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I Had Mixed Feelings Giving Away My Daughter In Marriage – Charly Boy

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Charly Boy speaks on how he felt giving away his daughter in marriage. (Photo credit: Naijaloaded.com).

Charles Oputa, aka Charly Boy who is known for fighting for the liberation of his people and challenging them to stand on their feet recently gave out one of his daughters in marriage and he has woken up from the dream of missing his daughter.

While speaking with Sunday Scoop on how he felt on that day, he said, “I had mixed feelings actually. I put in a lot of time in my daughter’s upbringing and we bonded so well.

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As a parent, you could sometime wish that your offspring would stay with you forever, but at a point, you have to let go. I am happy that I’m letting go to someone who is a gentleman, considerate and thoughtful. I wish her a happy married life. She has a good pedigree, and both the bride and groom’s parents have good marriages that have stood the test for time; that ought to count for something.”

While speaking on the relationship he had with his daughter that got married, Adaeze, Charly Boy said, “I have a very unique relationship with all my children. They are not all treated the same because each kid is special in their unique ways. I don’t have one way of dealing with everybody. There are different strokes for different folks.

I guess that’s the joy of parenting because not every kid would turn out the way you want him or her to. Some are late starters, while some are early birds.” During the cause of the marriage a picture of Charley Boy and his daugter went viral.

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Speaking on the picture in which they both sat on a motorcycle, Charly said, “That picture was her idea. She asked me to do a photo shoot with her and the concept was centered around two people stranded on a desert.

All my children have a bit of me in all of them and that’s only natural. I didn’t intentionally make it that way by conditioning their minds towards anything. I always tell my children to stay true to whom they really are, chase their dreams and be independent. I also tell them not to neglect the values and principles that we hold sacred in the Oputa family. I do whatever I want to do, and not what anybody tells me to.

I expect that my children are going to be the same way. As long as it is a positive thing and it makes them happy, I would encourage them. I am their father and friend.”

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