The Asian Age

Time women call the shots

WE ARE PROUD OF OUR DAUGHTERS GOING FORWARD, BUT WE FORGET TO SENSITISE OUR SONS TO BE ABLE TO COPE WITH THE NEW- AGE WOMAN

- SRILATHA SRIKANT

TREATING A WOMAN AS AN EQUAL HAS TO COME FROM CHILDHOOD, FROM THE HOME AND SCHOOLS. PUSHING IT INTO THEIR SYSTEMS LATER IS STILL A WINDOW DRESSING ATTITUDE — CICILIA CHETTIAR, HoD, DEPT. OF PSYCHOLOGY, MNW COLLEGE, MUMBAI

The more things change, the more they remain the same. Picture this:

Shweta’s husband regularly attended all her Kathak performanc­es, while they were courting. Once married, he insisted that she give up performing on stage, as he didn’t like the idea of every male in the audience “mentally stripping her.”

Kamini will be “allowed” to work after marriage, so long as she refuses transfers and doesn’t upset the domestic applecart, thereby bidding goodbye to any chances of promotion.

Bina is a gynaecolog­ist with a thriving practice, built painstakin­gly. Her husband demanded that she spend more time with the family, as he earned “enough for both.” She curtailed her evening practice, feeling resentful at this clipping of her career wings.

The Indian woman has come a long way. Education has empowered her and there is little that she is leaving unconquere­d. From corporate boardrooms to politics, sports, literature, technology, aviation, and business, women have been making huge strides in new India.

So, what kind of man does the woman of today want to be with? A man who can cook and help in household chores; who will not feel insecure financiall­y if she earns well; who will respect ‘ me time’ for both; who won’t expect her to sacrifice her career prospects to primarily suit his needs, and will understand and be sensitive to her feelings, among other things.

But are the men living up to the changed expectatio­ns of women? While we raised our girls to be assertive, stand up for their rights and chase their dreams, we seem to have ignored sensitisin­g our boys to the changes in their sisters! “Boys will be boys!” “It is what it is,” we seem to believe, resulting in a whole generation of young men still being raised the way they were for the last several decades.

Traditiona­lly, there is an assumption that strength, empowermen­t, passion and drive are predominan­tly male attributes, and that receptivit­y, expressive­ness, kindness and gentleness are the domain of the female.

But clinical psychologi­st Randi Gunther writes in Rigid Gender Roles — Enemies of the New Intimacy: ‘ Every man and every woman has the capacity for both assertive and self- sacrificin­g behaviours… some are geneticall­y more naturally inclined to take risks, to assume control… just as others prefer to follow someone they respect and feel naturally more comfortabl­e in a supportive role.'

When a matrimonia­l advertisem­ent asks for a ‘ modern woman with traditiona­l values’, what are the expectatio­ns? Saumya, an architect, explains, “A woman who is confident but not too forward, stylishly dressed but not too provocativ­e, intelligen­t but not over smart, articulate but not outspoken, holding her own but not arrogant, successful but not self- centred, sexy but not slutty, to give a few examples.”

Cicilia Chettiar, HoD, Dept. of Psychology, MNW College, Mumbai, says, “A patriarcha­l mindset is strongly entrenched in both, men and women in India. Women do go on to acco- mplish several goals, but with a very loud voice in their head saying, ‘ I, being a woman, have done this’. It should be ‘ I, being capable, have done this’.”

Beneath all this lies a darker subtext. The firm belief that whether speaking of premarital sex, dating, career, dressing, or socialisin­g, the modern woman is taking equality ‘ too far.’ One day, she may even dispense with the man! Hence, she needs ‘ checking’ and ‘ monitoring.’

Chettiar says gender stereotypi­ng occurs daily and is so subtle, we may not even be aware of it. “A simple example. Whenever guests come home, it is assumed that the woman will offer the standard glass of water, while the man will sit down. How many homes have you seen the reverse happening?”

Gender stereotype­s are an issue because they provide a set of rigid, inflexible rules each spouse must abide by. These stereotype­s are indoctrina­ted in children from early childhood when children are taught what colour of dress they should wear, what kind of toys they should play with, how they should sit, stand or conduct themselves with others, what hobbies they should cultivate, whether they can go out alone, whether schoolwork or domestic chores take precedence and the like. Chettiar is emphatic that, “Treating a woman as an equal has to come from childhood, from the home and schools. Pushing it into their systems later is still a window dressing attitude. Women must start thinking they are equal and they don’t have to try hard to prove this. They just are. Believe it.”

Traditiona­lly, there is an assumption that strength, empowermen­t, passion and drive are predominan­tly male attributes, and that receptivit­y, expressive­ness, kindness and gentleness are the domain of the female

 ??  ?? Veerey Di Wedding showed the story of four independen­t and strong girls; ( left to right) Swara Bhaskar, Sonam Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor and Shikha Talsania
Veerey Di Wedding showed the story of four independen­t and strong girls; ( left to right) Swara Bhaskar, Sonam Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor and Shikha Talsania
 ??  ?? Priyanka Chopra’s character in the movie Dil Dhadakne Do, was that of a headstrong woman, who started a travel company without anyone’s help and ran it very efficientl­y
Priyanka Chopra’s character in the movie Dil Dhadakne Do, was that of a headstrong woman, who started a travel company without anyone’s help and ran it very efficientl­y

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