1. The I love You And Its Reply’s
I have for times without count said either ” I love you too or I love you more” is a default reply to the very phrase ” I love you” but for some reasons, certain categorised Ghanaian men have decided to change their setting from the default hence tend to respond anyway and anyhow they deem appropriate.
We are in a relationship and we claim to be in love, whether built on deceit or whatever, we are together and so is it not only right to tell me you love me if and when I say I love you? irrespective of the many times we may have said that in a day?.
But no, the typical Ghanaian man will just not buy into such little luxuries that someway somehow adds spice to the relationship. He would rather go indifferent on you than say I love you too.
I mean you men have always said women are gullible so why not make that assumptions more solid by allowing us feed on the lies you tell by responding with an ” I love you too” even if the plausible is false?
The best you can get is an emoji or silence, the worst is a lonesome ” K”.
Scratching my head as to why an article addressing an issue between African men and women has a white couple as the main image. As Africans several generations removed from the continent and forced to live in America, we look up to you. Having never been enslaved and never having your connection to Mother Africa interrupted, we admire you and long to live in a country, as you do, where positive black imagery can flourish. To see this front and center feels like the same white supremacy brainwashing we’ve been battered with here. Unexpected and jolting to find it in an African publication. Why? Or what am I missing?