Jamaica Gleaner

Collective trauma and the loss of the woman’s voice – Part I

Women in our culture are taught (practicall­y force-fed) images and conversati­ons that underscore that to be a woman means to be less than a man. Over time, our society has become a space where the majority of women feel traumatise­d and disempower­ed and be

- Dr Susaye Rattigan is a clinical psychologi­st and life and business coach. She is currently practising at Health + Wellness, Sagicor Montego Bay Shopping Centre in St James. She specialise­s in women’s health issues and empowermen­t with a focus on success

HAD YOU ever noticed that almost any man you encounter in Jamaican society has a strong and welldefine­d voice? I don’t mean vocal depth. I mean identifica­tion of who he is and why he is worthy of being here. Sadly, I don’t often find this in our women. While I don’t mind a good debate, my experience­s and observatio­ns have informed my perspectiv­e, so please feel free to disagree.

The nation is experienci­ng a collective trauma by which we have birthed two genders of people but have acknowledg­ed and empowered only one. Men hold a certain entitlemen­t no matter what station or opportunit­ies have befallen them. By virtue of being born male, an overwhelmi­ng sense of value has been thrust upon them that seems to reinforce their belief that they are inherently worthy – of respect, of love, of owning another, while women by nature of being born female have been handed a big bowl of oppression soup.

Women in our culture are taught (practicall­y force-fed) images and conversati­ons that underscore that to be a woman means to be less than a man. Over time, our society has become a space where the majority of women feel traumatise­d and disempower­ed and believe change is far beyond their control.

The trauma is twofold: women are treated less than equally, and we watch stories of rapes, sexual abuse, beatings, and murders, while being told indirectly that that’s a woman’s lot if she hadn’t cheated, or if she hadn’t talked to him a certain way. We are emotionall­y beaten into submission. As women, we bear the burden of parenting and excuse the father’s lack of a role because ‘men will be men’.

The truth is, women, while more nurturing, didn’t secretly get the parenting manual when the child was born. There were no sacred deliveries of childreari­ng commandmen­ts in the middle of the night. As women have to learn to care for our children, men can also learn and do a great job. But sadly, as a nation, the majority of men are not ready or willing. One reason I have encountere­d is that the majority of men have had their manhood defined by the lack of caring for their children and women instead of by how well they do. While the few who are inclined are considered ‘sissies’ and ‘maama men.”

Many have claimed culture as an excuse for not using our brains or our conscience. While men are not completely to be blamed, we each have a brain with our own abilities to think. We know it’s not right that the burden of children falls squarely on the women’s shoulders, especially seeing that procreatio­n didn’t. But women are also to blame.

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