Shatta Wale, a well-known Ghanaian musician and dancehall artist, has finally revealed the reasons behind his estrangement from his parents.
Shatta Wale, in a recent Facebook post, attributed his
inability to provide for his parents to their actions.
The individual in question attributed his current state of
being to the lack of proper parental care and guidance during his formative
years.
He wrote; “When you born and take care of them anyhow you
can before your children turn into monsters
“No one ever apologized for making me this way.”
This follows an accusation of neglect made by his mother,
Elsie Evelyn.
Evelyn had posted a video online seeking financial support.
In April, Wale shared a deeply personal account of the
emotional distress he endured as a result of his parents’ separation.
In a candid online post, Shatta Wale shared the emotional and mental impact of his parents’ separation on him, distress as a result of witnessing the dissolution of his parents’ marriage at a young age. This trauma had a lasting impact on his life and continues to affect him as an adult, according to him.
He contemplated the obstacles encountered during their
upbringing in a disrupted family environment, emphasizing the emotional
distress and lack of stability that characterized their formative years.
The singer of “Already” highlighted the impact of the lack
of a stable family environment on his sense of security and identity during his
developmental years.
“I’m from a broken home. My mother left my father some time ago when we were young. When I was in SHS 1, we used to study about 13 subjects in a day and I didn’t have the mind for that; my brain isn’t a factory.
So, I told my father that I can’t continue that. “At that time, he wanted all of us to relocate to the states, Miami to be precise. He had a contract there and wanted all of us to emigrate to the U.S.
My mother didn’t think about my father’s plans and left him. She ran from home and left us. My father tried tirelessly to get her back. God is our witness. As a result of that decision, I grew up in hard conditions,” he said in a Facebook live video.
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