I saw a comment where someone wrote that if most women in Nigeria were given 50million naira (until the expiration of the full life span of that money) they will not see the reason to marry or stay married to a man.
I dunno how true this is but a few days ago, on a flight from Heathrow, London, to Toronto, Canada, I found myself restless, flipping through movies. After binge-watching a few, a documentary caught my attention.
It was a story of family, choices, and destructionâa story about how one woman's selfish decision ruined her children's lives.
She lived in Hawaii with her husband and children. According to her and her brother , he (the husband) was a good manâa provider, a father, a steady presence.
They weren't rich, but they were stable. Yet, she believed she deserved more-not in wealth, but in men.
Without conflict, struggle, or abuse, she walked away. Packed her 4 children and moved to Anchorage, Alaska, chasing an illusion of freedom.
That was the beginning of the end.
Her oldest child became wild and recklessâ died in a speeding accident. No father to guide him. No structure to keep him grounded.
But the real destruction came from her daughter, Kira.
At 16, Kira was already deep in the streets. With no father's discipline, she fell for a drug dealer, Mario Page.
She became part of his worldâa world of crime, danger, and no return.
One reckless decision sealed her fate.
Kira stole nine ounces of cocaine from Mario and gave it to her sister's boyfriend and the father of her sisterâs 2 children, Terrell Houngues. Mario found out. He was furious.
To fix the situation, Kira set up a trap.
She convinced Terrell they were about to steal more drugs and money from Mario. But instead, he was kidnapped, beaten, and thrown in a car trunk.
They drove him deep into the woods.
He begged for his life.
Kira shot him in the knee.
As he screamed in pain, Mario gave the final order: "Finish him."
Without hesitation, she did.
A young girl, just 16, had taken a man's life.
Kira was arrested, convicted, and sentenced to 99 years-with 65 years to serve before she could even dream of freedom.
From a father's home to a prison cell.
All because one woman thought she didn't need a man.
Marriage isn't just about love-it's about stability, protection, and legacy.
A man holds the home together. A woman nurtures it. Remove one, and everything crumbles.
Focus on familyâŚâŚâŚâŚ
#FinancialOrgasm