September 30, 2007. I was invited to Global Impact Church, Lagos, to
perform and I kept looking at her while on stage. I was admiring her
even before I was called up to perform but I did not have the courage to
walk up to her. After the show, as I was about leaving the church, she
walked up to me and told me that it was a wonderful performance and that
she liked my confidence on stage. That was how we got talking.
performance, she and her friends wanted to take a cab home and none was
forthcoming. I got a cab before them and I insisted we boarded it
together. We drove from the church to her place and we exchanged phone
numbers. One day, I was just at home, she sent me a text message,
praying for me and wishing me well in my career. I told myself that I
liked a woman like that. We met again after that, and gradually started
seeing regularly. Then we got married.
comedy show we attended on the island. That was the day Michael Jackson
died. He just got back from the United Kingdom and asked me to accompany
him to the show, and I did. Right there on the stage, he called me and I
came out, then he knelt down in front of everyone and asked me to marry
him. I was surprised but it was the best moment ever. I felt very shy.
Initially, I thought it was part of the comedy but when he brought out
the ring, I knew it was real.
did not notice her beauty. I love her attitude and composure. As time
went on, I saw the motherly character in her. She is caring and has
human feelings for people. I told myself that I would not miss her.
we would get married. Even after he proposed to me, we did not get
married immediately, my friends were concerned whether he would marry me
or not; but I told them not to worry. I kept waiting and kept believing
in him. We got married in March 2011.
wonderful, fun, divine, amazing and awesome. He is a wonderful person
every woman would want to have. He is funny and cracks me up even in the
house. But when he is serious, you would know because he would not be
smiling. You would just know when he is not joking.
oppositions did not really matter. The people who objected to it were
not the people that mattered to me. I saw them as people that were
scared that once I got married; they would stop getting certain benefits
from me. They were just fighting for their pockets. The most important
people saw her as someone I should marry. The person I thought would
object to me getting married to someone from another tribe was my
father, but when he met her, he liked her personality.
sceptical about me marrying a Yoruba man, but the first day she met him,
she liked him. There were no oppositions at all.
for almost four years and at that time, we became like siblings. Nothing
changed when we eventually got married. The only difference is that we
no longer go out as much as we used to when we were still dating. I am
always the one pushing her to have some time-out with her friends, but
she loves to do things at her own pace.
always tell me that she has money. Sometimes, I just see money in some
places and I discover they are hers. She is very prudent and does not
spend everything whenever I give her money.
jealous. I like it when his fans celebrate him. They come around and
tell him how much they appreciate his work and how much they love him.
We get that all the time and I don’t feel bad about it. If those calls
are not coming in, that means he is not doing well and no one
appreciates him. As long as those calls are not detrimental to our
marriage, I do not feel bad. I am proud when I see them come around him
and want to take pictures with him.
not working, I am always at home. If there is any need for me not to be
at home, we are always together, somewhere away from home.
an opportunity outside work, we are always together. We travel together
all the time, except on few occasions when I had to travel alone.
