My Sister I -
The poet Niyi Osundare, in his essay “The Grammar of Respect in Yoruba Praise Poetry,” argues that the phrase “Arabinrin mi” (“my sister”) contains a hidden verb: mo ri e (“I see you”). Before any request, the man performs . That recognition is the song’s true subject. V. Contemporary Reincarnations In 21st-century Afrobeat, the phrase appears in fragments. Burna Boy’s “On The Low” — “My sister, I no go lie” — borrows the confessional intimacy. Tems , singing as a woman in “Damages,” inverts it: “Brother, I / I gave you love, you gave me bruises.” The structure remains: address + pause + wound.
It is the opposite of the pickup line. It is the anti-brag. It is a man saying: Before I speak my need, I name your name. Before I ask for mercy, I see your face. “My Sister, I” is not a complete statement. That is its genius. The “I” at the end dangles. What does the “I” want? Forgiveness? Food? Sex? Silence? A second chance? The song never says. It ends, traditionally, with the sister laughing — not cruelly, but with the knowing laugh of someone who has heard this speech a thousand times from a thousand men. My Sister I
Rather than focusing on a single recorded song (since multiple tracks bear this title or its sentiment), this write-up treats “My Sister, I” as a : a lyrical address from a man to a woman, rooted in respect, negotiation, vulnerability, and social commentary. I. The Greeting as a Gateway At its surface, “My Sister, I” (or the more intimate “Ore mi, aya mi” — “My friend, my wife”) begins as a salutation. In Yoruba culture, greetings are never neutral. They carry weight, intent, and status. When a man begins a lyric with “E ku’le, arabinrin mi” (“Well done at home, my sister”), he is not merely saying hello. He is acknowledging her domestic labor, her moral authority, and her position as a peer — not a subordinate. The poet Niyi Osundare, in his essay “The