Who am I in the maze of
labels that society has given me? What about me? Who am I, outside the
labeling? These are simple, important and sincere questions which in today’s
world might be perceived as a self-serving, selfish and irrelevant.
I was daughter first, a first
child. Then I became a sister and a sibling. Soon, at school I became a friend.
In my late teens I became a girlfriend, followed by motherhood and then became
a wife.
Daughter, sister, friend,
girlfriend, mother and wife are all social constructs, labels that identify us
within a group but most importantly, the labels are given to “guide” us on navigating
societal desired behavior at any point in time.
First born. Yes. But I did
not choose to be the eldest, yet there has always been an unwritten code of
conduct, an overflowing manual of how I am supposed to behave. Why? Because, if
you do not show the way, the right way, those who come after you, because of
your first born status, will follow your ways good and bad. Really? They will
follow my ways and not the parents’ ways. Seriously? When did being first born
equaled a familys’ best practice? I thought everyone is born with their very
own independent mind with the Creators’ given ability to make informed choices.
This responsibility of “leading
the way” is burdensome, tiresome and a heavy load to carry. The conversations
are veiled. The remarks are deliberate. The announcements are loud. “You are
the eldest, you must be a good example. First born leads the way.” But, quietly
I ask, why, because I did not sign up for this. If there was a memo that was
sent, the email probably dumped it in the spam folder.
Every child is born into a
different family. When I was born, my mental model of “family” were two adults,
trying as best as they could, often experimenting to be good parents (because
they do not teach you anywhere to be a parent, never mind a good one.) When
another child was born, a girl, her mental model of “family” were two parents
and a child, who more or less looked like her but just slightly bigger and
older.
The second child has to find
her own space and voice within this set up. For a first child, at least for me,
it did not affect my mental model of “family”. I was told and just accepted
that there would be others, AND I would be responsible for them.
For the second child and the
rest, the messages are also crystal clear - you must look up to your BIG sister
for cues on “how we do things around
here…” So when did I become BIG and where did I learn the cues?
In all our societal given
roles, we are expected to behave in particular ways, roles that we were never been
taught specific actions and behaviors. Because of this, I was the most smacked
child within my family. I resorted to making up the rules as I went along. I created
my own rules as a sibling, friend, girlfriend, mother and wife - my own rules
and not societies’ rules. Oft times, my rules of coping with society and living
my life, have been at variance with those expected from me by my family and
society. Short of calling me a deviant, they have often resorted to creating
new labels in order to justify to their discomfort, for example, a rebel
without a cause, etcetera.
Out of all the labels, the
one I have found most uncomfortable is motherhood. It is a blessing but way too
overrated. Just because you have a womb and can give birth does not make you a
“natural” mother. I love everyone I gave birth to, but many children I have
encountered, including my own, do not realize that inside my body, is a person,
young at heart with their own mind of “how we should be doing things around
here!” And in that space, my space, we are sharing with you my children, when
you are home, I am the solution. When I am the solution, for that moment in
time, democracy takes a back seat. I have since come to the conclusion that
children are at their best, bare foot, with tops off, wearing just hand - washed,
ill - fitting, one hundred percent cotton nappies, with thick mucus coming out
of their nose, crying for you to pick them up and completely unable to utter a
single word!
The truth is, all of the
labels, daughter, sister, sibling, girlfriend, wife and mother bother me. They
pigeonhole the more in me.
So what about me? What about
the person that resides inside the matter you refer to as daughter, sister, girlfriend,
mother and wife? Why do families and society at large scoff at engaging the
real you, the real McCoy? Why do families and society create their own image of
you and then proceed to interact and engage with that figment of their fertile imagination.
I am still standing, always
refusing to have the committee of three; me, myself and I, sidelined, in
preference for my mirage, an illusion, a mask, fully formed in their own heads.
I stand here triumphantly
over the remains of the fallen, who became despondent and weary and eventually ejected
their own limb and life from this twisted space, because, they could not bear to
be passed over and completely ignored whilst their substitutes, the
non-existent but very much alive social constructs of themselves, affirmed.
Good question. I never questioned society's view for a long time. But one day I woke up and realised that I kept on juggling several hats of daughter, grandchild, sister, mother, aunt, wife, daughter-in-law etc, worker, each one with lots of responsibilities. Each role demanded a piece of me. There was no time for me. I did not even know who I was. Even my name had disappeared. I was Mai Rumbi to some and Mrs Mashingaidze to others. All denoting some roles. That is when I woke up and decided to be me. But how?
ReplyDeleteGood question. I never questioned society's view for a long time. But one day I woke up and realised that I kept on juggling several hats of daughter, grandchild, sister, mother, aunt, wife, daughter-in-law etc, worker, each one with lots of responsibilities. Each role demanded a piece of me. There was no time for me. I did not even know who I was. Even my name had disappeared. I was Mai Rumbi to some and Mrs Mashingaidze to others. All denoting some roles. That is when I woke up and decided to be me. But how?
ReplyDeleteI am glad that you woke up to that realisation.
DeleteOh Gloria! I stumbled on your blog while goggling up Tsitsi Vera. Your blog, 'what about me?' is just what I needed. I was recently told by a friend and sister that I had to nature the woman in me and bring her our as I was not woman enough to understand men and love them unconditionally accepting that it would always be a 60:40 ratio in their favour! What about me I asked?Who defined the ratio I asked? Why was there a ratio I wanted to know. Was I crazy for believing that love and mutual respect did not have a mathematical formula. Were my beliefs so unrealistic and selfish? I was told that I was still young (25) and I still had time to waste fighting society. When the time came I would bow down and fall into line. Reading your blog made me feel like God had sent an angel to comfort me and assure me that I was not crazy and it was okay to be me! Thanks so much!
ReplyDeleteAlways self preserve. I suggest you follow your gut. Your gut always tells you what is right. Many women are victims of patriarchy and therefore they are patriarchal women propagating patriarchal thinking and values. Listen to them at your own peril?
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