For the
longest time men have been considered the stronger gender and they relished
that with all they had. Women were constantly reminded of their place and were
to be seen but not heard. They were taught their domestic duties wherever they
went. There were even finishing schools to turn them into proper ladies!
Imagine that! “My daughter just graduated and a proper lady she is!”, mothers
would properly swoon.
That
brought about women who were good at what they did behind the scenes and when
they appeared in public they would still be able to fit right in. Men of course
enjoyed this because there was no power struggle. The power was ‘rightfully‘theirs
after all.
Someone
somewhere got agitated about the fact that women were only ‘allowed’ to become
homemakers and housewives yet there was so much more in them that they could
take advantage of and achieve. Thus began female empowerment. The girl child
was reminded constantly that she could do anything that a man could and even
better. Girls started trying to push these limits and as evidenced by the many
successful women in the world, they aced it.
So the girl
child is now empowered (although there’s still a lot of work to be done on that
in the rural areas) and she can go for whatever she wants without any fears
(apart from the fear of failure). That can be marked as a success story right
there but it has had its own repercussions. The boy child.
I’m so used
to hearing ‘girl child’ such that even the phrase ‘boy child’ sounds a little
off, don’t you think? We assumed that the boys had it under control and they
eased themselves into the position of having and wielding the power without any
opposition. They were probably told they should and not ‘they can’. Women were
devising their war tactics in the meantime and the men get the shock of their
lives when they run into opposition.
These guys
were trained to lead physical wars and not this other kind of war that doesn’t
even make sense to them. The war was loud and violent at first but became
‘quieter’ over the years. Were these men taught responsibility, love,
confidence, how to be a man, how to be a gentleman, how to take care of
themselves and those around them and all the social norms that people live by?
I’m not sure but maybe they were the power so they didn’t need to. They
dictated what was right or not.
Men didn’t
change much of their mindset but women had made some very extraordinary steps.
They looked at life differently, had the liberty to do what they wanted and
went ahead to do it. Does this threaten the man? Maybe but he can’t show it.
He’s a man.
#Mydressmychoice
has been doing the rounds this week because a woman was stripped in public.
That woman was actually wearing trousers but this is how someone said it actually went down.
It wasn’t
her dressing but how she spoke to them that angered them. I agree that everyone
needs to dress decently and be courteous to people. Another angle here is the
men who got so offended that they stripped her. She dared them, yes, but they
stripped her. They have the power so no woman is supposed to speak to any man
like that, right?
Correct me
if I’m wrong but these men had their egos punched. How is it that a slight jab
at their confidence got them so riled up that they turned it into a sexist war?
Here’s another example but this time not physical.
Something
went wrong somewhere when we were empowering the girl child. The boy child was
left to ‘fend’ for himself and ended up having the wrong idea of manhood,
unless you agree that that is the definition of a real man.