Tuesday, December 23, 2025

If She Cheated, She’d Be Gone in 24 Hours — So Why Is He Still ‘Faithful’?

A Faithful Cheater? How a Nigerian Facebook Post Accidentally Exposed the Rot We Refuse to Address





By The Dreamer’s Pause


It’s only Tuesday.
Yet social media is already exhausted.

If you’ve been online this week — especially African social media — you’ve probably seen that story. The one that refuses to leave your timeline. The one that makes you pause, sigh, and ask yourself how, in the 21st century, we are still having the same tired conversations.


• A married woman.
• Four children.
• A housemaid.
• A husband.
• A betrayal so loud it crossed borders.

Depending on which version you read, the wife travelled either to another Nigerian state or to Canada to give birth. While she was away — pregnant, vulnerable, trusting — her husband slept with their housemaid and got her pregnant.

When the wife returned and found out, she did what shocked some people and offended others:
She left. She filed for divorce. She chose dignity.

And honestly?
That should have been the end of the story.
But Africa’s favourite sport is not football — it is selective outrage.



When Self-Respect Offends Society





What I saw when I read that she left was not rebellion.
I saw self-respect.


She respected herself.
She respected her children.
She respected both families involved.
She respected marriage enough not to reduce it to humiliation therapy.

But apparently, that was too much.

Because soon after, a Facebook post began circulating — written by a man — explaining, confidently and shamelessly, why the husband was actually… faithful.

Yes. Faithful.

According to him:

1. A man who impregnates his housemaid is a faithful husband.
2. The maid was “available” and therefore became a “useful tool”.
3. The wife should have stayed, taken care of the pregnant maid, and helped arrange her relocation.
4. Money — ₦50k monthly — should solve everything.
5. The child should later be introduced to the family quietly, like a delayed delivery.

I wish this was satire.
Unfortunately, it was written seriously.


Let’s Be Honest: Would This Grace Exist If the Roles Were Reversed?




Let’s stop pretending.
If a man (especially an African man) discovers his wife ever cheated:


• It does not take ten days.
• It does not take twenty-four hours.
• Sometimes, it doesn’t even take sunset.

Her bags are packed.
Her name is dragged.
Her dignity is stripped.

And society claps.

“He did the right thing.”
“He protected his respect.”
“He is a real man.”

But when a woman chooses the same boundary?
Suddenly she is:

 emotional 
• impatient
• toxic
• proud
• unforgiving
• unwise

So I ask: what kind of justice only works in one direction?



“Men Have Needs” Is Not a Moral Argument




Let’s address the most tired excuse of all.
“He Needs Sex"

If sexual frustration justifies betrayal, then marriage is meaningless.
Pregnancy becomes permission.
Distance becomes a loophole.
Illness becomes an excuse.

Love without patience is not love.
Commitment without discipline is not commitment.
Vows without restraint are just performance.

If the marriage was unbearable, there were options:

• conversation
• counselling
• separation
• divorce

Cheating — especially with a housemaid, in a clear power imbalance — clearly was not one of them.


And About the Housemaid…


No one online knows whether there was consent, coercion, pressure, or manipulation.

And that uncertainty alone should make everyone uncomfortable.

Employer-employee relationships are not neutral.
Power changes everything.

Reducing her to “a tool” is not culture.
It is dehumanisation.




From Lagos to Johannesburg — We See It


This story trended in Nigeria, but it resonated across Africa — including here in South Africa — because the pattern is familiar.

Different accents.
Same excuses.
Same entitlement.

Whether you say “na culture”, “that’s how men are”, or “a wise woman endures” — the message is the same:
Women must absorb male irresponsibility quietly.

Not anymore.


Final Pause


Kudos to that woman.
Not for being perfect — but for being clear.

May she find peace that does not require endurance.
Love that does not demand self-erasure.
And a partner that understands fidelity is not geography — it is character.

And to those still calling betrayal wisdom?

We see you.
And we are no longer silent.

— The Dreamer’s Pause


© 2025 The Dreamer’s Pause. All rights reserved.

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