Julius Agwu, a comedian/musician, has been married to his wife, Ibiere for five years. The marriage is blessed with a daughter, Zahra. They talk about their marriage in this interview.
You have been married for five
years. How has the journey been like?
Ibiere: It has been good.
How did you meet?
Julius: We met at a wedding in
year 2000; she was part of the bridal train. Incidentally, Okey Bakassi and I
were the comperes at the event, and both of us competed on who would be the
first to ask her out. I made the first move but she was too little, she was
underage.
Ibiere (cuts in): I was 18, I
was not underage.
Julius Agwu: Well, she was 18
but she was a baby. I just saw one beautiful girl. I was smarter, I was faster,
and I was able to get her contact.
We became friends but she
started putting up an attitude whenever I tried reaching her. At a point, I called
her bluff and wondered who she was. In fact, I forgot about her.
Ibiere, why did you put up an
attitude?
Ibiere: I was not putting up
any attitude, I just concentrated on my books, then, I was in my first year in
the university.
Was your attitude as a result
of his profession as a comedian?
Ibiere: The fact
that he is a comedian had nothing to do with my decision, I wasn’t just
interested.
So, at what point did you
change your mind and show interest?
Ibiere: After the first
meeting, we lost contact for two years; we met later and became friends.
When you met her later, what
was your reaction?
Julius: I met her two
years later in 2002 when I lost my father. I was very angry because at
that period, my career was just kicking off. The day he died, I went to Chioba,
my village to settle his hospital bills.
On getting there, I saw a crowd
of mourners at our gate. I was so angry that I made up my mind to drink myself
to stupor. I went to a town in Port Harcourt to have drinks with some friends
who had come to commiserate with me. When I left our table for the toilet, I
ran into her on the corridor. She informed me that it was the eve of her
birthday and she had come out for some drinks with her
friends.
I informed her that I had just
lost my father. We moved from there to another club and since it was her
birthday, I decided to buy drinks for everybody. After all the money I
spent at the club, they wanted to leave. So, I asked her, “are you leaving
without even giving me a kiss?” She said, for what?’ I realised she was
still putting up an attitude and that got me very angry. This was in addition
to the fact that I was tipsy. Again, I called her bluff.
During my father’s burial, she
came, but she was still a baby because she still had her curfew and she was not
supposed to stay out late. But I was impressed that she made out time to
visit me.
At what point did it occur to
you that he might propose?
Ibiere: At no point, when
he proposed, I was not actually thinking about marriage because I had just
graduated and was not even thinking of marriage.
But Julius, do you agree that
part of this attraction could be the fact that she was not really interested?
Julius: One thing about me is
that I like to have my way. I have always had my way and she posed a challenge
for me through her lack of interest. But I did not just see a beautiful
girl, I saw someone who was intelligent and stern. She was principled from the
outset. She is actually my greatest critic.
Since he is a jovial person and
makes money out of telling jokes, are there times you expect him to be serious
about some issues and he is not?
Ibiere: He knows when I want
him to be serious and he sees it on my face. Most times, I don’t even need to
say anything, I just look at him and he knows I mean business. Also, I know
when he is serious. When I see his facial expression I know.
His job entails a lot of
publicity. How do you deal with that especially being with him almost at every
event?
Ibiere: I am always with him
but I am not in the public glare because I don’t bring myself out there to be
seen. I am always in the background.
Do you laugh at his jokes when
he is on stage?
Ibiere: If it is funny I laugh,
if it is not I don’t laugh.
You must really enjoy his
jovial nature?
Ibiere: He could be very
annoying; forget all these things he does on stage. He gets me annoyed.
At home?
Ibiere: Not even at home.
What does he do to annoy you?
(At this point, the couple
stared hard at each other).
Ibiere: What does he do to
annoy me? Hmm… I don’t want to go there.
Julius: Go there now.
What does she do to make you
angry?
Julius: She is an introvert;
most times I am the one who would ask, ‘are you okay? What is the problem?’ She
would just keep to herself and that really gets at me.
Sometimes, I would expect her
to ask me how I am faring but she never does. Though I like the fact that she
really doesn’t have friends; but I still don’t like the way she treats
me. Before we got married she would ask me, ‘baby, have you eaten? Try
and eat something please.’
Since we got married, she has
not bothered to ask me if I have eaten! These days, I have to beg her to ask me
if I have eaten.
Is this true?
Ibiere: No. It is not true.
When was the last time you
asked him if he had eaten?
Ibiere: I asked him day before
yesterday.
Julius: When was the last
time before the day before yesterday?
How do you settle fights?
Ibiere: We fight until one of
us is tired; usually he is the one who gets tired first.
Is it true?
Julius: It is true. The kind of
job I do is to give laughter and joy. So, each time we quarrel, I don’t feel
comfortable, I can’t claim to give people joy when I am not happy. I
thought I was an expert at keeping malice. until I met her.
Ibiere: You are worse than me.
I might not be happy but if I am angry, I can still talk to him but if he is
angry, he can go on and would not even say a word to anybody.
Has your bond grown stronger?
Both: Yes it has. Funny enough
it has.
What has kept your marriage?
Julius: We just decided that we
would not engage in stupid quarrels.
Ibiere: Before the situation
gets to the stage of quarrelling, we speak about our feelings instead of
bottling up issues.
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