite someone into. We make do with what we have and thank God for the food on our table.
I have plans to rent my own place because of the distance to my workplace and also because of sikasɛm, money matters. However, that dream has been put on hold for now. I am still gathering enough money to make it happen.
The man I have been talking to comes from the complete opposite background. We met at a wedding, exchanged contacts, and built a friendship. We started going on dates, visiting places I only used to dream about, and suddenly I found myself experiencing them. I have visited his workplace, seen how he moves around the office, how he commands authority, and how he relates with his workers.
He was born with a silver spoon. The grass has always been greener on his side, and he never had to cross over to find it.
His parents are very wealthy and well-known public figures who are now retired after successful careers. He has four siblings, and they are all doing well and living outside Ghana. He is the youngest, and he is doing very well for himself too. He has a PhD, and you can only imagine the calibre of women he meets every day. The classy ones. The sophisticated ones. The tall, elegant, and eloquent women who seem to fit perfectly into his world.
Then there is me. Ma Christy ni bi, a woman who is still climbing the ladder.
My boyfriend himself is an intelligent man. When he speaks, he speaks with wisdom. His intelligence is something to admire, and I learn something new every time we have a conversation.
Out of all the women he could have chosen, he chose me. He wants to build a future and a family with me. Sometimes, it feels so sweet that it almost feels like a Cinderella love story, but then I stop and ask myself, am I even allowed to dream this kind of dream? Is it real, or is it just a beautiful illusion?
I have never asked him for money or burdened him with my family’s financial struggles, so he has never really “seen” me through the lens of poverty. It is not pride that keeps me from telling him. It is something I cannot even explain. Maybe it is because I have always carried myself with dignity. If you met me, you would probably assume everything is fine at home, but the truth is that it is not.
So, how do I bring this man to my house, knowing the kind of life he has lived since childhood?
He has been nothing but a gentleman from the very beginning, but these questions refuse to leave my mind.
Will his parents agree for their son to marry a poor girl like me? Will they encourage the son they have invested so much in to marry into a family like mine? What will they think of my mother, my siblings, and the place we call home? Won’t they burst into laughter and look at us with pity?
Do rich people really marry poor people like they show in movies? Does it even end well? Will they respect me, or will they merely tolerate me? Will they ever truly value me?
These questions haunt me every single day. We see stories like this in movies and on television, but those stories are adaptations of real life. Sometimes, I wonder if mine will become one of them.
I Called My Girlfriend And Another Man Answered The Phone
Considering all this, should I just ghost him? Should I block him everywhere before he gets the chance to come to my house and meet my family? Should I walk away now and save myself from the humiliation I fear is waiting for me? Or am I allowing my fears to destroy something that could have been beautiful? Hmm.
—Seyram
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If the guy likes you, he wont have any problem with that. However never discuss your poverty with him, never make it a topic for discussion. Rich people dont like poor people who are always highlighting their poverty in every conversation. If you learn to still carry yourself with dignity no one in his family will have a problem with you.
I can only assure that all his male family members will not have a problem with you. As for the females, i dont know.
there is no harm in trying, give him a chance and see how it will end. But above all take it into prayer, ask God for directions.
Have that conversation with him.
Tell him your fears. Don’t tell him you are poor but your worlds are apart and that you don’t think his parents will allow him to marry you etc etc and wait for his response. You can’t just take him home. The shock would be too much to handle. Some men will help you get a place or elevate your life to some extent. Others would leave you. But how would you know if you don’t test the waters?
Everything in life is a risk ,first talk to your mum about him and his intention to meet her , base on your mum’s view, set a date ,get some chairs and table so you can sit outside and take him home.
If he is genuinely in love ,he will rather help upg4ade your lives to meet his standards, if he walks away, life goes on ,you have your school cert ,job and life to keep going on dear.
Dont ghost him and don’t act like you are shy of who you are and where you stay, just be calm and confident when you take him home . Rich people love confident and determined people.
Just be yourself dear ,God might use him to change situations to you and your family’s favour ….all the best dear .
God is presenting you with an opportunity to change the course of your family destiny and you’re running away from it. Don’t you come to think of it how many women he might have encountered before you and ask yourself why you? Don’t let this opportunity slide. Take him home but on that day make sure you tidy the environment to the core. Be confident, what will be will be!
You paint a picture of him being intelligent and smart, if thats the case you can have that conversation with him and hope that his intelligence would be on display in seeing you beyond your present situation….. I like the fact that you are not making demands of him, thats a good attribute but dont ghost him until you have that conversation….