It’s sad to say the year 2016 won’t be remembered for further progress towards gender equality. Instead, this year’s powerful women will be remembered for Hillary Clinton losing the U.S Presidential Election to Donald Trump and the British Prime Minister Theresa May’s shoe collection.
What makes me even more ashamed to be a professional woman, a leader, a mother, is that I have contributed to our lack of progress towards gender equality in the working world.
For those of us old enough to have worked in the 1980s and ’90s, have either forgotten what it was like or don’t realise how much further we still have to go before we rid our culture of gender bias in the workplace. We only need to turn to the media to see how women are being portrayed compared to men. For instance, the first line of this article addresses the ‘daring length’ of Theresa May’s dresses on the same day she’s elected Prime Minister.
While we have made huge strides in progress, watching these female portrayals reminds me of the sexism I faced when I began my career.
Working in a profession for a woman back then, particularly in a male-dominated industry like surgery, was near impossible. In fact, less than 2 percent of women were working in retinal surgery, orthopaedics and neurology when I started out my career in ophthalmology.
I vividly remember hiding my pregnancy under my medical suit during my Specialty oral exam. I feared that if they saw I was pregnant I wouldn’t be accepted.
One woman once asked me, "Why would you bother having children if you weren’t going to look after them?" It sounds harsh now but to work full-time as a mother before the turn of the century was a rarity and hugely undervalued. It challenged many values that weren't as recognised as they are today; however, there are still so many silent gender biases women face in the workplace today that continue to go unnoticed.