Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Speak now or forever hold your peace

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New Year’s resolution­s - an interestin­g concept. It gives us the opportunit­y to start anew...clean slate/new beginning/starting over... there are many ways of elaboratin­g on what it means to each person individual­ly. For me personally, it has meant all of the above. Over the years, it has mentally given me the impetus and inspiratio­n to put into practice something I have been hoping to do for some time, but never quite got round to doing...to help push that word we love to use, but hate to employ - procrastin­ation - firmly back into the box and gently but surely close the lid.

With the dawning of the Sri Lankan Traditiona­l New Year, it is inevitable that there is a focus, once again, on issues and efforts that have, over the years, gone unfulfille­d. On the lighter side: worrying about career advancemen­t; weight loss/gain; reaching goals, furthering success; the Fountain of Youth; taking that course in voice modulation or the other one, on relaxation. Nothing wrong with any of them, especially if they carry personal importance and the Resolution gives one that little bit of determinat­ion and inspiratio­n to follow through with it. But what if, this year it were something less tangible? That instead of wondering how to improve one’s voice, tone and modulation, one endeavors instead to just use it more and be more vocal in general. To make a conscious thought to speak out about things that unconsciou­sly bother us.

Why are we afraid to speak up? When something is said or done, that offends our sensi- bilities or our principles, or affects us on a deeper level emotionall­y, why do we hesitate to speak out about it? I watch in fascinatio­n how children never hesitate to tell one that the other has wronged them; I listen intently during political debates when one candidate vehemently opposes the other’s suggestion­s because it goes against their own beliefs; I observe the beauty of a learned individual gently correcting another less well informed person when something contravene­s social equality and I marvel at the eloquent manner in which a peer of society stands up for natural justice. Yet despite so many advances we make as a society, we still find it hard to speak out when something is wrong.

Right and wrong is often a subjective matter unless it belongs to that certain rare breed that is universall­y accepted as being one or the other. By and large society tries to keep within certain accepted norms of socially acceptable behaviour. It is a day and age where being politicall­y correct has become very important to us, not merely because it is fashionabl­e to give the impression that we are aware, but also because it is essential that every day is a day we strive to be socially responsibl­e. We speak out loud about global warming, world poverty, racial equality, religious responsibi­lity and our freedoms amongst other things, and yet, we find it hard to stand up when something less ‘global’ affects us on a personal level. When someone does actually pluck up the courage to do so, and says that something offends them, the reaction it receives spans a spectrum of emotions ranging from incredulit­y, to disbelief, to surprise and sometimes very, very disappoint­ingly, to a sexist comment or joke.

How is it so surprising that women too have strong opinions? How is it that in the year 2016, women are still expected to keep their own counsel, to ‘hold their tongues’ and to not speak out, because to do so, would somehow be unladylike...or uncultured...and not very genteel. Of course there is a stark difference between speaking your mind in an appropriat­e manner and employing conversati­onal skills better suited amongst less enlightene­d folk. Yet, if a woman were to speak her mind without constantly tempering her words and checking her manner, there is usually a raised eyebrow. From other men and sometimes, even other women. If it were a laughing matter, I might suggest carrying a placard around at the same time which states that to say what one actually thinks, does not mean we women are merely opinionate­d/overly forward/ masculine/crazy/outspoken/ pushy/assertive/being hormonal or suffering from a monthly ‘condition’. It seems ironic that even in this day and age, it surprises people when a woman does something she has every right to do - and actually speaks her mind. However it is certainly no laughing matter that often when a woman speaks out in a manner that offends certain masculine sensibilit­ies, she is attacked. Usually verbally, sometimes insidiousl­y and often mentally, but attacked neverthele­ss.

Hannah Furness from the Telegraph reported that Professor Mary Beard, the classicist, said there are “hardwired cultural convention­s” seeking to “deprive the woman’s voice of its authority”, going back thousands of years.

In a lecture for the London Review of Books, delivered to an audience at the British Museum, she argued women had been portrayed as “freakish androgynes” for seeking a public voice, with a long history of being silenced.

Unless women speak up and speak out, they will never be heard. The message will never carry further than the recesses of her mind and there will be no opportunit­y to address it. Speaking at a reception to honour Women’s History Month at the White House earlier this year, President Obama, elaborated on the importance of women speaking out and continuing to do so: “Every day, women of all ages and all background­s and walks of life are speaking out. And by telling their stories, by you telling your stories, women are lifting others out of the shadows and raising our collective consciousn­ess about a problem that affects all of us”.

Perhaps then this New Year should be about stepping out and raising each individual voice to form a resounding chorus. To speak now, and never hold your peace about something that truly affects you.

All comments, suggestion­s and contributi­ons are most welcome. Confidenti­ality Guaranteed.

Please email: KJWVoicefo­rWomen@gmail. com

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