When you think of an engineer what thought comes to your mind immediately?
It should be that of a man… well there are many women engineers, but rarely does she make it to the first image in many minds.
These women engineers do work at the workplace in factories, mines, doing tough jobs. It’s a sociological fact that men came to the workplace first and women followed a few decades later. So, it wouldn’t be a misnomer to say that workplaces are male dominated especially sectors like the IT, manufacturing, brewery, finance to name a few.
This article is about Celebratory Network’s experience on building a community of women via an Employee Resource Group for an organization in the manufacturing sector. This understanding has thrown up some insights on how women show up at work, their lived experiences and what do they do. The other side of the coin is how the men perceive them at the workplace and what behaviours of theirs are seen.
How do women see themselves and what do they do about it?
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Some women see themselves as capable, competent and ambitious and do not shy away from voicing it out. They know that the world outside has possibilities, and they can avail of them.
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Some see themselves as second fiddle to men where the latter dictate what they need to do and why. For instance, “You are a woman, you will be great at handling a desk job. Let the men do the hard stuff.” Their work goes unrecognized, and they find themselves incapable of talking about their aims and ambitions or questioning the treatment meted out to them.
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A few seem to be happy that they take the risk and talk in the appropriate forums irrespective of the consequences. They are scapegoated, targeted and seen as someone to be cautious of. “Don’t say anything in front of her, she will bring it out in the meetings”
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Sensitivity towards women during their periods is not experienced until it’s very explicitly communicated. “Why are you sitting here, walk around.” Very few women take advantage of the period situation and want to be on leave during the cycle.
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When women speak their mind they have been told something on the lines of, “Tum chup rehti ho toh sunder lagti ho.” (when you keep quiet, you look beautiful)
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There’s also an experience of women being like men to feel equal
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Women do not showcase their work, the assumption is that I am doing work and my work should speak for itself
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The feeling that I am not alone was experienced, the sense of community emerged and the idea of networking came alive!