So I wrote this exactly a year ago, although a few changes have been made. I’ve been contemplating whether to publish it here or not. well, I guess I finally made my decision. I dedicate this to KT, he was the first person to read this piece and his kind words really encouraged me. Again, I dedicate this to Edem, she is such a big inspiration and she totally loves it.
I am an African girl
“The weaker sex”, I’ve been called
As a girl I was taught a lot of things
I was taught to be mute
when males are talking
I was taught not to look a man
directly in the eye when addressing them
I was taught to be confident and successful,
but not more than a man
“It would intimidate him”, they said.
For me, my life’s purpose was marriage
Therefore right from girlhood I’m taught
how to play house and be
a good mother and an obedient wife
“A good wife doesn’t talk back at her husband”,
Daddy admonished
Any choice I make in life should be stimulated
by my aim to find a good husband
It is why I was born
But I always felt something was wrong
Why am I the only being taught
how to cook and clean and respect the opposite sex
Why isn’t my brother learning same?
As a growing girl
I was made to understand
That the more attention I had from men,
The more attractive I was
This flawed view of who I was supposed to be
Made me to see other girls as competitors
I was made to believe that
It would make me fulfilled and accomplished
As a girl in Africa
I was made to understand that
A boy can commit any sexual crime
and go scot free
But I would be criticized
Society would shun me
And worse of all
It would be difficult for any well-meaning man
To marry me
Because I questioned these standards
Because I objected to these ways
Because I voiced out my misgivings
THEY called me an abomination
Because I believed in the social, political
and economic equality of both sexes
They called me a curse unto men
They called me a freak
They called me a FEMINIST
Asiedua Yeboah © 2016


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