Is This What African Mothers Do When You Accept Food In A Neighbour's House? House Of Ajebo Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • Is This What African Mothers Do When You Accept Food In A Neighbour's House? House Of Ajebo Reaction | The Demouchets REACT
    Original video link: • AFRICAN Mothers (What ...
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Комментарии • 68

  • @aissatayara7778
    @aissatayara7778 Год назад +62

    As an african myself and having experienced this exact situation when I was 6-7 year-old, I can assure you that EVERYTHING in this video is the absolute truth 😂💜

  • @The_Muchiri
    @The_Muchiri Год назад +13

    Same here in Kenya😂 I think for most African mothers, eating at a neighbours house is simply saying she doesn't feed you enough😂😂

  • @Miss_lei
    @Miss_lei 3 года назад +49

    Not only eating from a neighborhood is atabooo but also refusing food after being beaten is aproblem😂😂😂, even accepting a visitors food is also another taboo😂😂😂in Africa morals and respect is a paramount👻🙌🏾💯🌍

  • @OlayinkaOrila-ou5iw
    @OlayinkaOrila-ou5iw 10 месяцев назад +9

    I grew up reading body language, especially the eyes. Mothers have a way of speaking to you without opening their mouth. As a Nigerian you know you don't accept food anyhow.

  • @jenn.a
    @jenn.a Год назад +9

    In Ghana when u go out to play in your frd's house as a kid, you ask your mom for permission the first thing will be don't eat there when u r hungry come home! And be warned the facial expression from your mom will remain in your memory forever😂😂🤣

  • @luiz7837
    @luiz7837 2 года назад +41

    This comedy is from Nigeria..they were kinda representing the Nigeria experience but I am sure other Africans may have similar experience

  • @akhibiossie9692
    @akhibiossie9692 Год назад +15

    As a Nigeria, whenever we go out to visit ppl with my mum as a kid we read her eyes , hand gestures or body movement like the bible when ll are offered food, biscuits or money etc. And her eyes or body contacts tells if to accept or not. Children are thought by their African mum to read her eyes, hands and body movement as a sign of either Yes or No and eating at someone's house is considered to be a criminal offence that come with grievous punishment afterwards. Secondly picking things that don't belong to us on the way was also a taboo, especially money,. wristwatches, wallets, or any other stuff.

  • @okekeanyanna9362
    @okekeanyanna9362 Год назад +11

    For my mum...if u finished...better sleep in that house. Hahahaha

  • @mahajallow4820
    @mahajallow4820 2 года назад +37

    As an African born in the Gambia 🇬🇲 I remember dis happening to me, love u guys

  • @rda-gama2567
    @rda-gama2567 Год назад +12

    My late mother rules was not eating in people houses, not open their fridgeds , not talking bad things about other people foods or the way they were cooking , and not going inside other people bedrooms.

  • @sojiadamo5212
    @sojiadamo5212 11 месяцев назад +4

    The beatings was sumply assured...its gonna happen even if theyve already forgiven you. Great scetch.

  • @drewnationtv-vlogs1141
    @drewnationtv-vlogs1141 3 года назад +21

    This was hilarious 😂 🤣…he had a sore bottom but a full belly 😂

  • @user-gb1pb1mq1h
    @user-gb1pb1mq1h 3 месяца назад +1

    is is my mom that jellof wey i chop nah the food for the year🤣😂😂🤣😂

  • @noblepepple191
    @noblepepple191 Год назад +13

    That boy had it coming, he shoulda stuck to his guns by saying no to the food, that's a Nigerian mother for you, the boy tegwolo is Nigerian from the Niger delta region, by his name i can identify what region and tribe he is, good laughs right there and video 100% absofriginglutely correct.

  • @Miss_lei
    @Miss_lei 3 года назад +25

    What this kid is talking is actually the words that run in your mind when eating the food🤣🤣🤣l swear you can't say any because you already know you messed by accepting and guava tree or mingoring stick is waiting for you😂😂😂

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  3 года назад +4

      🤣🤣 the ending with his brother was our favorite part.

    • @Miss_lei
      @Miss_lei 3 года назад

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT 😂😂😂😂😂😂you guys are funny daala

    • @elondeperkins7765
      @elondeperkins7765 Год назад

      That's his friend Tega......
      What actually happened was that he went to his other Friends house and this friend's family is so wealthy. The golden rule of the boys mum( mama tegwolo) is that you don't eat outside of her house so he dissapointed his mum and her only way of correction is beating him to a pulp

  • @okolookechukwu6479
    @okolookechukwu6479 3 года назад +21

    Yeah you are spot on. He's the kid that Love's to clown people but wouldn't want to be punished for doing stuff like that 🤣 and the woman who offered him food is not his aunt she's the mother of his friend and classmate. I don't know about other countries in Africa but in Nigeria when you see a woman or a man that is close to your mom's or dad's age we use the term Mr, Mrs, uncle, auntie, sir and ma to address them some people also use brother, or sister we don't call them by their names, for example we say good morning Mr Obi, good afternoon auntie Ogor or brother Malcom is on his way. His friends parents are the rich family in their neighborhood. He was actually eating the food and making comparisons with his mom's food. He eats well at home and that was why he rejected the woman's offer initially because it was a regular meal and he didn't want to get beat up by the mom for accepting food from his friends mom, but when she offered him jellof rice with baked chicken death meant nothing to him🤣🤣. At that moment he was ready for the ass whooping cause at the end he knows that his mom won't kill him but will definitely beat up his ass. For instance when i was growing up my mom did her best to make sure that i and brother were properly feed. We didn't lack food in the house and even if we did my mom won't take it lightly if we ate in our friends or neighbors house. Eating in someone's house who wasn't a close relative was like a taboo more like you broke a very strong house rule but that was our own upbringing. There were still so many people that were more stable financially than us and some who didn't have much as well but they didn't instill that discipline of not eating or accepting food from strangers on their children. I know some parents back then that would deliberately push their children to go and eat in their neighbors house just to save the food that they have in their house. Some did it because they didn't have while some did it because they are selfish. Anyways i love you guys ❤️👍🏾 keep doing what you're doing

  • @omobanedo9602
    @omobanedo9602 Год назад +7

    That is absolutely correct about Nigerian families! Parents are very wary about their children eating other people's food because they do not want any problem getting poison or diseases! The family better know what their children eat and from where!!

  • @tonyejiro7641
    @tonyejiro7641 Год назад +5

    My mother picked me up from school when I was like 7,8 and had me wait with her friends while she hurried to get something from the market,til this day I ll never forget the priceless look she gave me when she got back and found me eating fufu and ogbono soup,she was so dissapointed she didn't even care to give me the usual whoopings when we got home 🤣I love mama ❤

  • @Iam_ammie
    @Iam_ammie Год назад +3

    "My sister" in Nigeria Can be told to any female wether she's ur sister, relative or not

  • @chiblesstheraindowninafric9932
    @chiblesstheraindowninafric9932 2 года назад +15

    I remember when I ate more than 2 bananas in my cousin's house
    I couldn't sit for a week 😭😂😂

  • @joywright8794
    @joywright8794 3 года назад +30

    We had similar, but not quite as stringent rules. 1.) Never, ever ask for food! Come home if you are hungry. 2.) If they insisted on feeding you, eat what is offered, but death would be a fitting punishment if you took more and certain if you asked for more. 3.) If you are thirsty, you could ask for a glass of water, and even if they offer you anything else, you only take water. Sugar was a luxury so even sweet tea was off the table. (We grew up with unsweetened tea.)
    Dad was disabled and mom was the bread winner. We didn't grow up in luxury, but neither did the people in our neighborhood. Respect was important and manners were key. Yes mam, thank you sir, and taking care of the older residents by shoveling snow from sidewalks, scraping ice off of windows. No explanation when we were younger, you just did it because it was what you did. Later I realized it was all about treating others with respect and the Golden Rule.

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  3 года назад +2

      Great family values!❤

    • @luiz7837
      @luiz7837 2 года назад +8

      For us Africans, number 1 is accurate esp the come home n eat we have food in the house type but the whole reason to this is to tell you NOT to collect anything, not even a grain of rice for some reasons or the other...you see Africans are very cautious ppl even to themselves the only ppl they may fully trust is their own but if it comes down to being friendly n open they can be that n so much more to strangers and others but trust is for family only.. If an African who isn't family with you trusts you and I mean trust....value it.
      Usually my mom will tell me not to eat anything that we have food in the house we should curb the hunger till then or she will buy a snack for us. I remember in those days really poor Africans still had food, they could farm on anyland they saw for food n nobody would question then except the owner when he wants to use it and there was no need for heaters n even if you didn't have a house in the city, you still had a family house in the village. We didn't have sugar sugar but we did have lots of sugarcanes which we ate as kids n still eat..we had honey, n I even had some flower nectar as a kid, it was little inside but it was sweet

    • @chiblesstheraindowninafric9932
      @chiblesstheraindowninafric9932 2 года назад +2

      @@luiz7837 💯

  • @luiz7837
    @luiz7837 2 года назад +5

    No he meant the chicken they usually have is frozen chicken but the one he is having now is fresh...the fresh one techinically has a better taste n flavour

  • @oliviauhegbu6720
    @oliviauhegbu6720 Год назад +2

    Most Nigeria homes children are not allowed to eat in neighbors houses as a way to teach the children that eating everywhere you go is wrong,it's a way to control them from unhealthy eating and self control,but my mum won't flog you for eating when you go out with her,even me as a parent when I go out with my kids depending on who we visit they can eat.

  • @abodunrinabayomi8808
    @abodunrinabayomi8808 2 года назад +8

    Nigeria specifically. Africa has 54 countries.

  • @emmanuelmoro9552
    @emmanuelmoro9552 Год назад +1

    You know what? Tegwolu just couldn't control his appetite, he manifested gluttony and his mother couldn't overlook that. Anyway, funny, harsh and brutal. 😂🤣😁

  • @abubakarmuhammad8524
    @abubakarmuhammad8524 Год назад +2

    😅 that’s definitely my mama, before I take anything from my neighbor or any of her friends I get to took at her to see the moods on her face first.

  • @kcikiki1512
    @kcikiki1512 Год назад +2

    This is sooo true.

  • @iyoresamuel4361
    @iyoresamuel4361 2 года назад +1

    😂😂😂 thanks guys

  • @Bjcrypto545
    @Bjcrypto545 Год назад +1

    Lol. I relate to that 100%.

  • @albertaatieno
    @albertaatieno 3 года назад +11

    ISSA HELL NO. Don't even dream of pulling that stunt. African mom's will hit you with whips, branches, belts and drop kick you if you "embarrass" them.

  • @zwoitwahonetshivhongweni2634
    @zwoitwahonetshivhongweni2634 Год назад

    You never eat food outside no matter what😅😅😅😅😅if you eat they'll beat you like damn😅

  • @elormblake8924
    @elormblake8924 2 года назад +5

    For my parents they don't allow me to eat from some particular people just because there's foods that they eat that we don't eat...like my family doesn't eat snails and you'll never know what kind of meat or whatever they use in cooking thier foods so then it's better you don't eat from them.

  • @overtothisside504
    @overtothisside504 3 года назад +6

    Nigerian Little Bill

  • @sophymadie5617
    @sophymadie5617 Год назад +1

    I remember when I was 10 my neighbors gave me food and my my mom gave the scary look😂

  • @Oghosa_Praise
    @Oghosa_Praise 5 месяцев назад

    As a Nigerian, I'm dead

  • @africalenisi
    @africalenisi 9 месяцев назад

    Malt is a drink equivalent to Coke cola, or any sweet beverage. African parents are fire 🔥. We don’t appreciate them when they are imparting good discipline when we are young but we get eventually. If you/one misbehaves we we go out, the licks will start raining on you the minute we get into the car 🚗 on our way back home. 😢😢😢😢

  • @bernedettekuteyi3843
    @bernedettekuteyi3843 11 месяцев назад

    This little pikin don enter one chance. Meaning this little child is going to pay for eating outside.

  • @MountH212
    @MountH212 Год назад

    😂😂😂 You don't eat outside really. I experienced this

  • @isaiahboahen4632
    @isaiahboahen4632 Год назад

    It’s the same .. in the next house the moment you smell food u run

  • @user-gb1pb1mq1h
    @user-gb1pb1mq1h 3 месяца назад +1

    and in nigeria they can put juju [withcraft] in your food

  • @i.i1215
    @i.i1215 Год назад +1

    I remember when my mum gave me a dirty pinch after I accepted food from an Aunty house. It’s seen a disrespectful . Also no such thing as “African culture” Africa is a huge ass continent with more cultures than any other continent

  • @RMHENRY187
    @RMHENRY187 Год назад

    Not in south Africa 😂💔🤣

  • @newnesslifezionsdaughter7751
    @newnesslifezionsdaughter7751 Месяц назад

    She will allow me

  • @pinkynwoke1581
    @pinkynwoke1581 Год назад +1

    As a South African you don’t eat in somebody’s house..unless you mother eats there

    • @beverleybarends57
      @beverleybarends57 Год назад

      My mother warned us as kids not to dare ask for anything to eat even if we visited her sisters houses. I am a coloured South African so i think its just general etiquette accross all cultures

  • @TheOracle007
    @TheOracle007 Год назад

    The rule is simple, if they are not directly related to ur mom or dad, and sometimes even if they are, That depends on the relationship. u don't accept nothing, even if the jollof rice be made of Gold. And then u got to make up something smart, u can't just say yes my mom said don't accept food from... Also sometimes u've got to communicate telepathically with ur ma to know if u should accept.
    😂😂🤣

  • @margarettami2877
    @margarettami2877 2 месяца назад

    My parents did not allow me to eat in peoples homes neighbors etc

  • @Daron7181
    @Daron7181 Год назад +1

    Why they draw his head to look like a potato?

    • @rqubedrqubed1634
      @rqubedrqubed1634 Год назад +1

      Not gonna lie his head shape reminded me of mine as a kid. I must be Nigerian. 🤣

  • @celestie4609
    @celestie4609 Год назад

    You don't know what they put in their food.

  • @pinkynwoke1581
    @pinkynwoke1581 Год назад

    As a South African you don’t eat in somebody’s house..unless you mother eats there