Convener,
All Ladies Affairs, Business and Career Forum, Dr. Shade Toyin-Kehinde,
speaks on challenges married women face in balancing their homes and
careers in this interview withBOSEDE OLUSOLA-OBASA
How true is the saying that it takes a tough woman to break even in the business world?
It takes an ordinary woman to achieve the unachievable in whatever
industry. But the difference between her and other ordinary women is
that she is one backed by God and her spouse. It actually takes vision
to excel. She is a focused woman, who brings business before pleasure.
She is shrewd and organised. She pays herself rather than touch her
capital. She lives within her means, she respects the core principles of
business excellence and above all, she is socially responsible to her
immediate environment and beyond. For instance, we give revolving loans
to poor widows for business and take them through skills acquisition. I
encourage women to go all out; there is no limitation at all.
But people say that women are the worst bosses to have?
That is a wrong notion. Women have this milk of kindness which comes to play
from time to time. Men who complain about female bosses are perhaps
those who want to take undue advantage of a prevailing situation. They
feel they can get away with about anything; that is where the woman’s
‘hardness’ shows up. She puts her feet down and gets the results she set
out to get. Some men think that the average woman doesn’t understand
the game in the corporate world or that she is dull.
Is it ideal for women to resign to look after their homes?
If there is an agreement between her and her spouse, well. But I will
not advise a woman to take that step; at the same time, I won’t say
that a woman should disobey her husband. But I would plead with such men
to note that her being employed may soon pay off. When perhaps the
burden of running the home becomes too heavy on the man and it may be
too late for the woman to return to the corporate world, she has become
rusty – he has rendered her inadequate and handicapped in that area.
That can eventually create tension at home. He starts putting up acts
that show the woman that she is too domestic. I encourage that men who
insist that their wives stay at home should pay her monthly as if she is
going to the office. The amount should be close
to what she was earning in her last job. For the woman, she should do
things that will multiple that income and save for the rainy days.
Engage in something profitable that still gives you good time for
keeping the home. Frankly, these are days when it requires both spouses
to work to keep the home running, especially when the children get to
higher institutions and bills are rising. So people should look into
tomorrow and empower their wives financially. In the real sense of the
word, I don’t think there are still full-time housewives in Nigeria
today. You don’t have to abandon your home to work, spend time with your
family members and build healthy family units.
You are a career woman, how often do you cook?
Oh, I go to the kitchen everyday to cook. I celebrated my 20th
wedding anniversary in February and for those 20 years, I have not had
any other person cook for my husband or children. That is not because I
can’t afford a house maid, but because I believe in managing my kitchen
personally. I cook every day, breakfast, lunch, dinner. As a matter of
fact, I have a day in the week dedicated to the kitchen. On that day, I
overhaul my freezer; check
my fridge to see what I need to restock. I do it on my own. Even as a
banker, I did that in a way that it did not affect my job. I did it at
the weekends. Currently, my weekends are the busiest, so I chose a day
in the week when my schedule enables me to do so. I stay in the kitchen
and fix as many things as possible such that I realise that I am good to
go for the rest of the week. I can cook anything without visiting the
market. I do that weekly. And I do another monthly overhaul of the
freezer. The monthly schedule helps me stock the freezer with meat of
all kinds of things in large quantities. My husband can call for any
kind of meal and you are sure I have it. Many women need to be tutored
in this area. Don’t leave your responsibility to the housemaid, nannies,
grandma. It is easier for me now because I could do it as a banker.
Those days, I did my large cooking at the weekend; packed them in
plastic packs. It is not every day that people love to eat foods stored
in the fridge, so sometimes on my way from work, I park my car and do
some shopping. A woman should never be tired of the kitchen.
Which part of your house are you fond of?
Wow, wow, I am most fond of my bedroom.
Why?
That is where I enjoy the best fellowship that gives me the tonic to
keep going. That is where I meet with a man to whom I can pour all my
heart. That is where I get the best counsel, encouragement and prayer. I
attach the most importance to my bedroom and of course I don’t joke
with my sex life – it is an integral part of the fellowship that I am
talking about. I know that marital bliss cannot be without sex. I tell
business and career women not to joke with their sex life; and I
practice what I preach.
As a banker, how receptive were you to sex?
Oh, let me set the records strait; I am busier now than when I was a
banker; as a counsellor, pastor and one in a social responsibility
sector. Then, as a banker, I had resumption and closing time, and when I
had to call it a day and go home. But now, I could get calls at 3am on
my duty as a pastor. Sometimes, I am at my desk here in the office till
midnight, attending meetings. Sometimes, because of my busy schedule, I
don’t have good sleep for three consecutive days. If I could manage my
sex life then, it should be difficult now; but no, it is not. I have set
things right. I tell married women at all kinds of fora that it is
better not to marry than come into it and claim to be tied and unable to
enjoy sex – you are courting trouble. There are so many mistresses out
there willing to give it to your husband. Let me share a personal
secret: when you are tired, that is the time to have sex. It will cool
you down, that is the design of sex. It puts your body back when it is
about to give way. That is the best sleeping pill – the right sex, with
the right man – your husband. When you feel really tired, have a good
shower, relax in your bed beside your husband, let him rub your back,
you rub his and before you know it, you are there and you will feel
really refreshed. I have practised it and I know it. It also cements
relationships and settles quarrels.
Are you saying that in 20 years you have never said no to your husband?
Hmmm, there has been no time that my no was outright. I have had to
say no only to find out that I have yielded. Before I had this
understanding, I, like other women, had the erroneous belief that sex
further drains you when you are already tired. I have since learned not
to say no; it doesn’t mean that I have sex every day. But on whatever
platform I stand to teach around the world, I do say that for a healthy
marriage, that a couple should not have any week without sex. When I see
couples who quarrel on every little issue, I find out how their sexual
life is; then I discover that they have not been there for two weeks,
one month, two months. So not a week without sex please.
You talk as if it is automatic?
Well, there are factors that aid good sex. There shouldn’t be
pressure. Some African men love to leave the roof burning and pretend
nothing is happening. He knows the bills have not been paid, yet he
wants to sleep with his wife whose mind is naturally on the unpaid
bills. The woman is not in the right frame of mind for sex. So it is
easy for her to say, ‘don’t touch me; let’s talk about the bills
instead.’ If the man is not ready to talk about it, they stay off sex
for as long as the issue is unresolved. This is for the men, ‘it is not
the time that you want to go to bed with your wife that you remember
your wife exists. Pay the bills; make life comfortable for your wife.’
That is why I can’t say no to my husband. He makes life comfortable for
me, he doesn’t give me a headache about bills being paid, he pays
attention to every detail and makes sure they are fixed, he gives me
hope. In such a man, I can relax; he doesn’t wait till bedtime to tell
me he loves me. Even in the midst of his schedule as prayer director of
Lagos Chapter, Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, among others, he still
minds little details. He calls just to say, ‘I love you’; he knows I
love ice cream and he buys it often. There is nothing he can’t do to
help me, especially when I get home late at night – in the kitchen, in
the shower, in the bedroom, we help each other. When a man is as good as
that, he will enjoy his wife in every sense of the word. Some men say
their wives don’t help them meet needs at home, but they don’t open up
to their wives. I spoke to a widow who said she didn’t know her
husband’s office address while he was alive.
How do you cope with office romance, sharing the same office apartment with your husband?
It is not affecting our work; rather, it helps us to work better.
When we are at work, we should be focused. Office romance doesn’t have
to be physical today. Social media has made the world absolutely without
barriers and borders, but work hours should be given to working.
What can’t you resist?
The cry of a widow. I can give everything that I have to them. I love
to look good but I don’t spend too much on those. I have carried this
heart and commitment so hard that my children are also following me in
it. I have had to sell off some expensive things I have to meet needs of
the widow, missionaries and the less-privileged.
Your forum deals with issues about women balancing the demands of their homes and careers. Can you tell us more about it?
It is a forum where we spur women to become the best that they can be
in their respective fields and endeavours and in turn, impact their
world positively. I have come to discover that women have a lot to offer
their homes, immediate environments, countries and the world. There is
no limit to getting this done except in the African setting where their
roles are played down. It is also interesting to note that apart from
being looked down on by the public and the men, some women look down on
themselves. Our role is to help such women in all sectors to get rid of
that grasshopper mentality. That is the focus of the Business and Career
Forum, which hosts women from all walks of life yearly. This year’s
event comes up on March 9. The forum is hosted in March deliberately in
commemoration of the International Day of Women.
What are the limitations women face?
From counselling, I realise that women set no-go areas for
themselves. There is the phobia that the core business sectors cannot be
taken over by women. The average woman with her level of education
would rather run a massive departmental store, deal in jewellery or
other accessories than think of going into manufacturing, for instance.
And the men are not helping matters, because when they see a woman who
dares to come close to the places otherwise thought to be the preserve
of men, they are jolted. They put up an attitude that says, “We’ll
rather have your husband here.” But I ask, “If a man falls into a river
and the only person around to throw him a life jacket is a woman, will
he prefer to die than take it from her?” The interesting point to add is
that women who have dared to go there, excelled. Some women have the
challenge of husbands who cannot bear to have them in public light. But
that shouldn’t be, provided it doesn’t reduce commitment to the home
front. So the women only need to be encouraged to strike a balance.
Another challenge is that women can be impediments in the track of
fellow women. Such attitudes should stop; we should be willing to serve
as ladders for other women to rise.
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