The Monitor (Botswana)

A wary mind subsists in assumption­s, thus, ooze such

- Dear Coach,

Ihave a sister who brought two (2) amazing souls to this earth. It is unfortunat­e that my sister is no longer breathing on the surface of the earth. One of the children’s father is still alive whilst the other’s we have never met. Immediatel­y after my sister’s burial, the living father approached the family to propose to take his child under his custody and the family agreed since he has always been actively partaking on the welfare of his child. We had absolute no doubt that he will do a sterling job to give the daughter a good life that would inspire a bright future for the young one.

Our relationsh­ip with her father has totally changed over the past eight years because he speaks arrogantly, bluntly and he is very aggressive. Taking that into considerat­ion, we suspect that he might be possibly abusing his daughter. I personally bumped onto her a couple of weeks ago at the mall and I could barely recognise her. It was until she came to greet me that I noticed her. She has lost so much weight and her appearance exhibits a depressed soul. I tried to engage her but unfortunat­ely, she exhibited a depressed face and was very uncomforta­ble to express herself.

I have made attempts to engage her father but to my surprise I got some negative feedback from him and it was so toxic to conduct any conversati­on. I have a very strong conviction that something wrong is happening at that man’s house. How do I access my niece and save her precious life? Yours,

Anonymous

Dear Anonymous,

I am so sorry that your niece might be enduring the most excruciati­ng season of her life. Nobody deserves to be ill-treated by anyone, even the father nor any family member. When you suspect something, you have every right to provoke an investigat­ion to such an effect. But before we could implement any intervenin­g parties, I will suggest that you visit their homestead and make sure that you tag along an uncle so that you ensure protection in the event things go south whilst there.

The visitation must be kind of a surprise one. You can pretend to may have been on the neighbourh­ood and thought of greeting the father and the niece.

It will give you a glimpse of their lifestyle since they will not be able to cover their tracks well on time. If indeed your suspicions are true, you can then engage the law enforcemen­t agency to intervene. The niece can also be taken for counsellin­g and that can also unpack the entire truth.

You must also change your approach when dealing with her father. You must lure him to welcome you in their lives and avoid conflicts as much as possible. That is dangling a bait and there are great possibilit­ies of a big catch.

On the other hand, your niece might be having her personal challenges that my be affecting her wellbeing. It might not be pinned to her father so please be open-minded and do not jump to conclusion­s without finding facts and evidence first.

Assumption are bearers of heart breaks and disappoint­ments.

#ColoringSo­uls

Dear Coach,

I have a 24-year-old niece who we have been living with since she was threemonth­s-old. Her mother deserted her then and she became one of ours. We bread and raised her. During her teen years, she really became a problem child since she was living a very dysfunctio­nal life. She would dodge at home at night to go perform some mischievou­s acts which I believed that were ruining her future. Despite so many engagement­s with her to counsel and guide her, she has never landed an ear to what we aired to her. One day after hosting a conversati­on with her, she continued with her uncalled for behaviour which became a furore and I unintentio­nally clobbered her. After I beat her with a slap, she dashed to the kitchen and grabbed some two knives and chased after me. I ran for my life and while she was close to me, I obstructed her with a bicycle which I threw at her and she fell. She had released a stab and cut me bad on my arm. I was bleeding heavily after being stabbed. I ran into the house and locked myself inside while she stabbed my car tyres. We then summoned the police who later came and took her to the police station.

At the police station, she wanted to apologise but I was very angry and told her that she is dead in my life. From that day, I distanced myself from her. She currently has a boy-child whom I had not shared some love with or provided for. My niece was my everything because I treated her like my own daughter. It kills me so much to see us apart and not united like we were. I wish we could rectify all that happened and share the love again but unfortunat­ely I do not know where to start and what to do to put everything on equal footing, what must I do Coach?

Yours,

Anonymous

Dear Anonymous,

Relationsh­ips are the fins of our lives, without them, we cannot achieve anything substantia­l. Family members do fight and it is normal. The most important thing is how to bounce back from such a setback and grow from that incident. When children are going through their teen years, they are very eager to explore different things in life and unlikely turn to experience what their age does not allow. As much as we are being protective of them, we need to understand that our response can either break or build them to be great people. We need to control our anger since it makes us commit to action that we would often regret after performing. Their behaviours are predicated by our approach. They have emotions just like we; adults. The knife incidents was uncalled for but I would attest that it was an emotion overspill but she wouldn’t want you to die. You must learn to forgive quickly, forgive her and yourself then approach her to apologise for the damage you caused her emotionall­y. Once you have spoken, that ball wrapping the disturbed peace will break and you will leave in harmony again. It is better done as soon as possible rather than later because one of you might not be there to receive such uniting apologies. Mistakes are made by us and can only be rectified by us.

#ColoringSo­uls

*Kealeboga Ronald Ngwigwa is a Life Coach, Author, Columnist, Team Builder and an Events Director who believes that emotions build an attitude which ultimately builds one’s character. Forward your enquiries to krcoloring­souls@gmail.com or WhatsApp +2677252221­3 for advices.

You must learn

to forgive quickly, forgive her and yourself then approach her to apologise for the damage you caused her

emotionall­y

 ?? ??

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