Woman Explains How Her Husband Raped Her Several Times In Marriage

    Terrible! Sadly, this happens to so many Nigerian women in marriage.
    What is even more heart-breaking is that a Nigerian man shared the story on his
    Facebook page and so many Nigerian men want the lady to shut up saying, sleeping
    with your wife in marriage without her consent is no rape. It’s so heart
    breaking tho… the story…
    My story starts like a lot of people’s stories. I had a
    whirlwind romance and married a man I put all my trust in. We had a happy
    marriage for a few years, and then we began to drift apart. Our lives were
    consumed by everyday events — children, school, work, sports — which meant we
    were a typical married couple working on raising a family and living a normal
    life.

    Seven years into our marriage, I started having memory and
    fatigue issues. Strange things would happen to me and I couldn’t remember how.
    One night, I woke up with a dissolving pill in my mouth. I had no recollection
    of taking a pill and was very confused. Another night I woke up with my clothes
    off. That was strange, since I wear clothes when I sleep and could not remember
    taking them off. I began to worry that I was sleepwalking.

    I was also experiencing a weird taste when I slept. It was
    very bitter, like that lingering awfulness in your mouth when you don’t get an
    aspirin down in the first swallow. After a while, I started tasting the same
    thing in my drinks. I thought there was something seriously wrong with me.
    One night, I woke up to my husband standing over me with
    something strange in one hand and a flashlight, shining in my face, with the
    other. As he scurried away he tried to hide something under the mattress. After
    a physical confrontation, I was able to retrieve what was hidden. Under the
    mattress was a vial with a cloudy liquid inside. I asked what it was and what
    was he doing with it. He admitted that he had been dissolving Xanax and/or
    Ambien and administering it to me while I slept. Of course I asked why and he
    told me he thought I needed the drugs so I could get more sleep. Confused, I
    begged him to stop. He agreed to stop and I trusted that he would.
    Over the next few years, I caught him multiple times
    administering the same white cloudy liquid to me. I confronted him over and
    over again, pleading for him to stop. He always had a way to make me believe
    that he would stop, that he was just looking out for my best interest.
    One day, my husband left his phone at home. I had had
    suspicions that maybe he was involved in something shady so I decided to
    investigate. I found something on that phone that would change my life forever:
    video taken by my husband of him having sex with me while I was passed out
    cold. There were three videos in total and in each one I looked like I was
    dead. I panicked.
    How did I not know this was happening to me? How did I not
    wake up when this was going on? I couldn’t wake up! I had been drugged with the
    white cloudy liquid that my husband administered to me countless times before.
    He would give me such a large amount of the drug that I would pass out and not
    wake up, for any reason. I was in a deep, drug-induced sleep. How many times
    had this happened? I had no idea. I was so disgusted, confused and afraid. I
    had always known that something wasn’t right, but I never had any proof until
    now.
    I kept a copy of the videos and confronted my husband. He
    acted like he had done nothing wrong and then he somehow manipulated me into
    believing that no one would believe me, even with the video. Very soon we were
    divorced. He moved out and away from me. Even though I could move on with my
    life, I always felt like I should do something, tell someone, let the world
    know that this extremely messed-up thing happened to me. I tried to shake those
    feelings off and concentrate on moving on. I would read self-help books, go to
    support groups and see a counselor regularly.
    One day, my son and daughter were supposed to go with their
    father for their weekend visit. My son would be gone most of the visit on a
    school trip and my daughter would have been left by herself with her father.
    All of a sudden, I felt like my brain opened up and I finally realized that
    what my husband did to me was 100% wrong. If he could do something that
    horrific and horrible to his own wife, then he could do it to anyone, including
    my daughter. It was then I knew that I needed to turn him in to the police for
    what he had done. He needed to be exposed for the monster that he was.
    I turned the copy of the video I had into the police and
    told them my story. For the next three years, I fought this man who I once
    trusted with my life. I had to fight him in the criminal court for his disgusting
    acts toward me and also in civil court over my children.
    Finally in the spring of last year, the jury trial came to
    an end: my husband was convicted of six Class B felonies, including rape and
    criminal deviant conduct.
    I was finally free — free of his lies, his manipulation and
    his dark cloud. I could finally move on knowing that I would be safe. This man
    could not hurt me or my children.
    Or so I thought.
    Two weeks later was his sentencing hearing — and we received
    the biggest shock of the trial. Although he was convicted of those six
    felonies, he would not spend any time in jail. He would be put under house
    arrest, essentially free and able to live on without going to prison.
    How could that be? How could someone be convicted of such
    violent crimes and not serve any time in prison?
    And while the judge was giving the gift of no prison time to
    my ex, he told me that my ex may have been a crappy husband, but he was a good
    father and that I should “forgive him.”
    WHAT?!
    Excuse me, sir. This man raped me multiple times over many
    years. Rape doesn’t make him a crappy husband — it makes him a criminal.
    I was devastated. I could not believe that one judge could
    destroy all the hope that I had that justice would be served. I went into a
    deep depression and tried to hold on to the hope that I would be able to move
    on and live my life unafraid. No such luck.
    Two months later, my ex violated his house arrest. He was
    finally sent to prison, this time with a five-year sentence — and was let out a
    few months ago.
    I have come forward to tell my story to highlight the issue
    of marital rape. My case brought up lots of conversation about the law, and
    whether or not marital rape is illegal. It is, in all 50 states. Some people,
    like Donald Trump’s lawyer, seem disbelieving. Some people wonder,
    understandably, how can a man rape his wife. My story tells you how. Regardless
    of your marital status with regard to your rapist, if there is no consent, it
    is rape. When a person is convicted of rape, they should receive a sentence
    that fits that crime. Unfortunately, in my state, rapists’ sentences are handed
    down by judges who can decide how harsh — or not harsh at all — they will be.
    Today, I am still trying to overcome the depression that
    comes with the shame and disgust that I feel when those videos pop into my
    head. I try every day to stay positive and to achieve something toward my goal
    of changing the way people view rape, and especially marital rape. I need to
    make sure that this story is heard by other women in similar situations. Maybe
    they will find the courage like I did to come forward, and to make sure their
    attacker is held accountable for their actions.
    If I can continue to bring the issue of marital rape to the
    forefront of conversation, then maybe I can help make changes in sentencing
    laws for convicted rapists. If my story helps one person, it is a story worth
    telling.
    Mandy Boardman is a mother and a small-business owner in
    Indiana.

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