A lot of the people I chat with, or interact offline with,
especially men, keep telling me I am being too unfair, too caustic, too aggressive
in my blogs, comments, opinions. Many of these people believe feminism is
outdated, no longer required, because the world has changed, and “these days
such things don’t happen, and women have all the rights” (to me this only means
that these people don’t read the news, or have any idea of current affairs/reality).
Most women would tell them they are living in a fool’s paradise. Any woman
knows the reality of how patriarchy treats women. Even privileged, upper class,
educated women, from loving, supportive, egalitarian homes (like mine) face
enough social discrimination on a daily basis to never be fooled. Women in
India re-realize every day of their lives, at home and outside, what it means
to be a woman.
For the men who think Male Privilege doesn’t exist in India, who
think everything is all rosy and heavenly now. Here is a small checklist of
things you DO NOT have to face… because you are a man and not a woman.
·
You were not killed before you were born simply for being the
wrong gender.
·
You were not killed immediately after you were born by your
father/grandfather/uncles chucking you in a well, stuffing you in a pot and
filling it with salt until you suffocated, or drowning you in milk.
·
People congratulated your parents when you were born. Nobody
consoled them with, “don’t worry. Try again, and you might just get lucky and
have a girl.” Nobody asked “What will
become of you once you marry him off?” No one will comment about your parents
“itne bacche hain inke….magar ek santaan nahi.” No one will be sympathetic to
your parents about not having the child of the right gender to perform their
funeral rites, ensuring their entry into heaven.
·
Even
if you were the second or third boy born to your parents, you felt no less
loved and cherished. No one treated you like crap because you had dared to be
born. Your parents, especially your mother, did not get stigmatized as the bearer
of only sons.
·
It was a foregone conclusion that even if your parents could only
send one child to school, you would get an education.
·
You could say what you wanted to be when you grew up, when people
asked, and people acknowledged your ambition, saw nothing strange in it, and
encouraged you to achieve anything you wanted. Nobody laughed at you.
·
You had lots of role models, Tata or Birla or Sachin or whoever.
You didn't have to search to find someone of your gender in your desired/chosen
field to serve as a role model.
·
Growing
up, you could choose from an infinite variety of children’s media – books, TV
shows, Cartoons, featuring positive, active, non-stereotyped heroes of your
gender. You didn’t have to search for meaningful male protagonists, they are
the default.
·
There are numerous festivals around the year for the women in your
family to give thanks for your existence, and none for you to give thanks for the
women in your life. Clearly, you are precious and important enough but they are
not. You don’t have to fast, and pray for the well being of, and worship, your
sisters in festivals like Rakhi, and bhaiduj, or your wives in festivals like
teej and karwa chauth.
·
As a child, if you misbehaved, and got into trouble, you were
scolded only for your behavior. Not because you would make a bad prospective
groom or son-in-law for some random unknown people 20 or so years in the future.
·
You were not constantly told to speak softly, laugh softly, sit
properly, and behave like a “gentleman”, even when you were five or six years
old.
·
You were not only allowed but encouraged to play outside. Becoming
dark from the sun was not a problem for your future, and learning how to do
household work, again for the benefit of random future spouse/in-laws, was not
a priority.
·
You could dream of having a high flying career, earning big bucks,
owning a fancy car and a big house instead of just a red lehenga.
·
As a 5, 6, 10 yr old, you could learn to dance, if you wished. No
one stopped you because “in our house boys don’t dance like bazaru mard” or
because “in-laws don’t like boys who dance; it creates the wrong impression
about his character”.
·
You could wear shorts as a child, continue to wear them as a
teenager and still wear them as an adult, at home or outside without fear of
repercussions from your wife, your in laws, and society in general.
· You only had to go to school/college, and relax when you got home. You
were not expected to look after younger siblings, or serve your sisters hand
and foot while they sat around like lords of the house. Neither did you have to
help your mother in the kitchen, in household work, etc as a duty, and as
training for your future.
·
You were never the one who had to stand around, waiting hungry -- with
fathers and uncles -- while people much older than you ate their meals. You were
never the last to be served, eating whatever was left. You did not even have to
think about hurrying through the meal, sharing, or saving a little bit for the
siblings of the wrong gender who were waiting for you to finish. You ate your
fill and took your time. If nothing was left for them to eat, or if they had to
wait hungry for a long time… well, that was not your problem. If there was one
egg in the fridge, you got the omelet. If there was one chocolate, you ate it.
·
You could talk to your friends, even brag, about the changes
brought about in your body by puberty. Your mom never asked you to keep it a
secret, or to pretend you had no idea what others were talking about when they discussed
it. You weren’t ashamed of the changes in your body and didn’t try to hide
changes in loose fitting clothes. Puberty didn’t curtail what little freedom
you had, and didn’t make you more of a prisoner in the home. In fact, puberty
made a MAN out of you, and gave you more voice in the home, more power to make
your own decisions, and to participate in those of the family. It didn’t seem
like the beginning of the end, as a signal for the end of your life and the
beginning of life as a lowly spouse/son-in-law.
·
You
were not, henceforth, excluded from the kitchen and prevented from worshipping,
for a particular few days every month.
·
Temples,
like the Ayappa temple at sabarimalai do not exclude you from even entering
their premises for 40 yrs of your life.
·
Your
mother did not keep track of your physical processes, counting days and asking
pointed questions if you were ever even a day late
·
If
you have a bad day or are in a bad mood, people don’t automatically say “men
are so moody, who knows what they will say/do”. They also don’t automatically
assume that all irritation, anger, and negative reaction to their asinine
behavior that you show or experience is because of “that time of the month”.
·
Your
ability to make important decisions and your capability in general will never
be questioned depending on what time of the month it is.
·
You
were not expected/trained to “hold it” in to an unhealthy limit, no matter how
badly you needed to go to the bathroom. This unhealthy practice, leading to severe
health problems in many cases, was never forced on you. There are adequate
public toilets for your use. If there isn’t one, you are encouraged to just
stand up anywhere.
·
There
are enough toilets for your gender in schools, so that you do not have to drop
out of school when you hit puberty.
·
No
one leers at you and makes nasty lascivious jokes loud enough to make sure you
hear, when you go to a store for pads/contraception. Buying contraception does
not automatically make you available for the men behind the counter to fantasize
about and leer at (since it proves that you are sexually active)
·
You
have never had to do a gauri vrat, or a series of 16 somvars, fasting and worshiping specific gods/goddesses to get a good spouse in the future.
·
You were not married off to an old woman in your childhood “for
your own protection”.
·
Getting and staying married is not the most important priority society
assigns to you.
·
You are not expected to forget 20+ yrs of upbringing, lifestyle,
beliefs, freedoms, tastes, and completely change your personality to become
someone else.
·
Your
parents have never been relegated to second class citizens in your life. You are
not expected to forget about your own home, family, parents, siblings, and serve
those of your spouse, even if it hurts or harms your people. You are not
supposed to love someone else’s parents more than you love your own. You are
not restricted from helping or taking care of your own parents unless your
spouse/in laws allow you to do so.
·
You
will never be expected to change your surname, and sometimes even your first name
upon marriage. If you don’t, you will not be questioned by family, friends, and
mystified strangers why you don’t change your name.
·
Your in-laws don’t dictate how you dress, what you eat, and whether
you can go out to work.
·
You are not required to publicly advertise your marital status,
marking you as someone’s property, with sindoor, mangalsutra, shakha, pola,
noa, thali, etc.
·
No
one else can dictate or control your body. No one else gets to decide when you conceive,
what sort of protection you use, if any, and whether or not you have an abortion.
Such decisions are made for you, BY you. Not by your spouse or in-laws.
·
If
you decide not to have children, your masculinity, and your humanity will not
be questioned.
·
If
you have children, you will not be expected to provide primary care for them, and
your masculinity and humanity will not be called into question if you choose
not to care for them.
·
If
you do provide primary care for your kids, you will be held up as an example of
extraordinary parenting – even if you are only marginally competent. Regular,
boring and repetitive jobs such as changing diapers and feeding will be
considered your partner’s.
·
If
you have children and also choose to have a career, no one will think that you
are selfish for not staying at home to take care of your kids.
·
If
you are straight and decide to have children with your partner, you can assume
this decision will not affect your career in any way whatsoever. If career
sacrifices are needed to raise the kids, chances are much higher that the
career sacrificed will be that of your spouse.
·
Household
chores, by default, will not be considered only your domain, especially the
most repetitive and unrewarding tasks, they will be relegated to your spouse.
·
In
a household where both partners work full-time, you are not the partner who is
expected to cook and clean when they get home after a full day’s work, even if your
job is more demanding than that of your spouse.
·
After
work, you will not be expected to go straight home to look after your spouse,
kids and in-laws. You can go to your friends’ houses, to parties, to clubs, or
simply to hang out and relax, without being branded a selfish person, and a bad
spouse, or a bad parent or a bad son in law.
·
If
you and your partner have to live separately for some reason, like different
places of work, it is assumed and considered normal that the kids will stay
with their mother, regardless of her workload, available free time, etc.
·
If
you go to a doctor specializing in “your” complaints, even as a 40 year old,
they do not ask for your wife. They consider you capable of making your own
decisions.
·
You
can adopt a child. Within a marriage, you cannot be prevented from choosing
adoption as an option by either your spouse or your in laws. The law also recognizes
your right to adopt. While your partner can only “give consent”, she cannot
apply for adoption.
·
If
you are straight, you are not very likely to be emotionally, physically, and
sexually abused by your partner. Nor will you be told, by your family, by cops,
by courts, and by society in general to continue living in an abusive household
for the sake of your children.
·
Marital
rape is not an issue for you. You can express desire without being called a
whore, and can say no to sex without being called frigid or being forced or
beaten into submission.
·
Domestic
violence is not a huge likelihood in your life. Unlike 70% of Indian women,
your spouse will not regularly degrade, insult, and beat you. Neither will people
assume that this is normal/ok/justified/deserved behavior on their part.
·
You don’t have to pretend to be dumb to stroke your wife’s/girlfriend’s
ego. You can show that you are smarter.
·
If you earn more than your wife, or are promoted to a bigger post
than hers she will be proud. This will not lead to ego hassles, domestic
trouble, or divorce.
·
When your friends ask you why you won’t do something, your answer
is never going to be, “Because my in-laws/husband won’t allow me to do it.”
·
You
have far more choices even in choosing your spouse in an arranged marriage.
·
Losing
your spouse to divorce or death is not the end of your entire world and your way
of life. You are not expected to change all lifestyle upon the death of your
spouse (giving up colored clothes, eating insipid, vegetarian, non exciting
food, etc), and you will not be stigmatized for divorce.
·
If
you are a widower or divorcée with kids, you don’t have to give up all hopes of
companionship/ love/ remarriage. In fact, chances are that you will be
remarried before the year is out.
·
Sexual harassment is not a constant reality of your life.
·
You can walk aimlessly around without having to plan your route and
avoid certain streets/areas, at certain times of day/night. Nor do you have to ask
people to accompany you even in broad daylight, if you have to go to certain
places.
·
You can be certain that no woman will suddenly walk up to you and try
to fondle/ pinch your privates on the street. Faceless entities will not constantly
grope you in buses, trains, and everywhere else.
·
When you pick your outfit for the day (assuming your mom isn’t the
one doing it), you don’t have have to run over your mental list of to-do’s for
the day and wonder if it involves being around a certain kind of men or in a
certain kind of area or returning back to home at a certain time of day, and
then wonder if your outfit is appropriate considering all those factors.
·
You can dress how you want, without your character being
questioned, and without your dress sense, or outfit being used as a defense for
your rapist.
·
You
do not live your life in the constant fear/expectation of rape. You do not have
to constantly mistrust anyone and everyone of the opposite gender. If you are
walking alone down the road, and someone of the opposite gender just happens to
be on the same route, you need not automatically feel anxious/ threatened.
·
If
you do get raped, you will not be expected to kill yourself or become a “zinda
laash” whose life is as good as over.
·
No one will make assumptions about your sexual availability based
on whether you drink
or smoke or party or on the basis of the gender of your friends.
·
A
total stranger upon seeing/hearing that you smoke, drink, or have friends who
are primarily not of your gender, will not accuse you of being a blot on the
name of Indian-ness. Neither will they insult you for it.
. A total stranger, seeing you minding your own business and quietly smoking in a corner, will not walk up to you and ask"do you want to talk? are you depressed? why are you smoking? can i help you?"
. Strangers will not follow you back home from the neighbourhood cigarette shop, because they "know" that women who smoke are loose, so you must be easy game.
. A total stranger, seeing you minding your own business and quietly smoking in a corner, will not walk up to you and ask"do you want to talk? are you depressed? why are you smoking? can i help you?"
. Strangers will not follow you back home from the neighbourhood cigarette shop, because they "know" that women who smoke are loose, so you must be easy game.
·
All
the movies you ever watch will not portray characters of your gender –smoking/ drinking
as evil, loose and bad.
·
Other
movies will not show a youngster of your gender who parties, drinks, smokes, and
stays out late, being “rescued” when the partner of their committed
relationship asks for sex, drilling it into you that this is not something that
a “bharatiya mard” will ever accept
·
You
don’t have to be categorized into just two categories in your entire life –
father/brother or slut/whore/loose (in fact there is no equivalent word for
slut for men, and slut shaming does not have a male equivalent.
·
You can have multiple relationships (monogamous or otherwise) before
marriage and not be labeled a slut or have your character questioned and your
reputation tarnished.
·
Ghar/samaaj/community
does not locate its izzat solely on your body. You
can have a girlfriend without fear of bringing dishonor to the family name, and
you can even have relationships outside marriage without fearing a
disproportionate backlash. You will never be killed by your father/brother for
being raped.
·
You can have sex with your girlfriend without ruining your chances
for marriage in the arranged marriage market (should you be interested).
·
You
will never be caned in front of the entire school for daring to like a girl, or
weaving a few fantasies around her. (Said fantasies shared only with your
friends, and you having never even spoken to this girl).
·
A
decision to hire you won’t be based on whether or not the employer assumes you
will be having children in the near future
·
For
a position, when faced with a candidate of the opposite gender, you have a better
chance of being hired. This will become more and more apparent the higher up you
go. Ifyou do the same task as a woman, and if the measurement of the result has
any subjective angle, chances are people will think that you did a better job.
·
Shopkeepers,
bank employees, CAs will not talk to you in a dumbed down language of “baby
sentences” . They will not automatically assume that you don’t know and can’t
comprehend basic math, economics, etc
·
People
don’t get uncomfortable, and seem unsure about how to handle it when – in social
situations – you join in to discussions on politics, current affairs, finances/
economics and more.
·
Magazines,
billboards, television, movies, pornography, and virtually all of media are
filled with images of scantily-clad women intended to appeal sexually only
to you.
·
Pins
to palaces, cars to concrete sellers don’t use half naked people of your gender
to sell anything and everything.
·
Ads
don’t constantly brainwash you to stay young, unlined, smooth skinned, no grey
hair, to “keep your woman”, or to “keep the love young”.
·
You
are more likely to be given a loan as sole applicant
·
When
people hear that you run a business, they don’t automatically assume that it is
a boutique, or a family business started by your father that you are now running, or that your partner/spouse "helps" you in it.
·
You
can be careless about your appearance without worrying about being criticized
at work or in social situations. Total strangers will not comment on your
waxing etiquette. You are not expected to spend insane amounts of money on specific
kinds of grooming, style, and appearance to fit in, even though you make less
money than the opposite gender.
·
If
you rise to prominence in an organization/role, no one will assume it is
because you slept your way to the top.
·
Your
clothing is less expensive and better-constructed than women’s clothing and
tend to fit better without tailoring. So you can always find something
readymade that looks good, and costs less.
·
You
can go to a car dealership or mechanic and assume you’ll get a fair deal and
not be taken advantage of, even if you don’t know anything about cars.
·
Expressions
and conventional language reflects your gender in positions of authority, (e.g.,
“all men are created equal”, chairman, etc) and reflects the opposite gender
badly (e.g., hysteria, “don’t be such a girl”, etc). Most curse words are not insults/comments
on your gender/gender roles/body parts. (in India, most swear words you can think
of are likely to be an insult to a female family member, or a part of the
female anatomy).
·
Every
major religion in the world is led by individuals of your gender. Even God, in
most major religions, is pictured as male. You can practice religion without
subjugating yourself or thinking of yourself as less because of your gender because
most major religions state that a man should be the head of a household, while his
wife and children should be subservient to him. While most of them also preach that women are born impure, evil, and so on.
·
You
have the automatic social right to have your kids brought up in your religion,
even if your spouse professes a different one.
·
You
can be loud without being called a shrew, and be aggressive without being
called a bitch.
·
You
can ask for, and get, legal protection from violence that happens mostly to men
without being seen as a selfish special interest case.
· Violence that affects you is
labeled “crime” and is a general social concern. Violence that happens mostly
to women is usually called “domestic violence” or “acquaintance rape,” and is
seen as a special interest issue.
·
When
you go to the cops to register a complaint about such violence, you can at
least get a complaint registered. You don’t have to fear that they wont
register, or that they will perpetrate the same violence on you.
·
You
can eat as much as you like, in public, without attracting comment.
·
Complete
strangers generally do not walk up to you on the street and comment on your weight,
looks, appearance, complexion, clothes. Nor do they stand by the side of the
road and pass lewd comments
·
Total
strangers do not assume the right to say things like “you are pretty/goodlooking
/hot/attractive. How come you are not married?” as if looks is all you are good
forand marriage all you should aspire towards.
·
You
can be careless with your money and not have people blame it on your gender.
·
You
can be a careless driver and not have people blame it on your gender.
·
You
can be confident that your coworkers won’t assume you were hired because of
your gender.
·
Your
gender does not make it less likely for you to get promoted.
·
You
can expect to be paid equitably for the work you do, and not paid less because
of your gender.
·
If
you are unable to succeed in your career, that won’t be seen as evidence that
your gender should not be in the workplace
And
last … and definitely the most important, you have the privilege of being unaware
of male privilege. You take all of these things for granted, while half of
humanity has to fight very hard to get even a few of these basics.