Mercy Aigbe-Gentry Says ‘Most Nigerian men don’t want their wives to outshine them’ in Motherhood InStyle + More Interview Excerpts
Nollywood actress Mercy Aigbe-Gentry is all about her family and gorgeous kids in the latest issue of Motherhood InStyle magazine.
The
actress talks to the magazine about having a supportive husband as a
working mother, discipline in her home, rumours of being a second wife,
motherhood challenges with her kids and much more.
Read excerpts below.
On getting support from her husband:
I’m married to Ashiwaju Olanrewaju Gentry and together we have two
beautiful kids. I always tell people that I married my own husband
because he has been awesome. He is mature and just a very fantastic
person. He is always there for me and supports me all the way. He has
actually helped me to achieve my dreams. With his help and God’s, I have
been able to do so many things. I’m just blessed. I always say when you
see a married woman doing very well that means she has a very
supportive husband. Most Nigerian men don’t want their wives to outshine
them, maybe it’s ego. I don’t know. They always want you to be
dependent on them for everything you want but my husband believes in me
and gives me total support. My celebrity status doesn’t even bother him,
he just sees me as Mercy.
On the kind of father he is:
He is a wonderful dad. I always tell him ‘Look you spoil kids too
much!’ I’m the disciplinarian in the home. He’s hardly tough on his kids
and doesn’t believe in smacking. He stands up for them when I want to
smack them sometimes. He’s just a very fantastic father.
On rumours of her being a second wife: I’m the only wife, one and only. No rival. He has been divorced since. I met him as a divorcee.
On her relationship with his other family:
He has three beautiful daughters and I have a fantastic relationship
with them. Even with their mum. They are my kids too. There are times
when they go on location with me and assume the role of my P.A while on
set. We do everything together, we’re fantastic together. They call me
their second mummy, they actually use the word ‘small’, they call me
‘small mummy’. So their mum is ‘big mummy’ and I’m ‘small mummy’. They
use the word small because like them I’m also in tune with today’s
trends. Their relationship with my kids too is very good.
On her former marriage:
Actually I’ll prefer not to talk about it but looking back, I thank God
for where I am today. I would say it’s not that there was something
both of us didn’t do right. The only issue we had was his mother, she
just didn’t want me to marry her son because I’m not from the Igbo
tribe. That was just it. We actually tried to convince her and all that
but when it wasn’t working, I just felt I had to leave.
On her growing 14-year-old daughter:
There was a day she came back from school and was like ‘Mummy somebody
got expelled in my class for giving someone blowjob’ and I just
exclaimed ‘Blow what? You know what that is?’ She just laughed and said
‘Mummy, you don’t expect me not to know that.’ You know, that opened
another room to educate her. As often as possible I have to talk to her
about boys. Teens need sex education. She is growing up so fast, so I
need to tell her all she needs and wants to know so she doesn’t get it
all mixed up.
On having domestic staff:
Ah, it’s God. Only Him can help working mums. I make sure I check
whoever I’m employing properly. I do the health check, a little bit of
background check to assess the person’s personality and values, and the
rest I leave to God. I monitor my domestic staff, even when I’m not
around. Mums can’t afford to be lazy about that. I must add that I have a
very good support system.
For more from Mercy Aigbe-Gentry’s interview pick up a copy of Motherhood InStyle in stores around you.
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