7 Common Habits that Prove Women are Trained to Delete Themselves

Silence is a betrayal of goodness and decency. End it now.

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Silence is a betrayal of goodness and decency. End it now.

Meera, 25, sits across from me, leaning forward, in a meeting room at Harvard University, USA. She looks striking, in a black kurta, silver jewellery, a tribal shawl and with kajol lining her dark eyes. But she shares her life hesitantly, pausing to breathe, trying, as she says, “not to cry”.

“I remember that deep sense of choking. In my family, as a child, I learnt to observe too much, silent, listening. My mother is a good listener; not my father—he is very dogmatic, always strong opinions. My father is a liberal in his thoughts, ‘You are free to choose anything, it is your life’ but ‘being a doctor is desirable’. He is a doctor. There is a big disparity between how he thinks and how he lives. I wanted to study psychology, but it was forbidden. I went to medical school … it was my father’s dream … It’s very embarrassing … I ran away from medical college after three weeks. I was 17. I left all my things in the hostel. I felt … I had no other way … I was dying. I took a bus and then a train for two days and nights and landed in Chennai to go to college to study psychology—I got admission … but I had no place to stay. It was already evening, I had very little money, I saw these women at the bus stop, it was at Marina Beach. I started talking with them; baaton baaton mein, by and by, I told them I was hungry. They gave me a beedi to smoke. I had no place to stay. I did not want them to know I was vulnerable, so I said I am on this research project and want to live with you to understand your ways. The women agreed on the condition that I would look after their children when they went out at night for dhandha, sex work. They would pay me. I lived with them.’

Meera is a Delhi girl. She grew up in Saket, New Delhi, with her dadi, chacha, bua and parents in a middle-class family that prospered wi...

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