A Working Woman’s Appeal For An Occasional Menstruation Break
This is the winning entry for our 6th writing contest: Menstrual Leaves-Should or Shouldn’t be
Here’s a story of every working woman ever
Toiling through the days
Enslaved to wage labor
Suffering the torments of a secret ailment in silence
An ailment that is not even a real sickness
But Mother Nature at work shrouded in the myths and misconceptions they feed us
So anyway we take up the monthly challenge
And venture out to our offices, attend meetings or go on travels
Traversing on highways, forsaking basic amenities like a functional toilet
Ever gallant and brave
Because we are super modern women
Too awesome to ever need a break
With the discomfort and what not, we show up at work
Conquering or pretending to conquer, those messy, bloody cramps
We don’t make a noise, we do not complain
Lest we give them the evidence of what they have always proclaimed
That we were indeed lesser beings that needed to be kept in place
So we have learned to live with it
With the one that must not be named
The one that is condemned to ignorance, languishing in neglect
And we too continue to suffer along, cornered, shamed and silenced
But we took it in our stride, as usual and as always
Because we are the great modern women
Too awesome to ever need a break
We took one for our kind
We, the models of super power and strength
With the ability to juggle galaxies and move mountains
With grace and a majestic silence
Lest we give them the evidence of what they always proclaimed
That we were indeed weaker beings that needed to be kept in place
Bound in strictures and sanctions that nearly kill us
Branded as untouchables and ostracized
The kitchens and places of worship that we were barred from
The menstruation huts where we were banished to
We became the unholy and the dirty and those were our new names
The work of Mother Nature was turned against us and became our prisons
So here we are now, trapped between difficult choices
Between the tags of ‘inferior’ and ‘outcaste’, we can decide which one we prefer
I would say being an ‘outcaste’ is out of the question
And those sanctions are actually a civilized death sentence
So I would rather be an ‘inferior’ and fight it good and fight it hard
Smash these myths and misconceptions they feed us, till they don’t exist at all
I will stand up for my kind, I will stand up for myself, and speak of the ‘unspeakable’
I will speak till I am heard and till menstruation is no longer a matter of shame
I will happily trade the ‘great’ in and ask to be treated as a woman who is just another person
I will demand for a rest or two to deal with those messy, bloody cramps
Because menstruation my friend is just Mother Nature at work
And even the best of us need an occasional break!
Poet: Nandini Mazumdar
Nandini holds a Masters in Sociology from Jawaharlal Nehru University and has worked with young people and women, particularly, on issues of gender and sexuality; She is also a International Visitors Leadership Program (IVLP) alumni and currently works for India HIV/AIDS Alliance.
Editor: Divya Rosaline
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