HH PEOPLE

Menu
  • Home
  • Features
  • Cover
  • Food
  • Health Tips
  • Career Story

A Woman’s Place in a Room is Second

Tochi Eze (Editorial Team)

ADMIN by ADMIN
March 2, 2020
in Features
2

 

My childhood conditioned me to fear. My aunties, who raised me by proxy, were always quick to send me off to my room or to the kitchen, especially on nights when my uncles were around drinking beer with Eba and talking about politics. It was important to them that I did not grow up and ‘wa l’anya,’ which is a loose Igbo translation for ‘shine eye.’ It was also important to them that I did not end up like my father’s youngest sister whose voice sounded as thick and as sure as a man’s. On Sunday evenings, my father’s youngest sister would sit down holding her glass of beer and centre herself in the conversation, out laughing the potbellied men and often contradicting them—much to my father’s obvious irritation.

From what I was told, she was exactly the kind of woman nobody wanted to marry. To my other aunties, a woman’s place in a room is ‘second.’ She is an ‘after’ or an ‘otherwise.’ Many of us are familiar with the local saying that a woman should be seen, not heard. If you talk too much, you are proud. And if you must contradict a man, do it gently, massage his ego. Make it appear like the idea was his own in the first place, which all seems fair and logical, except the only recipient for this tenderness must be men. I remember when one of my uncles was about to get married—the praises that came for his fiancée were so adoring but also, they majorly revolved around her being quiet and humble. Humble because she worked in a bank but still woke up every morning to make fresh food for her fiancé, who was self-employed; quiet because she was the perfect host, shuttling between the kitchen and dining when family guests were around.

I no longer quarrel over the legacies of my aunties. They have lived their lives to the best of their own making, constructing their opinions based on the narrative that society fed them in their time. Some of them have married and seen that humility does not make a man keep his vows, nor will it stop him from raising his hands to hit a pregnant woman. Maybe the truth is that we have no roles, and our actions or inactions will never be predictors of human outcomes. Men who want to manifest shall surely manifest. Women too but let us not digress.

On a personal note, I am constantly outrunning the fears that framed my childhood. But to unlearn this legacy of silence, I have to practice self-respect. A case in point was when, recently, I called out a man for interrupting me in the middle of a conversation. The man in question is white so my irritation was doubled by both the gender and racial dynamics. It is possible, as he explained, that he did not mean to silence me, though that was the second time the incident was happening. But what I know is that my voice matters, my thoughts matter and next time, when someone hijacks a conversation from me, I will promptly step in and address as necessary, regardless of their gender.

In a world that blindly celebrates people for coming first, women can no longer afford to be second or seen as a mere casualty of male banter. This, to me, means that women need to take up more space. Deliberately. In the classroom, boardroom, at the bars and pharmacy. Stop apologizing every time you have a thought. Reduce the self-editing. Prepare to lead, because leadership is not biological, and intellect has no gender.

We must speak, even though speaking sometimes is a risk. Standing for what you want will mean that sometimes, people will reduce you to hormones and anger. “She is sensitive” they may say, but please, be sensitive and speak. Speak up. Speak loud. Speak truth to power. Speak against anything that interferes with your voice.

Happy women’s day.

Post Views: 216
Previous Post

Between the Last Failure and the Next Time

Next Post

The Shape of Equality

Next Post

The Shape of Equality

Comments 2

  1. Gbemi says:
    5 years ago

    Very interesting read.

    Reply
  2. Adetola Adeleye says:
    5 years ago

    Tochi, thank you for this timely piece

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Adetola Adeleye Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Always Stay Informed

Always Stay Informed, Talk To Us Subscribe for weekly updates from our team on lifestyle, industry news and valuable tips for your health.

Instagram

[instagram-feed num=9 cols=3 showfollow=false]

About Heirs Holdings

About

We are an African proprietary investment company driving Africa’s development through long-term investments in key sectors. We operate businesses that rank among the top three in their sectors

Heirs Holdings is a leading pan-African investment company. Its investment portfolio spans the power, energy, financial services, hospitality, real estate, healthcare and technology sectors, operating in twenty-four countries worldwide.

Heirs Holdings is inspired by Africapitalism, the belief that the private sector is the key enabler of economic and social wealth creation in Africa. Driven by this philosophy, Heirs Holdings invests for the long-term, bringing strategic capital, sector expertise, a track record of business success, and operational excellence to its portfolio companies.

HH People Team

Editorial Board

Editor in Chief – Clari Green

Editor – Adeoye Falade

Technical Lead

Akindamola Akintola

Cover Design 

Oghenefegor Abade

Contributors

Cover stories

Osemudiamen Umane
Taye Ade-Balogun

Other Contributors

Obong Idiong

Mateen Taomu

Nonso Okafor

Priscilla Okorie

‘Deoye Falade

Akindamola Akintola

Ikeoluwa Feyisetan

Iyanuoluwa Olorode