Between Gold and Grace
My name is Precious, and this is my story my real confusion, my real heart, my real crossroads.
I never thought my life would turn into a question with no clear answer. I grew up believing love was simple: two people, one heart, one future. But life has a way of testing what we think we know. At twenty-six, standing on the edge of adulthood, I found myself been ask out by two very different men,men who represented two very different futures.
The first is Tunde.
Tunde is not rich. In fact, by society’s loud standards, he is poor. He lives in a single room apartment, works tirelessly as a phone repairer, and counts his money carefully before spending. But Tunde is rich in ways that don’t make noise. He listens when I talk. He remembers small things how I don’t like sugar in my tea, how I go quiet when I’m worried, how I smile when I’m nervous. When I’m tired, he doesn’t tell me to be strong; he tells me to rest. When I doubt myself, he reminds me of who I am.
I met Tunde when I was still struggling to find my feet. I had nothing to offer but dreams and faith. He never mocked my dreams or rushed my growth. Sometimes he would come to see me with nothing but roasted corn and groundnuts, yet he would look at me like I was priceless. He has never raised his voice at me, never made me feel small, never acted like I owed him anything. His respect is gentle, consistent, and deep.
Then there is Kelvin.
Kelvin is everything society celebrates. He is wealthy, polished, and powerful. He drives expensive cars, wears designer clothes, and lives in a house that makes people gasp the first time they enter. When he proposed to me, it wasn’t quiet or simple. It was grand flowers, gifts, promises of comfort and luxury. My phone didn’t stop buzzing for days. Friends congratulated me. Family members smiled wider than I had ever seen.
But Kelvin’s love comes with sharp edges. He talks more than he listens. He corrects me in public. He reminds me sometimes jokingly, sometimes not of what he has and what he can provide. When I disagree with him, he calls it disrespect. When I express discomfort, he calls it drama. He loves me, yes, but his love feels like ownership, not partnership.
With Kelvin, I imagine a life of ease no financial struggle, no counting coins, no fear of tomorrow. But I also imagine a life where my voice slowly fades, where I begin to measure my worth by his approval, where comfort replaces peace.
Now here I am, standing between them.
One offers me peace without plenty.
The other offers me plenty without peace.
At night, when the world is quiet, I ask myself hard questions. Can love survive poverty? Can money cover arrogance? Will respect pay bills? Will wealth heal emotional wounds? I think of the future children, home, old age. I imagine sickness, arguments, seasons of loss. I wonder who will stand by me when life strips us bare.
Tunde says, “I don’t have much, but I’ll grow with you.”
Kelvin says, “I already have everything you need.”
One sees me as a partner.
The other sees me as a prize.
And so I write this story not with an answer, but with honesty. My heart is torn between security and sincerity, between gold and grace. I know whichever path I choose will shape the rest of my life.
So I ask myself the question that keeps me awake every night:
Who do I choose?
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