There are some things typical to an Average African Household...Here are just a few of them. Enjoy!
1. Your
parents are basically demi-gods. It doesn’t matter if you learned that
the sky is blue. If your parents say the sky is orange, the sky is in
fact, orange. At least, in their presence.
2. Your parents will seldom ever admit they are wrong. And if and when they do, you will be too stunned to even believe it.
3. Your grandparents are the only people who can put your parents in their place. (And you will enjoy those moments.)
4. Your house is a free for all. At some
point a relative, twice-removed, will be invited to stay for an
extended-period of time.
5. You will likely be raised the
old-fashioned way -“you spare the rod, you spoil the child” kind of
old-fashioned way. In your adulthood, you’ll largely be grateful for it
and you’ll always be able to tell the difference between people who were
raised the same way and people who were not.
6. God help you if you’re living under
your parent’s roof and you yell at them, slam a door in anger, and/or
curse in their presence. Yeah, God help you.
7. The youngest child will be blamed for everything….until he or she is able to talk.
8. The oldest child will be blamed for everything that the younger children do.
9. If you cry while being accused of something, it is assumed that you are guilty.
10. Your parents will call you from
upstairs, downstairs, outside, etc., to hand them something that is
literally 10 centimeters away from them.
11. You will not leave your parents’ home without learning how to cook.
12. Religious attendance and practice is not an option.
13. Everyone
who is older than you is your “auntie” or “uncle.” Calling them by
their first name is basically a crime against humanity.
14. You will probably never meet all of your extended family because there are just so many of them.
15. This one specifically applies to most
Nigerians (although I have to hand it to papa and mama Biakolo for not
putting this kind of pressure on us): Doing well in school is not an
option and by doing well, parents have expectations that you will be the
best at everything. Example: If you get a 98%, they might ask, “What
happened to the other 2%?” If you get a B, your parents will likely ask,
“The person who got an A, do they have three heads?” Just do well in
school.
16. Your friends better greet your parents
first when they see them or that friendship is pretty much over.
R-E-S-P-E-C-T is H-U-G-E.
17. Sleepovers at friends’ houses are
mythical tales or basically only happen when your parents have known the
family’s family since the beginning of time.
18. Another mythical tale – being in a
serious relationship with anyone when you’re in your teens. And until
your parents believe you are of, “courtship age,” they will refer to
anyone you are dating as, “your friend.”
19. You will still be expected to have a
traditional engagement/marriage regardless of where the person you’re
marrying is from. (Have fun explaining the details of that to all your
significant others!)
20. Your parents will talk to you in a lot
of proverbs and metaphors. For example, when I was 12, I spent half a
day trying to figure out what my dad meant when he said, “When I talk to
you and advise you, do I talk with water in my mouth?” I eventually got
it.
21. You will have maybe 3 conversations
about sex with your parents – one when puberty starts to take its
course, the second one when you start secondary school Biology, and the
third one when you are about to leave home. The will all surprisingly
sound like the Mean Girl’s quote, “Don’t have sex because you will get
pregnant and die!” followed by “Do not bring shame to this family!” Got
it parents, I can’t start dating until I’m married and I can’t have sex
until after I’ve had children.
22. Your siblings will be the first people
to bully the crap out of you. Later on, you’ll realize that they were
preparing you for a big bad world out there.
23. If your entire full name is being
called, and your native language is also being spoken, the day shall not
pass without tears.
24. Soda in the fridge? Either your parents were in a REALLY good mood or there are visitors coming over.
25. Surprisingly, alcohol is a hit or miss
with African parents. It depends on the set that you get. My dad
drinks, my mum doesn’t (at all). I got to choose. I chose my dad’s
viewpoint.
26. You won’t realize how incredibly
hilarious and somewhat bizarre your upbringing was until you reach
adulthood. And you’ll burst out into tears of laughter when you’re
sitting next to an African woman who is telling her child who probably
just got a B, “So the person who got an A, do they have three heads?”
Hang in there kid, they secretly boast that they have the best children
ever, just not to your face.
[Hawnsgist] 26 Things About African Upbringing - Number 26 Is So True
Reviewed by Oniranu
on
October 18, 2016
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