I used to be a feminist. When I graduated high school ten years ago, I was right on the feminism bandwagon. As a fresh-faced, doe-eyed eighteen-year-old, I felt invincible. The world was at my fingertips, regardless of my gender, and nothing or no one was going to stop me.
But as I got older, I noticed not all women felt the same. Whenever I gleefully insisted I was going to be rich one day, my slightly older girlfriends rolled their eyes, and muttered cynically about some sort of ‘pay gap’. I was party to endless conversations about how misogynistic a male co-worker was because he criticised one woman’s typing skills, and how terrible it was that men used sexist terminology every single day. These venting-fests always ended with the phrase, “See? This is why we need feminism. Women need to be empowered!”
However, the modern-feminist message I took wasn’t one of empowerment. By my mid-twenties, my youthful audacity was replaced by a burning frustration that the world was allegedly dominated by straight white men, whose sole purpose was to make life as difficult as possible for women. In order to succeed, or even to survive, I had to be tough and aggressive – just like a man.
But here’s the thing; women aren’t men. Regardless of the feminist rally against gender norms, there are some characteristics men and woman have that you can put down to biology. These variants, however small, inform many of the differences in male and female behaviour, as well as the life choices they make. And somewhere deep inside me, I knew it. I knew the ideology I was buying into was, on some level, fake.