I can’t think of a time when my gender has had a significant impact on my career. This revelation has stunned every single person who has heard it. They’ve looked at me as though I’ve sprouted neon-green horns.

Nabeeha Ahmed, Head of User Research

These reactions say a lot about the state of our society. They also make me realise, even more, how lucky I’ve been. On International Women’s Day I’m thinking about:

My mother

My mother told us stories of staying out of sight while family delegations discussed her education. They chastised my grandfather for allowing her, a good girl of "marriageable" age, to go to school.

How could he allow her to go where she would get corrupted? How could he allow her to miss out on all the amazing suitors who do not want overly-educated wives? These delegations came and went. She got through secondary school and then through university, graduating with first-class honours.

Women in my family

Several women in my family were dragged out of school, kicking and screaming, and delivered to new husbands. These new husbands they’d never met before, were often twice or three times their age and often lived in different cities and even countries. The plan was always to get them settled in marriage and then for them to go back to school. One, two, three, four, five children later, the hope of ever going back to school died, silently.

My teacher

The first time my teacher told me he couldn’t believe my dad was allowing me to go to school, I couldn’t believe my ears. Why wouldn’t he allow me to go to school? Why was it ok for boys to be at school and not girls? What would I be doing instead? He never got around to answering my questions….

Our society

I see the stats around the gender pay gap, I see the numbers on women in the boardroom(or lack thereof). I must admit, I wonder whether I’m blissfully ignorant and whether my luck is inevitably going to run out. I think about my shyness, the fact that I am a mother, imposter syndrome and I wonder if there is to be one more barrier to my career progression. Is my being a woman going to become a challenge? Do I have a choice?

A little girl

A mother explained to her son and his friend, a little girl, that she had been invited to talk to their class about women leaders. This mother was so pleased to have the invite and bursting with pride. The little girl turned to her and asked, "Why? Can’t women be leaders just the same as men?" – why is talking about women leaders interesting or significant? I say, Go Girl!!

May she be the sign of an era where there is no need to talk about women in leadership and no need to close a gender pay gap. An era in which empowered women are the norm and there is no need to talk about gender equality.

Am I really that lucky? Definitely yes, for not being subjected to the same gender challenge’s of my mother’s generation. Yet, I cannot claim that idealistic view held by the little girl. I can only hold out hope that her view becomes the prevailing norm. Here’s to a future in which International Women’s Day is just another day.

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Original source – MOJ Digital & Technology

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