Women
What It Takes To Be A Woman
How does it really feel being a woman? Fulfilled? Or indifferent. With those large, or small breasts, heavy backsides or too flat buttocks. Some women tend to feel uncomfortable. Their worry becomes aggravated when issues of rape, trafficking, assault, abuse or violation are replayed.
Who knows! With the synergy between technological advancements and cutting edge medical practices, some women if given the opportunity may bow to the temptation of changing their sex organs all because of the complexities associated with womanhood.
But being dissatisfied with your look is only portraying you as one who does not know the potentials she has to make the best out of life. What poses as complexities are the boundaries you must determine within yourself to go over and beyond them to become who you want to be.
Amidst numerous and diverse challenges starring the woman at the face, challenges which range from compulsory marriage, child bearing, health, education, family responsibilities, traditional beliefs and limitations, the need for the woman to relegate to the background, the old cliché that the woman’s place is in the kitchen can not be over- emphasised.
At the maiden edition/inauguration of “Being A Woman Workshop, one of the programmes under THE EMILY GOD’s PRESENCE’s PROJECT, designed to be featured annually, this need was re-echoed and this time, with a call, or call it a mandate to go beyond the boundaries, which formed the theme of the workshop this year.
The choice of the theme: BEYOND THE BOUNDARIES was borne out of the understanding that the plight of the African women in general and the Nigerian women in particular is shrewed in several limitations, hence the need to have the understanding that limitations, herein after referred to as boundaries, however lofty or cumbersome as they may seem, whether cultural, social, political, religious, psychological or marital, are merely man-made and thus not insurmountable.
The convener of the workshop. Dr Emily Oghale God’s presence, a facilitator of children’s theatre programmes and an academic staff of the Department of Theatre Arts, University of Port Harcourt, uses the platform to crave the indulgence of all women to determinedly and courageously go above and beyond the perceived boundaries to attain their goals and stand tall within and outside their domestic confined spaces, showcasing not only their outward beauty, but the beauty of their brains, wits and talents.
Commenting on a recent photograph of a fat model, TESS HOLLIDAY, who courageously went beyond the boundaries of modeling restrictions, Dr Emily explains that the culture of starving our young girls to be as tiny as figure (8) to become a beauty queen or a fashion model is just a social construct which must be refuted. According to her, Tessy Holliday went beyond those traumatising boundaries of being bullied for years because of her big size as she was being refered to as being “too short” or “fat”, to be a model, proving the modeling industry wrong by flaunting her body with confidence and high self esteem which has won her a modeling contract.
Indeed, in a world where women are held bound by so many restrictions, where married women find it difficult to advance educationally, where the life of the girl-child is in danger simply because she desires to acquire education in order to better her lot so as to be able to measure up with her male counterparts in politics, leadership, business and in improving her domestic status as well as contribute to national development and proffer solution to global crises, Dr Emily upholds that women must be determined to help other women succeed, to give warm embrace to the hurting and build confidence in younger ones as well as be mentors to our tomorrow’s leaders.
It must be noted that the yearly observation of this workshop will serve to impact on our women the spirit of resilience and determination for global competitiveness.
It will also help women resist all forms of boundariesmilitating against their goals.
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