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Proud To Be A Woman




Every year on International Women’s Day, I am faced with a dilemma – to celebrate the day or to not. It was easy when the decision was not on me as when I was working in a company. The celebrations carried on whether I liked or not. People wished me on the day and I only had to thank them politely or else in the case of loved ones, retort that we women don’t need a special day to celebrate. No thanks. We shall celebrate our womanhood on all days. Just like people feel it necessary to point out unnecessary celebrations for Valentine’s or Mother’s day or New Year’s – calling it a Western influence. Some influences we come to understand are definitely worth it.

How immature I have sounded then. With age comes maturity and knowledge, and now I know not to belittle the day with a callous and uninformed mind set, when in reality a day like this should exist. It is a joke that we celebrate and feel special about ourselves every day, when actually there is evidence of the continuous conditioning women undergo in the hands of not only society but also other women, including their mothers and mothers in law. I know of my maid who is extremely upset for having given birth to a daughter...again. Her in laws including her husband had wanted a son. So she couldn’t understand my elation on giving birth to a daughter. 


Image from IWD website


Elsewhere we hear of women fighting for voting rights. Still. The twenty first century might have seen many women being successful at the workplace, but in many places there is no right to education or even the right to live. In India, we are fighting for building toilets for women and sending girls to school. The fights are endless.

Though originally started as  a day to commemorate working women and to identify it as a day when serious, empowered women had fought for gender parity and equal pay in the work place, now the day has also come to mean celebrating respect, love and appreciation towards women. Sadly, the flavour of the day is lost among celebrations that are meaningful for only that day – women are given free lunches and are asked to wear dresses of a particular colour scheme in certain organizations – with no clear idea of what the day means to us.  




A quick check of the IWD website lists the theme – Pledge for Parity, and this theme seems very relevant for working women, who I think are the intended group. For people like me, who are self employed or who have chosen to be home makers, I think there are plenty of options to commemorate the day. I have decided to blog about my views for this day and proudly display the 'I'm Proud to be a Woman' badge, and probably with this blog post hope to get one more woman who used to think like me to change her views. 



Here’s an ode to all those women in my life – those who work tirelessly at home to give a stable and clean environment for love and family values to grow; those who juggle their work and home life and complain of lack of sleep or lack of time to spend with your loved one, but still drag yourself out of bed the next day, only to give a better life to your children or family; for those who are waiting on the anvils for the right man to come along and not partake of the jamboree of the Indian wedding system; for those who think that they don’t need a man to complete themselves and that they are very fine by themselves; for those who want to pursue your dreams irrespective of the expectations of their family or society; for those who have made a choice to give up your ambitions to keep your family happy; for those who call themselves feminists and take time to think of issues plaguing women these days and fighting for it and facing public discord or contention for it; for all those women who know what they want; for all those who are truly celebrating all things that make us women – compassion, empathy, love and care; for my darling, darling mother for making me who I am; for me and for you for just being us – women.



Have an informed and meaningful day, ladies!

Comments

Brilliant! Well said - Archana Ramadoss
Priyanthi said…
Wonderful post Jerry! It used to irritate me as well, earlier, when people wished me. I'm older and wiser now, and realise its not so much about me, but a definite reminder about all those women still fighting for parity....not supremity, just parity
Jerina J said…
Thanks Archana :). Well said Priya! Exactly my sentiments.

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