The Guardian (Nigeria)

The Love Arena With Bishop Charles Ighele When Your Wife Is Her Mummy’s Pet

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CHILDREN are generally closer to their mothers than their fathers. Out of this foundation arise situations where a female child can be so close to her mother to the extent that she becomes her mother’s “pet.” Some can grow to become their mother’s “spoilt child.”

There is a child I know who hardly does anything wrong as far as the mother is concerned. For example, if this child should steal biscuits from another child, she will go to any extent to defend her child. Her child was always right. You dare not report her child to her.

Most men who are already married to such “spoilt” females are not enjoying their marriages. Some ha ve divorced. Ever y little thing she will say: “My mummy said, my mummy said, my mummy said.” During ever y little marital disagreeme­nt, the unwise mother will step in to protect her “pet.”

If you are already married or about to get married to a mummy’s pet, the following suggestion­s will help build your marriage:

• Study your wife or fiancée and look at those areas where she is so fon d of her mother. Look at those areas where her mother completely wo n her heart over. Understand how her mother loved her. • After this, go on and keep appreciati­ng her mother for being so full of love for her. When she knows that y ou love her mother, oh, she will love you more.

Some men go the wrong way by using threats and other violent means to distance their wives from an over- loving mother. In all my years of counseling, I ha ve not come across any method like this at all that succeeded. Instead, it inflicted pains on all involved and the peace that followed was not better than the peace and the quietness that the graveyard provides at night.

If for example, her mother won her love by petting her with her favourite chocolate right from when she was a child, start buying her that special chocolate and do it better.

You are not competing with her mother neither are y ou trying to wipe off her mother’s love from her memor y. What y ou are simply doing is understand­ing how your wife wants to be loved and then loving her better.

Abrahams’s wife, Sarah, certainly loved her only son, Isaac, whom she got at old age. After Sarah’s death, Abraham arranged a marriage between Isaac and Rebecca. Gen 24: 67 says, “… So Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death.”

I strongly believe that for Isaac, an only child, to be “comforted” by his wife Rebecca, Rebecca might ha ve employed some of the strategies I suggested above. Something I am ver y sure of is that Rebecca did not speak evil of her husband’s mother, Sarah neither did she attempt to wipe off Sarah’ memories. If she had done so, Isaac would not have been "Comforted."

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