Couple Who Got Married 6 Days After They Met on Facebook Share Their Unbelievable Story
Last year, Chidimma Amedu took Facebook post to a whole new level when he published a post advertising himself as an eligible bachelor seeking for a wife on December 30, 2017. In his post, Amedu, a Nigerian, who also said he was ready to tie the knots on January 6, 2018 wrote:
âI’m of age and I am ready to say I do and am wasting no time. Send in your applications â the most qualified will be married on January 6, 2018. Application closes 12 midnight, 31/12/2017.â
He then followed up with subsequent posts.
âAm serious about this oh and donât say you did not see it on time. Good luck.â
He received a couple of responses, but one from a certain Sophy Ijeoma was the one which caught his attention.
âAm interested, just DM meâŠlols,â her post read.
Read below the story by BBC;
At first, she thought it was a joke and she simply replied to keep the thread flowing. A direct message from him to her inbox, followed by a Facebook call, would change her lifeâs trajectory.
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Two days after their first conversation, he travelled some 500km (300 miles) from his home in the Nigerian capital of Abuja, to Enugu in the east where she lived.
She had been waiting for him outside a retail store and in true fairy-tale style, âit was love at first sightâ, she recalled.
âHe is the most handsome man Iâve ever met and I liked him instantly.â
After two hours of âawkwardâ conversation, he asked her to go to meet his uncle, who incidentally is also resident in Enugu.
Asked what was going through her mind at the time, she said she thought it was all a bit of a joke, but she was excited about it and thought Chidimma was quite an interesting character.
âWe got to the uncleâs house and he said: âUncle, meet the woman I want to marry.ââ
Like Chidimma, his family donât seem to hang about when it comes to getting things done, because the uncle gave his approval.
The couple had been friends on Facebook for over a year but had never spoken to each other before the advert. Getting family backing for your choice of spouse is an essential part of Igbo culture.
Whereas picking your future wife from dozens of respondents to a Facebook marriage advert and marrying her in six days is decidedly not.
At this point in their day-old relationship, it was beginning to dawn on Sophy that this fellow was not playing, but how do you commit to marrying someone you only just met?
She would not comment on whether they had even shared as much as a kiss at that point, but maintained she was captivated by how focused and determined her new fiancé was.
âWhen I saw him for the first time, I definitely found him attractive, but what I didnât know was how serious he was about marrying me.
âIt was after we met the uncle and his wife, that I realised that this could actually happen and I wanted it.â
It was now her turn to worry about how she was going to get the approval of her family to marry a guy she had just met on Facebook.
But they had momentum going for them. Having met and fallen in love at first sight, or first message, if you like, and getting Chidimmaâs uncleâs approval, the couple decided to complete the cycle by visiting Sophyâs family the same day.
Approval from the family is essential in Igbo tradition.
Sophy recounted how she relayed the information to her mother. Her dad had passed away, and her mum said she did not have the final word in terms of giving approval for her to be married, so it was up to Sophyâs elder brother to give his blessings.
It would appear the odds were firmly in their favour as Sophyâs brother gave his blessings too. So after a few questions from her brother, it was official â Chidimma and Sophy were engaged to be married in six days.
Last year Chidimma was engaged to another woman and the wedding was scheduled for December, but the relationship fell apart in March leaving him dejected.
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As December approached, fear of not being able to fulfill his dream of getting married led him to advertise himself. He said,
âI had the desire to get married, I had a date in mind, but no bride, so I decided to place an advert as a joke, but I was open and up for it.â
Asked whether she knew about his earlier engagement and her thoughts on how this seemingly rushed marriage might be seen as a rebound, Sophy dismissed any suggestions that her relationship was not well thought through.
âI donât care about that â when you see what you want, you go for it.â
They had been friends on Facebook for more than a year, but had never met or spoken to each other until the advert.
âAm interested, just DM meâŠlolsâ was all it took for the union to be formed.
Sophy admitted her friends were sceptical about the whole thing, while some are still in disbelief, but as she said: âWhen you see the one, you will know he is the oneâ.
Happily ever after?
They got married on 6 January in a traditional Igbo ceremony, and posted photos of their wedding day on Facebook of course â to the amusement of the social media community.
Chidimma put up a post saying people may have thought he had been joking but he clearly wasnât. As can be expected, there were mixed reactions, but mainly a lot of support for the couple.
They hope to have a church wedding in April and perhaps a honeymoon somewhere nice, he said.
Continue to see photos from their traditional wedding…
Photo credit: Facebook
This is the most awkward situation I have seen.
Hmmmmmmm. Congratulations to them.