What she saw was not what she expected…
Sometimes the story a child carries home is not the story that happened in school.
Let me tell you a story, a story of a mother, a child, a teacher and the danger of believing only one side of the truth.
In the heart of our community lived Mama Chioma, a hardworking single mother and one of those women whose strength you can see just by the way they walk. She was raising little Chioma, a bubbly five-year-old girl with bright eyes and a loud laughter that could warm even the coldest morning.
Every day, before school, Mama packed Chioma’s food, small jollof rice, one boiled egg, a drink and sometimes puff-puff. She always whispered:
“Nwa m, eat well. Learn well and be respectful.”
For weeks, Chioma kept returning home saying the same thing:
“Mummy… my teacher ate my food again.”
At first, her mother brushed it off. Children talk. Children exaggerate. Children imagine things but when it continued day after day, something inside Mama Chioma began to boil.
"Which kind teacher be this one wey go dey chop my pikin food?"
"Is it hunger? Is it wickedness? Or is it stupidity?"
She asked herself these questions over and over.
One day, she stood at her doorway, hands on her waist, classic Nigerian mother pose and declared:
“Tomorrow, I’m going to that school. This nonsense must end.” An igbo adage says that “Nwanyi na acho nwa anaghi eyi akwa arahu ura abali”( A woman who is in dire need of a child sleeps without clothes at night).
The next morning, Mama Chioma dressed up like a woman ready for battle, wrapper tied firmly, face like judgment day, slippers hitting the ground with authority.
She reached the school, walked straight into the classroom and stood by the door watching quietly.
What she saw shocked her.
Little Chioma, the same child who claimed her teacher “ate her food” was throwing biscuits across the classroom, sharing juice without permission and even trying to open another child’s lunch box.
The teacher, tired but patient, walked up to her:
“Chioma, stop scattering food everywhere. Please eat your own.”
Chioma, in her playful stubbornness, poured some of the drink on the table, laughed and ran off.
The teacher sighed deeply, picked up a spoon and began to salvage what remained, just to stop more waste.
At that moment, Chioma turned around, spotted her mother at the door and froze.
Her face changed instantly.
Eyes wide.
Mouth hanging open.
A guilty child caught red-handed.
Mama Chioma…
Mama Chioma almost fainted.
This was the same teacher she thought was wicked?
The same woman she imagined snatching food?
The same person her child claimed was “eating her snacks”?
The truth stood boldly in front of her:
As our Igbo elders wisely remind us that “Ejighi enyo ele ife agba na aka”(A mirror is not used to look at something worn on the hand).
Her child lied out of fear of punishment, out of childish mischief or simply to avoid admitting her own wrongdoing.
The teacher didn’t say a word.
She simply stood there, humble, embarrassed and unsure of what the mother would do.
Mama Chioma walked up to her, held her hand, and whispered:
“I am so sorry. I judged you wrongly.”
It is easy to blame teachers.
Easy to accuse them.
It's easy to forget they are humans too.
Yes, some teachers are unprofessional.
Some eat students’ snacks.
Some play favoritism.
Some abuse their positions but not every teacher is guilty.
Sometimes, our children, innocent as they appear, can twist stories to escape consequences.
Sometimes, a child will lie to avoid being scolded for:
wasting food
misbehaving
fighting
refusing to learn
or breaking school rules
Children are innocent, yes but children are also human.
When a child misbehaves, you will know how they were raised.
Parents, before you storm a school with anger and accusations.
Investigate. Ask. Observe. Listen.
Not everything the child says is the absolute truth.
Don’t disgrace yourself and later discover you were fighting shadows.
Teachers keep your dignity.
Don’t touch a child’s food.
Don’t play favoritism.
Don’t accept gifts that make you biased.
Don’t create room for suspicion.
Be professional.
Be honorable.
Be the role model you signed up to be.
Not every teacher is wicked; not every child tells the full truth.
Parents must investigate before reacting.
Teachers must maintain professionalism by not eating students’ snacks or requesting favors.
Children can misbehave, lie, exaggerate or hide their wrongdoings.
Respect is mutual between parents, teachers, and children.
Proverbs 18:13 — “He who answers before listening— that is his folly and his shame.”
In other words: Hear the full story before reacting.
If you are a parent - observe more, judge less.
If you are a teacher - uphold dignity and integrity.
If you are a child - learn the value of truth.
If you are a school owner - build systems that protect both students and teachers.
MORALS
Always seek the truth before acting on accusations.
Children are precious but not always perfect.
Teachers are human but they must be professional.
Respect and honesty build the bridge between home and school.
In the end, the lesson is simple:
“Wisdom demands patience, patience demands investigation, and truth demands humility.”
© 2025 Elizabeth Akudo Stories #NigerianStory #ParentingWisdom #TeacherMatters #SchoolTruths #AfricanNarratives #ChildBehavior #ParentingTips #MoralLessons #InspirationDaily #IgboWisdom
Follow @Elizabeth Akudo for more inspiring stories that touch the soul and feel like home
Sometimes the story a child carries home is not the story that happened in school.
Let me tell you a story, a story of a mother, a child, a teacher and the danger of believing only one side of the truth.
In the heart of our community lived Mama Chioma, a hardworking single mother and one of those women whose strength you can see just by the way they walk. She was raising little Chioma, a bubbly five-year-old girl with bright eyes and a loud laughter that could warm even the coldest morning.
Every day, before school, Mama packed Chioma’s food, small jollof rice, one boiled egg, a drink and sometimes puff-puff. She always whispered:
“Nwa m, eat well. Learn well and be respectful.”
For weeks, Chioma kept returning home saying the same thing:
“Mummy… my teacher ate my food again.”
At first, her mother brushed it off. Children talk. Children exaggerate. Children imagine things but when it continued day after day, something inside Mama Chioma began to boil.
"Which kind teacher be this one wey go dey chop my pikin food?"
"Is it hunger? Is it wickedness? Or is it stupidity?"
She asked herself these questions over and over.
One day, she stood at her doorway, hands on her waist, classic Nigerian mother pose and declared:
“Tomorrow, I’m going to that school. This nonsense must end.” An igbo adage says that “Nwanyi na acho nwa anaghi eyi akwa arahu ura abali”( A woman who is in dire need of a child sleeps without clothes at night).
The next morning, Mama Chioma dressed up like a woman ready for battle, wrapper tied firmly, face like judgment day, slippers hitting the ground with authority.
She reached the school, walked straight into the classroom and stood by the door watching quietly.
What she saw shocked her.
Little Chioma, the same child who claimed her teacher “ate her food” was throwing biscuits across the classroom, sharing juice without permission and even trying to open another child’s lunch box.
The teacher, tired but patient, walked up to her:
“Chioma, stop scattering food everywhere. Please eat your own.”
Chioma, in her playful stubbornness, poured some of the drink on the table, laughed and ran off.
The teacher sighed deeply, picked up a spoon and began to salvage what remained, just to stop more waste.
At that moment, Chioma turned around, spotted her mother at the door and froze.
Her face changed instantly.
Eyes wide.
Mouth hanging open.
A guilty child caught red-handed.
Mama Chioma…
Mama Chioma almost fainted.
This was the same teacher she thought was wicked?
The same woman she imagined snatching food?
The same person her child claimed was “eating her snacks”?
The truth stood boldly in front of her:
As our Igbo elders wisely remind us that “Ejighi enyo ele ife agba na aka”(A mirror is not used to look at something worn on the hand).
Her child lied out of fear of punishment, out of childish mischief or simply to avoid admitting her own wrongdoing.
The teacher didn’t say a word.
She simply stood there, humble, embarrassed and unsure of what the mother would do.
Mama Chioma walked up to her, held her hand, and whispered:
“I am so sorry. I judged you wrongly.”
It is easy to blame teachers.
Easy to accuse them.
It's easy to forget they are humans too.
Yes, some teachers are unprofessional.
Some eat students’ snacks.
Some play favoritism.
Some abuse their positions but not every teacher is guilty.
Sometimes, our children, innocent as they appear, can twist stories to escape consequences.
Sometimes, a child will lie to avoid being scolded for:
wasting food
misbehaving
fighting
refusing to learn
or breaking school rules
Children are innocent, yes but children are also human.
When a child misbehaves, you will know how they were raised.
Parents, before you storm a school with anger and accusations.
Investigate. Ask. Observe. Listen.
Not everything the child says is the absolute truth.
Don’t disgrace yourself and later discover you were fighting shadows.
Teachers keep your dignity.
Don’t touch a child’s food.
Don’t play favoritism.
Don’t accept gifts that make you biased.
Don’t create room for suspicion.
Be professional.
Be honorable.
Be the role model you signed up to be.
Not every teacher is wicked; not every child tells the full truth.
Parents must investigate before reacting.
Teachers must maintain professionalism by not eating students’ snacks or requesting favors.
Children can misbehave, lie, exaggerate or hide their wrongdoings.
Respect is mutual between parents, teachers, and children.
Proverbs 18:13 — “He who answers before listening— that is his folly and his shame.”
In other words: Hear the full story before reacting.
If you are a parent - observe more, judge less.
If you are a teacher - uphold dignity and integrity.
If you are a child - learn the value of truth.
If you are a school owner - build systems that protect both students and teachers.
MORALS
Always seek the truth before acting on accusations.
Children are precious but not always perfect.
Teachers are human but they must be professional.
Respect and honesty build the bridge between home and school.
In the end, the lesson is simple:
“Wisdom demands patience, patience demands investigation, and truth demands humility.”
© 2025 Elizabeth Akudo Stories #NigerianStory #ParentingWisdom #TeacherMatters #SchoolTruths #AfricanNarratives #ChildBehavior #ParentingTips #MoralLessons #InspirationDaily #IgboWisdom
Follow @Elizabeth Akudo for more inspiring stories that touch the soul and feel like home














