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Obaa Yaa

I want to commit suicide

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Dear Obaa Yaa,

I am a 19-year-old girl living with my father in Accra. About two years ago, my father made sexual advances toward me. Since then, he has continued to harass me, but I have always refused.

I reported the issue to my mother, who lives in the village. However, when I returned to Accra, my father continued his behaviour. Last year, he told me that if I agreed to sleep with him, he would give me anything I wanted.

About six months ago, around midnight, he came to me and said he wanted to marry me because he found me very beautiful and did not want any other man to have me.

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I feel deeply disturbed and angry. The thought of this is unbearable, and I have even considered taking my own life because marrying my father is a taboo.

Baaba, Nungua.

Dear Baaba,

Please do not harm yourself. You have done nothing wrong, and you do not deserve this. The person at fault is your father, and he must be held accountable for his actions.

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I strongly advise that you leave your father’s house immediately. Do not allow him to stop you. If you have nowhere else to stay, go to your mother in the village for now.

Speak honestly with your mother about what has been happening. Together, inform trusted members of both your father’s and your mother’s families. A family meeting should be arranged so your father can be confronted about his behaviour.

If he denies the allegations, shows no remorse, or threatens you at any point, you must report the matter to the police without delay.

If you return to Accra in the future, do not live with your father again. During the family discussions, arrangements should also be made to ensure your father continues to support you financially until you are able to care for yourself independently.

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Obaa Yaa

My husband is accusing me of cheating

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Dear Obaa Yaa,

I took off my wedding rings but could not find it again. I was washing when I took them off and placed them on a wall close to me. Honestly, after washing I forgot to pick them up until the evening, when my husband asked where my ring were, I quickly dashed out of the room to check where I had placed them, but they were not there. My husband made it clear that I was cheating that was why I could take my rings off and lose them.

I was packing to leave the house when the bags fell and I heard a tinkling sound of metals instead of plastic. I looked around the floor, and my rings were lying there.

Who took the rings and kept them there and why would the person do that to me just to shake the foundation of my marriage?

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Oye, Tabora.

Dear Oye,

Your husband’s reaction was abusive, not just angry. Accusing you of cheating was just mean.

 Rings don’t prove fidelity, trust does. Your response was fair: taking rings off to wash is normal, and cheating has nothing to do with it.

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The fact that the rings ‘mysteriously’ ended up in your bags suggests someone moved them deliberately to cause conflict.  A partner who jumps to punishment instead of problem-solving will do it again when the next misunderstanding happens.

If indeed your husband threatened and pushed you out, kindly talk to someone you trust in the family or a counsellor before moving back in. If you choose to stay, your husband needs to apologise and let peace to reign.

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Obaa Yaa

Life is dealing with me

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Dear Obaa Yaa,

My life started falling apart the very day I got married. I started experiencing a series of unfortunate events, which nearly broke me.

In the first year into our marriage, I lost a very lucrative job when my wife was pregnant.

I was scheduled for an interview at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital.

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 Immediately I got down from a taxi, out of nowhere, a motorbike at full speed knocked me down. I broke my leg and was admitted to the hospital for three months.

 I lost the opportunity for the breakthrough. Since then, things have become difficult for my family. Is my problem spiritual or what?

Mawuli, Keta.

Dear Mawuli,

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Stop linking your hardships to your wedding. Job loss, accidents, and unemployment are painful situations but that doesn’t mean your marriage is cursed.

In life, there are misfortunes and I urge you to continue to pray hard and wait upon the lord.

Focus on what you can control right now: your health, your finances, and your mental health.

Focus on your leg, take any work to build momentum, and consider therapy to break the “everything is a spiritual attack” cycle. Talk honestly with your wife; you two are a team, not the problem.

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