Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Widowed Yesterday, Wedding Tomorrow? The Awkward Timeline of "Moving On"

How Soon Is Too Soon? Or When Does Moving On Turn Into a Speed Dating Olympics After Death?”



Alright, let’s talk about that weird moment when someone loses their spouse, and before you can say “Rest in peace”, they’re already “I do-ing” with someone who looks like a clone of the dearly departed.

Yes, I know — grief is a messy, personal jungle gym. Some people bounce back like nothing happened, others cry rivers for decades. But when you see a private wedding happening less than a year after the funeral, and the new partner might as well be a photocopy of the old one, you gotta ask:

Did I miss the memo that grief now comes with a “speed dating” option?

I’m not here to judge who’s “allowed” to heal when. But seriously, when does “moving on” become “moving over” the memories and respect owed to the person who checked out early? Is there a secret grace period that comes with a handbook, or do people just wing it with the survival instinct and a new spouse?

And look, it’s not like I’m advocating for people to stay miserable forever or turn into grief zombies. But can we please at least pause for a beat? Or better yet, a year? Because nothing says “I loved you” like a swift replay with a substitute player—especially if she’s the same height, hair color, and probably same Starbucks order.

Let’s be honest — some people move on so fast they’d make The Flash look like a couch potato. It’s like grief took an Uber and they sprinted off the ride before the driver even said, “You’ve arrived.”

And while I’m all for love and second chances, I’m also rooting for a little respect for the past, a pinch of decency, and maybe a quiet moment to not replace your lost love with a "CTRL + C, CTRL + V" version.

Grief isn’t a race, folks. It’s more like a long, unpredictable marathon that nobody signed up for but everybody’s running anyway—at their own pace.

So, next time you see someone go from “mourning” to “marrying” faster than you can finish your morning coffee, just remember: Love is complicated. Grief is complicated. But rushing through either? That’s just… awkward.

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

Saturday, July 19, 2025

Dear Negroes: You're Making It Hard for the Rest of Us

Dear Negroes: You're Making It Hard for the Rest of Us


Dear Negroes,

Let me say it plain: I’m tired.

Tired of opening social media and seeing us act like walking stereotypes.
Fighting in public like it’s a concert.
Twerking on sidewalks with kids watching.
Screaming in restaurants, throwing food, filming the mess, and posting it like it’s content gold.
Proudly calling ourselves “hoes,” “gangsters,” “baddies,” “toxic,” like it’s a badge of culture.

And what hurts more?
It’s us recording it.
Us hyping it.
Us laughing and calling it "just vibes."

Then the rest of us—Black people who carry ourselves with grace, with purpose, with peace—get lumped in with that noise.
We lose opportunities.
We lose respect.
We lose chances to just be seen as individuals.

We’re not being silenced by white supremacy which does not EXIST!
We’re being drowned out by our own dysfunction.

This isn’t hate. This isn’t self-loathing. This is grief.
Because I love being Black. But sometimes?
It’s hard loving a culture that doesn’t always love itself back.

Signed,
The Girl Behind the Dreamer’s Pause
A Black girl who knows we can do better—because we are better.

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

🎭Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Destination Wedding Left Me Fabulogasted😬

🎭 The Girl Behind The Dreamer’s Pause: Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Destination Wedding Left Me Fabulogasted



Yes, I said it. Fabulogasted. Confused, disappointed, and slightly embarrassed on behalf of a franchise that once made me laugh so hard I cried.

As a loyal fan of the Madea universe, I walked into Madea’s Destination Wedding expecting chaos, comedy, and classic Perry family drama. What I got was rushed storytelling, shallow characters, forced jokes, and enough sexual innuendos to make me question if I accidentally clicked on the wrong genre.

Let’s break this down before my dreamer’s pause becomes a scream.




🎬 The Beginning? Promising.


The intro pulled me in — there was the usual charm. Madea, Aunt Bam, Mr. Brown, and Cora were bringing it. Their scenes together are always the saving grace, a comedic cocktail that works every time. You know when those four get talking, things are about to get funny... in the classic “hide the kids” way we’ve come to expect.

But once the wedding storyline took center stage, I started bracing myself.




🤦🏽‍♀️ Enter: Xavier, Tiffany’s Fiancé


Let’s not sugarcoat it. Xavier was one of the dullest male leads I’ve ever seen in a Madea movie. Tyler Perry — a man who has crafted legendary characters and powerful arcs — somehow handed one of the most central roles to a man with the energy of an unplugged toaster. There was no chemistry. No fire. No oomph. The scene where Xavier spoke with Brian Simmons (also played by Perry) had all the emotional weight of a bored cashier reading a receipt. It was dry. Cringe. Forgettable.




🙅🏽‍♀️ Debrah and the Bachelor Party from Nowhere


Now, I’d like to talk about Debrah — Tiffany’s mom and Brian’s ex. Her character felt like a leftover plot point with nowhere to go. Her new husband? Even worse. The chemistry was flatter than soda left open for three days. Add in the bachelor party scene, and things went from boring to borderline inappropriate. Let me be real here: I was watching this with my little sister, and I had to skip parts. What used to be a chaotic family comedy has now started dipping too far into over-sexualized territory.




🤷🏽‍♀️ Fast. Forced. Forgettable.


The pacing? Way too fast. The plot? Lacked depth. The humor? Overused, recycled, and overly dependent on slapstick and suggestiveness. Madea’s Destination Wedding felt like someone rushed it to Netflix just to meet a deadline.




🧓🏽 Is It Time for Tyler Perry to Rest?


Now don’t get me wrong — Tyler Perry is legendary. He has given us characters, stories, and cultural moments we will never forget. But maybe, just maybe, it’s time to pass the torch. Or at least open the door for fresh, young creatives who still have that hunger for originality. The Hollywood recycling machine is real, and I’m seeing it more and more — especially when a Madea film starts to feel like a parody of itself.

If there’s no passion left, don’t fake it. Hire people who still believe in good storytelling. If you’ve got no creativity left, Tyler, hire me. Seriously.




🎤 Final Thoughts


I’ve never walked away from a Madea film this disappointed. Usually, I laugh. Sometimes, I cry. This time? I skipped scenes, cringed at awkward performances, and whispered “What was that?” more than once.

Madea’s Destination Wedding was overhyped. And honestly? I’m not even mad. I’m just... fabulogasted.

But hey, don’t just take my word for it. Watch it for yourself — or don’t. Just know: if Madea’s legacy ends like this, I might have to throw my own destination roast.

Disclaimer: Images used on this blog are for illustrative purposes only and remain the property of their respective owners. No copyright infringement is intended.



📚 APA References






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

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

👑 Did You Come to Lead — or Just Never Leave?: A Love Letter to African Presidents Who Don’t Know When to Pack and Go


💣 “Presidents for Life? Or Presidents of Lies?” – When African Leadership Becomes a Lifetime Job Application


By Lilo Phedra, a very concerned African citizen who still believes in accountability.




Let’s not even lie. Let’s not even pretend. Let’s just sit down and admit this one thing:
Some African presidents are addicted to power like it’s their grandmother’s pap and stew.
They. Can’t. Let. Go.

I’m talking about the kind of leadership that doesn’t step down — even when their knees are weak, their hands are shaking, and the country is begging: “Papa, please rest.”
But rest? No! Instead, they sharpen pencils and run again for the 8th, 9th, 10th time like it’s an endless season of a bad soap opera. “The Chronicles of Power: Geriatric Edition.”




🇨🇲 Enter Paul Biya: Cameroon’s Lifetime Captain of the Presidential Club

The man is 92. Ninety-two. And he just announced he’s running again in 2025 for his eighth term.
Not the third. Not the fourth. The eighth.

Paul Biya has ruled Cameroon since 1982. Some of us weren’t even born when he first took office. Some of us are out here struggling to finish one course — and this man has finished seven terms and wants an eighth helping.

I’m sorry… what kind of hunger is that?
Leadership is supposed to be a service, not a lifetime addiction. But here we are.




👴🏽 The Presidential “Never Retire” Club

Paul Biya is not alone. No, no. In fact, Africa has a VIP section for leaders who treat the presidency like it’s a family inheritance. Let me introduce you to the “Long-Term🧓🏾 Africa’s "Forever Presidents" Club:

These leaders have held onto power like it’s glued to their palms. Some are still ruling. Some were finally shown the door (or the window — depending how dramatic it was).

🔥 Current Longest-Serving Presidents


-

 Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo

Country: Equatorial Guinea

Years in Power: 45 years

Status: ✅ Still in office

Fun Fact: Came to power in 1979 — before most of us were even born. The man has been president longer than hip-hop has existed.





Paul Biya


Country: Cameroon

Years in Power: 43 years

Status: ✅ Still in office (and running for an 8th term at age 92)

Fun Fact: Has ruled since 1982 — even cassette tapes were still trending when he took over.





 Yoweri Museveni



Country: Uganda

Years in Power: 39 years

Status: ✅ Still in office

Fun Fact: Changed both age limits and term limits to make sure he never has to hand over the mic. Ever.





 Denis Sassou Nguesso

Country: Republic of Congo (Congo-Brazzaville)

Years in Power: Around 40 years (combined)

Status: ✅ Still in office

Fun Fact: Took a break in the 90s, came back like a boomerang, and has ruled ever since.





 Isaias Afwerki



Country: Eritrea

Years in Power: 32 years

Status: ✅ Still in office

Fun Fact: Has never held a single election since independence in 1993. Calls it “unity.” We call it… something else.





🪓 Former "Forever Presidents" Who Were (Eventually) Removed




6. Robert Mugabe
Country: Zimbabwe

Years in Power: 37 years

Status: ❌ Forced out in 2017

How It Ended: Military “soft coup” — very polite eviction with uniforms.





7. Omar al-Bashir


Country: Sudan

Years in Power: 30 years

Status: ❌ Ousted in 2019

How It Ended: Nationwide protests brought tanks, chants, and finally... change.





These are the guys who said, “Two terms? I don't know her.”




🗳️ But... Are They Democratic?

Yes — on paper.
Constitution says: “Democracy.”
Reality says: “Authoritarian, but make it fashion.”

They hold “elections” where:

State media is the hype-man 

Opposition is jailed or mysteriously missing

Votes are counted... but maybe not really

The court is just another branch of the president's WhatsApp group


This is what experts call “electoral authoritarianism” — fake democracy with a sprinkle of fear and a full plate of manipulation.




🤯 Why the Greed?

Seriously. What are they fighting for?

The pension? (They already have Swiss bank accounts.)

The respect? (The people are begging them to leave.)

The legacy? (What legacy, if your youth are jobless and hopeless?)


Let me be blunt:
It’s about power. Control. Immunity. Wealth.
And maybe even fear — fear of what happens if they step down. Investigations? Jail? Accountability? Oof. That word burns.




✊🏾 But We See You

Dear Presidents-for-Life,

Your people are not blind.
We have Wi-Fi now. We read. We speak. We vote (when you let us).
And we’re tired of the Presidency becoming a throne, while the country sinks deeper into unemployment, brain drain, inflation, and spiritual fatigue.

You can only gag the people for so long. Eventually, they cough — and it turns into a roar.




🗣️ My Final Words:

Let leadership be leadership. Not dictatorship.
Let power rotate. Not stagnate.
Let democracy mean something. Not everything but.

We are the young voices of this continent, and we’re not stupid. We see through the suits, the photo ops, the “re-election” posters at 92.

Retire. Rest. Release. Respect your people.

You’ve ruled enough. Let the next generation rise. We’re not your enemies — we’re your children.
But even children eventually say: “Baba, it’s enough.”






📚 References:









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


If Men Can Be Feminists, Can Women Be Masculinists?

Can Men Be Feminists? Let's Talk, Before We All Lose the Plot"



By The Girl Behind The Dreamer's Pause




I was peacefully watching a video. An African woman I follow—graceful, elegant, and full of sense—was talking about femininity, push gifts, and the beauty of womanhood. You know, the type of content that reminds you that being a woman is something sacred, powerful, and beautiful in its own way.

Then I made a mistake.

I scrolled down to the comment section.

Yes, the comment section. Where logic goes to die.

And there it was.

> "Men can be feminists."



Boom.

I blinked. Read it again. Re-read it. Even tilted my phone sideways—as if that would somehow make it make sense.

Let’s be clear: it wasn’t that someone said it. We live in a world where people say wild things every day. It was who said it.

An African woman.

That hit like a slap. Not an American TikTok slap. A real, wake-up-and-wash-the-sins-off-your-soul kind of slap. I thought, "Wow. We’re really in the 21st century. We’ve joined them."




What Even Is a Feminist?

Let’s not twist words.

A feminist, by basic definition, is someone who believes in the political, social, and economic equality of the sexes. Historically, it was a movement born to fight for women’s rights in a time when they were treated like accessories to men—silent, obedient, limited.

And you know what? The early waves of feminism did good work. Women couldn’t vote. Own land. Open bank accounts. Buy a car. In many societies, a woman’s existence was tied to a man’s name.

Feminism changed that.

But like an unmonitored pot on the stove, it boiled over. Today, modern feminism (especially online) feels less about equality and more about rage, superiority, and lowkey blaming men for existing.




So Can a Man Be a Feminist?

Look, I’m not here to cancel anyone’s label. But we need to think logically.

Feminism was created by women, for women, based on women’s experiences and women’s struggles. It’s built on the foundation of correcting gender imbalance against women. So where exactly does a man fit into that?

> Saying a man can be a feminist is like saying a fish can join the birdwatching club. Sweet gesture, but… bro, you’re not the target audience.



If a man says, "I believe women deserve equal rights," great. Respect that.

But why must he wear the feminist badge to prove it? To get a woman’s approval? Because Twitter told him it’s attractive?

No.

A man can respect women, support their ambitions, uplift their voices, and still keep his masculinity intact.

Being a feminist should not be the price men pay for female validation.




What If Women Were Masculinists?

Here’s where it gets spicy.

Let’s flip the script.

If a man can be a feminist, does that mean a woman can be a masculinist? Ever heard a woman proudly say, “I am a mascuinist and I support the rights of men and the power of masculine leadership”? No?

Exactly.

Because the minute a woman says that, the world will accuse her of being a "pick me," suffering from internalized misogyny, or betraying her gender.

Meanwhile, a man gets applauded for calling himself a feminist—even if he’s just repeating buzzwords he doesn’t understand.

That’s not equality. That’s double standards on steroids.




A Word to the Men (Yes, You, King)


Dear men, I say this with peace and purpose:

You don’t have to become a feminist to prove you value women.

You don’t need to water yourself down, erase your strength, or apologize for being a man. If a woman only respects you when you bend over backwards to please her ideology, she doesn’t truly respect you—she respects her reflection in you.

Support women? Yes. Love women? Absolutely. But don’t abandon your identity to wear a label that wasn’t made for you.




A Word to the Women

We’ve gained a lot from feminism—and we shouldn’t forget that. But we also have the right to question where the movement is going. Blind loyalty is not empowerment.

A strong woman is not threatened by a strong man. And a strong man doesn’t need to be a feminist to be on her side.

Let’s stop turning gender into a team sport. It’s not us vs. them. It’s not "real men are feminists" or "real women must be warriors."

Let real be real.




In Conclusion

Feminism, at its core, was about justice. But now, it’s also about branding. And sometimes, people wear that brand without knowing what it really means.

So can a man be a feminist?

He can try. But should he? That’s the better question.

Maybe, instead of wearing titles like costumes, we should focus on values: Respect. Honor. Balance. Accountability. Purpose.

The rest? Just noise.


Written by the girl behind The Dreamer’s Pause. Still thinking. Still questioning. Still choosing clarity over chaos.

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

The Deadly Price of Perfection: Elena Jessica’s BBL Story You Can’t Ignore

WHEN BEAUTY GOES WRONG: THE SAD, SAD BBL STORY YOU NEED TO HEAR Hey Dreamers 👋🏿, listen. I need you to hear this because this ...

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