By: Danielle Campoamor for Your Tango.
I was walking my son to the park a few blocks from our humble apartment; him, asleep in his pram and me, attempting to stay cool on a particularly hot and humid day.
Wearing a newly-purchased sundress and drinking water with a tenacity I’d imagine a camel would appreciate, I enjoyed my somewhat-solo stroll past modest homes and convenient stores and beautifully green patches of grass.
Next to the playground with play areas and swing sets and slides, is a skate park. Mostly young men, attempting tricks that make my mum-marrow curdle, spend their time talking and sometimes smoking and skating with a terrifying, reckless abandon. In order to reach the vacant swings that put a particularly adorable smile on my son’s face, I have to walk past the skaters and the area they’ve clearly, and rightfully, claimed their own.
While on said walk, I heard three young men - probably in their late teens, early twenties - comment on my appearance.
As a woman, the fact that complete strangers took it upon themselves to criticise me physically, was hardly a shock or surprise. It was, however, the caveat they insisted on attaching to my presence, that garnered my attention.
She’s hot, for a mum.
The overall societal sexualisation of women, to me, is fascinating.
Culture demands that women present themselves in a certain way, always displaying a saturated allure of sex and desire and wanting, while never actually having sex or a particular desire or a consuming want. A woman must put forth a conscious effort to appear attractive but loses her allure if she admits that she has put forth said effort, to actually appear attractive. She must enjoy sex, but only with you and only when you decide it is appropriate for her to do so.