In a busy market courtyard just after dawn, gender roles reveal themselves in ways that can feel as ordinary as the rhythm of the drums at a wake. Women arrange baskets of cassava, sweet potatoes and plantains, their hands quick and sure; voices rise in practiced calls, bargaining that is equal parts song and business. Men move through the same space with different tasks—fetching supplies, negotiating for larger purchases, loading sacks—so the scene reads as a choreography of complementary motion rather than a rigid script. The smell of palm oil and roasted plantain hangs in the air, and the exchange of credit, gossip and news happens alongside the exchange of goods. Inside many households, mornings follow another set of quiet patterns. Someone wakes early to stoke the hearth or tend the charcoal, while others sweep the compound, dress children and fetch water from the well; who does what often depends on family history and immediate need, not a rulebook.
Rituals around weddings, funerals and naming ceremonies highlight gendered responsibilities—preparing the cooking grounds, sewing garments, composing praise songs—each task carrying cultural weight and offering a way into communal belonging. Respect for elders and for the elders’ way of doing things can shape who leads which parts of these events, and those roles are honored with patience and laughter as much as with formality. Craft and craftwork illustrate another side of gendered life. In some communities, women stitch elaborate wrappers and beadwork that speak of lineage and skill, while men might carve stools or weave fishing gear; in shared spaces people trade techniques, stories and improvisations. Evening gatherings often find women and men in different corners of a compound—one group rolling dough or pounding rice, another telling stories or mending nets—but the boundaries are porous. Songs and proverbs passed down at these moments function as both instruction and gentle critique, reminding younger generations of the values attached to particular tasks while also leaving room for change.
Change itself is visible, especially in towns and among young families where schooling and work pull people into new routines. A young father might come home and wrap his child on his back while his partner finishes a market call; a woman who started as a seller may now manage a small stall and the account books for an extended household. These shifts are usually practical and gradual, negotiated within kin networks and through everyday conversations over coffee or palm wine. What endures is a sense of mutual dependence: work and care are shared to keep households and neighborhoods moving, and the familiar sounds of footsteps, laughter and trade continue to mark each day.