![Dayo Amusa in an interview with Pulse News.](https://static.pulse.ng/img/incoming/crop6445928/8695291261-chorizontal-w1600/Dayo-Amusa-talks-fav-sex-position.png)
The movie star appeared to have entered a moment of realization in her comments regarding dating men who have passed a stage of repair.
Actress Dayo Amusa did some pondering concerning a relationship trend that has seen her date men who required a lot of mending.
According to the movie star who wrote on Instagram yesterday, October 4, 2017, a bunch of women like her have dedicated time to fix damaged male interests who always turn out to be a disappointment.
She questioned the psychology that had encouraged her female contemporaries to see themselves as the saviours of these type of men who she described as "selfish". The actress who is currently on a trip to Dubai seemed to have had an epiphany when she wrote:
"I used to be a fixer. I stayed in bad relationships, attracting the same type of men—men who needed to be fixed.
I know so many women in the same position. We attract cheating men, commitment-phobic men, emotionally unavailable men, emotionally damaged men, alcoholics, drug abusers, narcissists and sociopaths.
It’s like we are a magnet for men whose pieces are shattered all over the place. And for some reason, we feel compelled to put these pieces back together.
But I must admit, I have failed every single time.
I never gave myself a chance to sit back and question my motives. Instead of asking why I constantly felt obligated to pick up someone else’s broken pieces, I ran to pick them up without a second thought. Being selfless made me think that coming second didn’t matter because I was putting someone else’s worthiness first. And in the end, rank doesn’t matter, right?
I realized that the reason I was attracting these types of men was because I believed I could save them.
As selfless, thoughtful, giving women, we think we will be “that woman”—the one who will change them. We think we can turn a cheater into a loyal boyfriend. We think we can help him walk away from the drugs and alcohol. We believe we can help him get over his commitment issues and aim for a stable future with us. We trust that we can get rid of the emotional baggage that he has been carrying for years.
We attract these men because we believe they need us. And to leave them would be selfish, insensitive and ruthless.
The sad news is, we constantly blame ourselves when they don’t change. Every time they fail us, we think it’s because we failed them. Their hold on us becomes stronger; they keep us around knowing they have nothing to offer.
It’s just my view. What’s your view??? Let’s interact.#JustMyView #JMVwithDayoAmusa #TAO #millionshadesoftao."
ALSO READ: Kemi Olunloyo drags actress for calling her a psycho
Amusa's opinion is a relevant discussion that touches on the lives of a number of women who often get to be undervalued by their partners. Nollywood actresses in particular have launched a bad trend that has seen them exit a relationship after enduring some years of maltreatment.
The pair of Tonto Dikeh and Mercy Aigbe are veritable examples of such an instance. Both insisted that they were victims of abuse in their previous marriages though their claims contradict against the accounts of exes, Oladunni Churchill and Lanre Gentry respectively.
SOURCE - PULSE.NG posted by Campus94
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