Marvelling's Posts
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MRbrownJAY: i suggest you stop believing all the garbage you read online, and instead use your brain.No mind the mumu |
Some women are just wicked. |
www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/domestic-violence-2-are-men-also-victims/ By CHIOMA GABRIEL Becky could sense that something was wrong immediately she got home that night. The reluctance of the security guard to open the gate on her way in signalled the danger ahead but she walked right into it. Her husband, Emi, wielding a long whip, was standing at the entrance of the house, his countenance warning her to turn back but it was too late! It was 10.30pm. Becky had spent hours in the ever-busy Lagos traffic. She had left her office on the Island by 5.30 pm after a hectic day, but had no control over the ensuing logjam. On alighting from the car, her plan was to explain to her husband why she was so late. But that was not to be. He whipped her black and blue before she could do so. The next day, Becky got to the office with a black eye and her skin was pock-marked with blotches. She lied to her curious colleagues that she fell down the staircase at home, and was given three days’ break to treat herself. But unknown to Becky, her colleagues had noticed a pattern. Over the years, she had often appeared at her workplace with bruises and the ‘tired’ excuse that she had an accident. Before long, though, Becky learnt to fight back. Her matrimonial home became a battle field and eventually, her marriage packed up. But she made sure she left her guy with a permanent disability during a fight. Recalling her experience, Becky said she was 21 years old when they met. “I met him when I was 21 and he was 10 years older than me. For the first couple of months, we had a great time, spending all our spare time together. I thought it would be fun but it wasn’t like that. He was a bit too serious and I admired that as a masculine quality. I enjoyed him asking questions about my past and other family members. “But when we got married, he began asking about my previous boyfriends. He wanted to know how long I’d known them before I slept with them, and where and how it had happened. When I was vague or didn’t want to answer his questions, he would get angry and I would get frustrated with him and plead with him to stop or tap him on his arm but that was always my mistake. He would hit me,leaving me with bruises, mainly on my arms. The main effect of this violence was that I started to change. I stopped being myself. I would avoid any conversation with friends that would have anything to do with him. I didn’t look at or talk to other men. “During sex, I didn’t initiate anything or lose control of myself. He wouldn’t like this and would start questioning me about things again. It was like that for six years or so and during that time, we had two children. Also during that time, he would get angry occasionally and would call me names. I always thought that his behaviour was my fault, mainly due to the thoughts he instilled in me at the beginning of the relationship. “ When I started working in a blue-chip company on the Island, I thought things would be better but that was not the case. We all know about the Lagos traffic, and whenever I got home late, he would descend on me. He was in private business and managed his time, but because his business was not doing very well initially, he allowed me to work so as to complement his earnings. He used to take everything I earned until I began to resist that. Over the years, I grew in my job but that never mattered to him. The beatings even got worse until I started fighting back and we called it quits”. Meanwhile, if you think women are the only victims of domestic violence, you have to think again. The catch, though, is that most men are ashamed to tell their stories. No man, after all, wants to admit that his wife or partner dominates or abuses him. Men are often thought of as strong, domineering and macho. Boys, even at a young age, are taught that it is unmanly to cry. So the idea of a grown man being frightened or vulnerable is a taboo. The idea of a man being battered is ludicrous. Hence, many male victims of abuse may feel “less of a man” for their experience, as though they are in some way not manly enough and ought to have the ability to prevent the abuse. John, a trader, admitted he has a domineering wife but has been able to check her excesses over the years. “ She discouraged me from seeing old friends, especially female friends. She threatened to use violence against them. She would flirt with my friends, but then tell me that they were trying to seduce her behind my back. This left me feeling distrustful of my friends. Later on, I found out that she had been telling them they shouldn’t come around because I was insanely jealous. All this had the effect of damaging my social network. “ As our relationship progressed, she began to scream at me and hit me. She had attacked me with a knife once and I asked her to leave my house, but after intervention by in-laws, I brought her back to the house. But that didn’t stop her. She would even bite me and I would lie to my friends that I had scratched myself while shaving; whereas it was my wife who did it with her nails and sometimes her teeth.” But not all men are as lenient as John. The truth of the matter is that many will hit back at wives who attack them, and when they do, they risk being accused of physical abuse themselves. Abuse is not always physical, and a lot of men, in common with many women, face daily emotional, verbal and psychological abuse in silence for years, their self-esteem being slowly eroded and some get isolated from others around them due to shame. Linus Nwafor recalls what happened to his neighbour. “I was dumbfounded when I saw my neighbour getting struck by this woman he spent the night with. I was the one who called the police. I had to do that because my son was married to a violent young woman for a few months before he left her. My son was larger than her and nobody believed she abused him violently. She never used weapons, so she didn’t come close to hurting him physically. But she hit him whenever she got the opportunity, cut up his clothes and threw them in the yard. She destroyed the properties he had accumulated over the years, including their wedding album. Neither party was blameless, but the physical violence was all hers. If my son had ever hit her, there would have been evidence for weeks.” Pedro, an accountant who is still married, said he had witnessed hell in his marriage. “I am in a marriage with a woman who has difficulty controlling her rage, which would frequently erupt with verbal abuse and screaming. We fight a lot but she is always the one initiating it. In one particular case, after she initiated a fight by kicking and throwing punches, she called the police to report me as the violent abuser! When they responded, I was seen as the bad guy, she was the victim! These days, I try to stay away from home, visiting friends and other family members at the close of work. Most times, I get home drunk and sleep in the sitting room. I stopped eating her food and she doesn’t care”. In the final analysis, no one – male or female – deserves to be hit, insulted and ridiculed or touched intimately if s(he) has asked not to be. No one deserves to be treated like a doormat, threatened, attacked with a weapon, shamed before peers, told what to do, when and with whom. In fact, no one deserves to be abused in any way. |
By Aderonke Adeyeri While the majority of domestic violence victims are women, male-oriented abuse occurs more often than many think. Naturally, men are stronger than women but that does not necessarily make it easier for them to have their way all the time. According to a 2010 National Survey by the Centres for Disease Control and U.S Department of Justice, in the last 12 months, more men have been victims of intimate- partner physical violence than women. The survey also indicates that men were also more often victims of psychological aggression. It is not also impossible that gender-biased individuals have overtime managed to sway society into believing that there are more female victims of domestic violence than men. Yet, men are being ignored and threatened by a double-edged sword; they are victimized by partners who also complain about being abused. Also, an abused man faces a shortage of resources, skepticism from Police and other major legal obstacles, especially when it comes to gaining custody of his children from an abusive mother. Could it be natural or was it designed by men themselves? Speaking with Saturday Vanguard, Israel Obi, who was a victim of hot vegetable oil bath by his wife, narrated his ordeal: “I got married to Victoria May 2005 and settled in Odorasanya in, Ijebu Igbo of Ogun State. It all started when my wife influenced me about our relocation to Lagos and I did not know it was the beginning of my trauma. Victoria, influenced by our new environment (hustle and bustle in Lagos), started coming late from her shop. And anytime I cautioned my wife, she turned the situation into an argument. She changed from my loving wife to the abusive spouse calling me different names.” On that fateful night, Israel and his wife had an intense argument and around1.00am,Victoria went into her husband’s room and poured hot vegetable oil on him. Israel lamented, “It was our neighbours from the other flats that took me to a hospital and I was there for a whole month.” After his discharge from the hospital, Victoria pleaded for forgiveness and they were together again. But barely two weeks after, Israel was receiving a phone call from a distant aunt and his wife thought it was a conversation with an unknown mistress. Victoria accused him of infidelity. “Before I knew what was happening, she smashed my phone to the ground and started destroying all the gadgets at home. When I tried to stop her, she became more aggressive and stabbed me with a knife,” he revealed. www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/domestic-violence-a-society-biased-against-males/ |
Pls, this thread is for those experienced enough to provide valuable answers. I'll keep it short and simple. Before making an investment in any business, what are the right questions for the "investor" to ask? What enquiry should he/she make before committing his/her cash. |
Only stupid girls will allow a guy tape their love making sessions. Its reckless fun with dangerous consequences |
Indomie contains BHT and BHA which have been shown to carcinogenic. Its bad if you eat it raw, you are predisposing yourself to cancer. |
You'll have to go for HSE training. Its quite expensive, but its worth it as there is demand for professionals in that field. Google institute of safety professionals of nigeria for more info. You can also call their representatives in the various states they are located. believe me its worth it! |
[quote author=babe_online]thanks I checked and its true! [/quote]You are welcome |
Check the oxford English dictionary, there is nothing wrong with the term "mineral". It also means soft drink. |
lirerih: The challenges facing the present day BMS graduates in Nigeria is what I'll call "the presence of the absence". As most of us rightly opined earlier, we need a registration council for the BMS. A registration council with oversight functions just like the MDCN and the MLSCN since we are all members of the "health team" with different functions. Hospital equipment such as the ECG, EEG, Spirometer, dialysis machines, etc as well as other services such as sterilization, phlebotomy, etc ought to be the job of a physiologist in the clinical setting. More so, I'd advocate that the BSc BMS programme currently run in our universities should be done together with the MSc where one may decide to either go into research and eventually become a research physiologist, biomedical scientist or go into clinical practice where he/she can become a core clinical physiologist with distinct functions in the clinical setting. Even those persons who would want to teach/lecture physiology and related courses in the higher institution, fall into the category of research physiologist. Unless steps are taken to move the BMS into such direction, we will just remain where we are and continue lamenting. It pains me to see that our so-called lecturers and "mentors" who also were in this stage at a particular time in their life are virtually doing nothing, saying nothing to remedy this situation. We have the PSN (Physiological Society of Nigeria), we also have the Anatomical Society of Nigeria as registered associations for Physiological and Anatomical Sciences in Nigeria. I hope one way or the other this gets to them for appropriate action.Your head they there! But i suggest we put pressure on mlscn to certify us for practice. Anatomists can function as histopathologists as far as diagnosis is the aim. Mdcn Will never entertain such plea because of their ego. Any other "professional body" without a charter can never achieve anything or influence events in favor of her members. Our best bet is mlscn, we need to prevail on them to train and license us for practice. #SHIKENA ![]() |
Liverpoolfc: if i have had the power to barn the moderator, i would have done that for ignoring the plea to frontpage this topic. Suppose it was topic that concerns tonto dike, he/she would hv long frontpage it.. Vexiiiiiiiinnnnnnggggmy dear stop asking for front page! simply going by the amount of posts on this thread and the traffic it has generated, it does not deserve front page. BMS graduates/students should simply come in, discuss or air their grievances with the current situation and join heads together to find a solution. i spoke about the issue of obtaining a license to practice, you all acted as if its not relevant, but that's simply what is holding us back from being relevant in healthcare service delivery. we need to storm MLSCN and make our voices heard. the older generation no dey reason una, na time to take matters into our own hands! #SHIKENA ![]() |
try koeman intergrated services ltd, 583 motor road, shogunle bus stop, ikeja, lagos. call 07060546217, 08034499328, 080335511784 or email koemaninv@yahoo.co.uk |
busar: Still availablewhat's your location? |
ok here I go! I read microbiology and the little I understand about the system operating in nigeria is that b.sc holders are not eligible for any form of clinical practice. license for practice is not given. now the issue with basic medical sciences is not really different as the "professionals" that actually run the show don't want you guys to be licensed. why? I don't know, but I think its time we put pressure on the relevant medical councils to give us chance. how? I don't know, (we should form a coalition, storm their various secretariats and demand to be taken seriously in the scheme of things ).I was at the medical laboratory science council zonal office in lagos last year and i found out that initially, an internship program for b.sc holders in biochemistry and microbiology was being run by the council, but it was later scrapped and non of the people i asked was able to give a good reason why. [b][/b]WE NEED TO BE LICENSED OR ELSE NOTHING FOR US. datz all ![]() |
i heard the prices for accommodation there na cut throat |
lets swap, i have a storm 2. i'll give you 12k |
sova: my brother, chk http://www.nispnigeria.orgYou are referring him to institute of safety professionals! The training in environment management is too expensive and does not guarantee employment as he has no working experience. Pls be real! |
sova: .Its not lack of focus. I woke up to reality b4 I graduated and I took action by acquiring a skill. I suggest you do the same. |
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and the little I understand about the system operating in nigeria is that b.sc holders are not eligible for any form of clinical practice. license for practice is not given. now the issue with basic medical sciences is not really different as the "professionals" that actually run the show don't want you guys to be licensed. why? I don't know, but I think its time we put pressure on the relevant medical councils to give us chance. how? I don't know, (we should form a coalition, storm their various secretariats and demand to be taken seriously in the scheme of things