Nothing more, which is really disturbing to say the least.
The EME head honcho has been ‘quizzed’ one too many times about this that it is no longer news when he responds to questions hovering around him getting married and all that.
But we must rise up against limitations of this sort in society. Because it does no one any good that a huge chunk of our time and energy is focused on shaming celebrities whose crafts are unmistakeable and true all because they aren’t married.
I mean, what is marriage and why is it such a prerequisite for measuring ‘success’ and ‘achievements’ around this parts? We can do better as a people.
It’s about time we touched on the subject because marriage appears to be so overrated sometimes around here and the result is we fail to see the finer aspects of life in our relationships with the next man or woman – except of course it is about discussions regarding marriage and marriage only.
Marriage this, marriage that. The economy is bad and there’s a heavy recession and the answer to that is marriage.
Talks centred on marriage are so replete in our culture today we don’t see the forest for the trees., which is wrong.
It isn’t about marriage all the time. It is more about changing the world we live in more than it is about obsessing about when to settle down and with whom and where the party is at.
For God’s sake, we need to do better as a people. It is understandable that this is a part of our culture as Africans but we need to lay off the single men and women in society because sometimes they haven’t decided to stay single of their own volition.
You aren’t wearing their shoes, you don’t know where it hurts or pinches. You can only guess from afar.
And for the record, celebrities generally aren’t as comfortable as they portray themselves in the media.
So if that is what informs the need to urge them to hurriedly ‘settle down’ because they have ‘arrived’, then critics have got another think coming because more often than not it’s all about imaging and showmanship.
NAIJ: