At Emmanuel Adesanya Street, downtown
Ikorodu in Lagos State where she resides, there is hardly anyone who
does not know Taiwo Fakiyesi, aka Mama Maria. She became very popular
among residents as the owner of the only well-stocked grocery store
around the area.
But two Saturdays ago, almost everyone
in
the neighbourhood shed tears for the ailing 47-year-old mother of
three as she was struck with yet another tragedy.
She lost her husband who had been helping her contend with kidney disease.
Last October, following an excruciating
stomach upset, tests revealed that her two kidneys had packed up. And
since then, she has been undergoing dialysis twice a week.
With the support of her husband and the
association of landlords in the area, the family had been coping with
the high cost of the treatment. But unfortunately, the husband, who had
been running around to see that his wife was cured, succumbed to death,
thus throwing the family and the entire neighbourhood into mourning.
Everything was done by the family to
hide the news of his demise from his sick wife, but it did not take long
before the cat was let out of the bag. Sooner than later, the woman got
to know that something terrible must have happened to her husband when
for three days, she did not see him.
According to her brother, Sunkanmi, who
spoke to our correspondent on Sunday, everything was done to keep the
news away from her until it was no longer possible.
He said, “We tried as much as possible
to keep the news away from her but we failed. The man was the one that
was solely responsible for her welfare and in less than two days, she
was aware of the terrible news.”
When our correspondent visited the
ailing woman, it was obvious that the demise of her husband must have
hit her very hard as she lay on the floor moaning.
With an emotion-laden tone, she moaned
in Yoruba, “Ha, my husband, how can you die? I’m sorry I didn’t mean to
kill you. Now that you are dead, what is next for me? Who will take care
of me? We did not plan it this way; why?”
Sunkanmi, who was detailed to attend to
her, told Saturday PUNCH that her health condition grew worse when she
learnt of her husband’s death.
He said, “Even though she has been in
pains, the death of her husband has made her situation worse. She has
not stopped lamenting since, even with the little strength left in her.
We have tried as much as possible to console her, pleading with her to
save her failing strength for the sake of her children. But she has
refused to listen to us.
“It is now difficult to know which one
pains her more. Before the death of her husband last week, she had
demonstrated strong faith in God, being a member of the Redeemed
Christian Church of God. She had borne the pains of her sickness
stoically, believing that God would see her through.
“But the death of her husband shattered
all of that. I must confess that she has lost the zest to live,
especially when she has taken responsibility for the death of her
husband. We have appealed to her to stop feeling that way, but she has
ignored everybody.”
Fakiyesi was said to be a very hardworking business woman whose grocery shop built in front of her house enjoys good patronage.
In October 2012, she woke up with a
terrible pain in a part of her stomach that did not allow her to open
her shop on time. When the pain would not go on time, she asked one of
her daughters to boil water to massage the spot but it would not go
away.
In a laboured conversation with our
correspondent, Fakiyesi said she had never known anything called renal
disease until tests run on her revealed what she was suffering from.
She said, “When I woke up that day, I
was feeling pain at this side of my stomach. When it was becoming
unbearable, I asked Maria to boil water so that I would massage it. But
when the pain would not go away, I was taken to Ajayi Medical Centre in
Ikorodu here, where I spent three days on admission.
“The pain subsided a bit and I was
discharged. But on the second day it came back much stronger. My husband
took me to his church for prayers because everything appeared so
strange. I can’t remember the last time I took meditation, not to talk
of being admitted. In this kind of environment, one cannot rule out
spiritual attacks.
“But when the pain would not go, I went
back to the hospital where I was treated again but this time around, the
pain refused to go. I was then taken to Jolad Hospital in Bariga, Lagos
where I was told that I fainted repeatedly. It was from Jolad that I
was referred to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja for an
abdominal scan.”
Fakiyesi lamented that her condition
would perhaps have been salvaged had the hospitals she was taken to at
the initial stage detected what was wrong with her.
“Maybe I would not have suffered like
this if they detected the disease early. “Even when the scan was done at
LASUTH in October, I was given a December date to come back for checks
when I was already dying. I had never been so shocked in my life when
the result of the scan revealed that I had a kidney problem.
“They said my two kidneys had gone bad
and that I would need to undergo dialysis at least twice a week to stay
alive. It was as if I was dreaming because prior to that time, I had
never heard about it nor had any symptom of the disease. I had to
undergo different tests running into thousands of naira.
“I can’t even quantify how much we have
spent, especially on dialysis which I have been doing twice a week since
October at Life Support, GRA, Ikeja. A session alone is about N45,000.
My husband spent everything he had and even borrowed. Members of my
family too have come in, as well as the landlords association to make
sure I come out of it, but my condition killed my husband,” she said and
burst into tears.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that Mr.
Fakiyesi was diabetic and had been managing the ailment for years before
his wife suddenly fell ill. He was said to have been so overwhelmed by
his wife’s condition that he neglected his own health which led to his
death.
“For years, he managed his diabetes but
my ailment killed him. How else do you want me to feel about the death
of my husband who was the one carrying me everywhere? Maybe I should
just have died instead of killing the good man,” she laments.
Sunkanmi told Saturday PUNCH that the man’s death had begun to take its toll on his sister’s health. The dialysis has even stopped because of lack of funds.
“It’s a week today that she had the last
dialysis. There is no money to continue and you can see her condition
is becoming worse. When it was discovered that her kidneys had packed
up, the recommendation given to us was that if after about five sessions
of dialysis she did not pick up, we should seek medical help abroad.
“We cannot even count how many dialysis
she has done. The confusion created by her husband’s death has not even
allowed us to sit down and deliberate on what next to do,” he lamented.
Fakiyesi informed our correspondent that
her first daughter, Maria, who had since stopped her studies at the
Redeemer’s University, had offered to donate one of her kidneys.
“Maria has offered to donate one kidney
but where am I going to get N5m required to travel abroad for treatment?
Now my husband is dead, who is going to take his place? I must be the
most miserable person in the whole world. People will say that I killed
my husband and even if I die, they will tell my children,” she added
amid sobs.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that the three children of the sick woman had stopped schooling.
As it stands, Taiwo lies critically ill at home, facing an uncertain future.
-Punch
We wish you well Mama Maria and pray for God's healing upon you ma.
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