Authors: Ama Ata Aidoo
âShe fried it with the breakfast eggs!'
âShe put it into cakes!'
And they would whisper and laugh. As far as the sisters were concerned, Oko never had money to spend on them because he was busy wasting his salary on her. When Esi let it be known that in fact she earned more than he did, their new line of attack was that it served him right, marrying a woman who had more money than him. His
wife could never respect him. It was also around this time that the hints began to drop here and there: about the need for him to get himself an unspoilt young woman, properly brought up, whose eyes have not jumped over her eyebrows with too much education and too much money of her own ⦠No she couldn't go to them.
As a result of Esi's growing uncertainty about the justification of her decision, she was hesitating to tell Opokuya her story. And since any hesitation with communication was itself a new development in their relationship, it too was creating its own nervous tensions in her. If Opokuya was her last hope of getting an understanding at all, then she had better not let go of her. For here, where no one ever made the mistake of thinking that any marriage was strictly the affair of the two people involved, one could never attempt to fight any war in a marriage alone. And if she lost Opokuya too, she would have to fight alone.
Before Opokuya moved into Accra recently, she and Esi had only once before lived in the same town since they were in secondary school. It was when Esi and Oko were first married and Esi returned with Oko to Kumasi, where he had been teaching. Kubi was then an assistant surveyor, and Opokuya was still a midwife at the Central Hospital. At the time, neither of them had any marital problems to share. Of course Opokuya as usual had sounded as if she had plenty. But then, as some of her colleagues always said unkindly, Opokuya searched for problems to talk about, so that she too would sound just like any other wife. As for Esi, she was then expecting her baby, and was too recently married to be aware of problems even if there had been any.
After her baby was born, Esi had wanted to return to work. But that had not been easy. She had had to face the difficulty of having to choose between two not so attractive options. She could stay on at Kumasi, but that meant that she would not be working at all, or not meaningfully. It was not every government department that had regional branches. The Department of Urban Statistics was one of those that didn't. Or she could return to Accra for her regular job: as long as she first convinced Oko that they could still see one another as often as possible at weekends, either she going or he coming. But at the merest hint of that, Oko had made it clear that the subject wasn't even up for discussion. He made it clear that as far as he was concerned they had done enough of that kind of travelling when they were just friends'. In fact he had thought one reason why they
had got married was to give themselves the chance to be together properly, no?
In the end the only option left her, which she had had to take, was to ask to be seconded to the regional census co-ordinating office. She had ended up keeping the Birth and Death register.
âSurely, one doesn't need a Master's degree in statistics to do that?' she would fume and rage daily. Oko ignored her complaints. The truth was that he didn't feel that sympathetic. And neither did the men in the office. In fact, they let her know that she was unwelcome, and a burden they did not know what to do with.
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Having to deal with a man who is over-qualified for a job is bad enough.
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To have to cope with an over-qualified woman in any situation is a complete misfortune.
Now six years later, both she and Opokuya were here in Accra, working. And she had a marital problem. A big problem. She should just gather herself together, and tell Opokuya what she felt. If Opokuya too could not understand her, then that was that. She would accept that she was just a fool, like her mother and her grandmother had said.
After all, people change. Look at her. Esi had changed. If she now found Oko's attentions so suffocating that she wanted very badly to split, then people change. There was a time when she had been made to fear that in fact she would never marry.
âYou have waited too long,' Esi's mother had complained. âGiven your structure, you shouldn't have.' (The poor woman shared the popularly held belief that a young woman who is too tall, too thin, and has flat belly and a flat behind has a slim chance of bearing children. The longer she waits after puberty, the slimmer those chances get!)
Esi's main problem was that she was easily bored. And no woman ever caught a man or held him by showing lack of interest. Esi had known that she would have to work up some enthusiasm in her relationship with men. âBut how?' she had kept asking herself. Now looking back she didn't dare admit, even to herself, that perhaps what she had felt for Oko in the first years of their married life was gratitude more than anything else. Gratitude that in spite of herself he had persisted in courting her and marrying her.
âNot many women are this lucky â¦' Esi could hear her grandmother's voice. âAnd who told you that feeling grateful to a man is
not enough reason to marry him? My lady, the world would die of surprise if every woman openly confessed the true reasons why she married a certain man. These days, young people don't seem to know why they marry or should marry.'
âWhat are some of the reasons, Nana?'
âAh, so you want to know? Esi we know that we all marry to have children
âBut Nana, that is such an old and worn-out idea! Children can be born to people who are not married.'
âSure, sure, but to help them grow up well, children need homes with walls, a roof, fire, pots.'
âOh Nana. But one person can provide all these things these days for a growing child!'
âMaybe ... yes... Yes, my lady. We also marry to increase the number of people with whom we can share the joys and the pains of this life.'
âNana, how about love?'
âLove? ⦠Love? ⦠Love is not safe, my lady Silk, love is dangerous. It is deceitfully sweet like the wine from a fresh palm tree at dawn. Love is fine for singing about and love songs are good to listen to, sometimes even to dance to. But when we need to count on human strength, and when we have to count pennies for food for our stomachs and clothes for our backs, love is nothing. Ah my lady, the last man any woman should think of marrying is the man she loves.'
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6
It was night in Accra. It was not as hot as it had been in the day, but it was still hot, and the atmosphere was heavy with the moisture from the gulf. The Hotel Twentieth Century was blazing with light, consuming enough electricity to light up the whole of the nearby fishing district. But the fishing villages did not have electricity. In fact, all that the fishing community knew of that facility were the huge pylons that stood in their vegetable patches, and the massive cables passing over the roofs of their homes as these bore the electricity to the more deserving members of society. Like users of hotel lobbies. Like Mrs Esi Sekyi and her friend, Mrs Opokuya Dakwa.
Kubi had not shown up yet, and the two women had long stopped expecting him. In fact, they had decided that their chance meeting, along with his failure to be there on time, was a definite advantage. In spite of the long pauses, they were having an old- fashioned relaxed chat, and Esi could always take Opokuya home anyway. However, Opokuya was feeling a little uneasy even though she had long ago taught herself to see her husband as a grown-up person who was perfectly capable of looking after himself; and also that people being late does not always mean they are bleeding to death by some roadside. âBut sometimes they are,' screamed the nurse in her. Maybe she had worked too long in hospitals.
âEsi, exactly what is the problem?' Opokuya couldn't help putting it in her blunt way this time. âIs it another woman?' As Esi opened her mouth to answer she was also wondering how Opokuya could speak with her grandmother's voice.
âOpokuya, do you remember when you were still up north, and I stopped at yours for the weekend on my way back from Ouga?'
âYou had been on some Ghana-Burkina joint commission, no?'
âYes.'
âYes.'
âI had told you then that I was already beginning to feel fed up.' âYes, Esi. But why? Is it other women?' Opokuya hated to, but couldn't prevent herself from repeating the question.
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In any case, everyone knows that a man's relationship with women other than his wife, however innocent, can
always help ruin a marriage. And that includes his love for his own mother.
âOh no. To be fair to old Oko, it was never that. In fact sometimes, I wished he would behave like other men in that respect.'
âEsi you are mad.' Opokuya truly couldn't believe her ears.
âThat is what my mother and my grandmother said.'
âHow many women wouldn't give everything they've got to have a man like that?'
âWell, they can all have him.'
âListen my sister, you have to be realistic.'
âAbout what?'
âAbout life!'
âIt's he who wasn't being realistic.'
âNo?'
âWell ⦠well ⦠here we are, two people, each with a demanding job â¦'Opokuya was surprised. Esi was beginning to sound childish and petulant. She had a strong urge to scream at her to stop her story. But that she knew would be unfair. âEsi, what about your job?'
âAs you know, my job can be very demanding sometimes. I have to prepare materials for ministers, permanent secretaries ⦠you know, such people. And then I have to do a lot of travelling; inside the country, outside. Oko resented every minute he was free and I couldn't be with him.'
âBut that is so natural.'
âFor whom?'
âMy sister, if a man loves a woman, he would want to have her around as much as possible.'
âTo the extent that he would want me to change my job because he thought it took me away from him?'
âYes,' said Opokuya, wondering where she had acquired such ideas from, and the confidence to express them so forcefully. âTo the extent that he would want you to change your job.'
âBut when we first met, Oko told me that what had attracted him most about me was my air of independence!'
Opokuya had begun to giggle, and then discovered she could hardly stop. âYou see, it happens to all of us. Esi, listen: men are not really interested in a woman's independence or her intelligence. The few who claim they like intelligent and active women are also interested in having such women permanently in their beds and in their kitchens.'
âWhich is impossible. It's a contradiction.'
âYes. But there it is. Very few men realise that the sharp girls they meet and fall in love with are sharp because, among other things, they've got challenging jobs in stimulating places. That such jobs are also demanding. That these are also the kinds of jobs that keep the mind active â alive. Look, quite often, the first thing a man who marries a woman mainly for the quickness of her brain tries to do is get her to change her job to a more “reasonable” one. Or to a part-time, not a full-time job. The pattern never, never changes. And then a “reasonable” job is often quite dull too.' âAnd no part-time job has the stimulation that its full-time version can give.'
âExactly! So that when a woman changes jobs in such a manner, more likely than not, her vision begins to shrink, and she begins to get bored and dissatisfied.'
âAnd even he might begin to find her dull.'
âSure.'
Swiftly Esi had become aware of a certain desolation moving towards her from far away.
âIt's an impossible situation,' she said rather heavily âIt is,' Opokuya agreed, with equal cheerlessness. For a time, they were quiet, Opokuya stirring the cold ghost of her tea, and Esi twirling around her empty glass.
âLet's have another drink,' they both said, at the same time. They ordered a second beer for Esi, and this time, a gin and lime for Opokuya, looking with a mischievous understanding at one another.
âSurely, Kubi is different,' Esi picked up the thread of their conversation from where they had left it before their drinks came.
âHow little you know my husband,' Opokuya declared, not really wanting to say more.
âHe's always seemed so reasonable.'
âWell, go on thinking that. I don't want to disillusion you... But Esi, what are you going to do?'
âAbout what?'
âEsi, you can't stay alone forever?'
âWhy not?'
âIt's just not healthy.'
âSays the local representative of the SWI.'
âAnd what's that?'
Esi was giggling. âIt means Satisfied Wives International. It's how another girlfriend refers to you all.'
âAll of us who?'
âAll of you happily married women who are always saying that being single is not healthy.'