When I was 5, I sat on the edge of my chair with my legs spread. I felt an itch between them, so I reached down to scratch, but my grandma grabbed my wrist to stop me and hissed: āGirls donāt do that!ā I asked her why, because I had seen my father doing it, I had seen all the boys in primary school doing it, too. And it itched and I wanted to scratch it. Her answer was: āItās just how it is. Girls donāt do that. Also, donāt sit there with your legs spread like that. Girls donāt do that, either.ā
When I was 6, I spent a day on the beach with my family. I was excited about the new bikini my mum got me, but confused as to why she asked me to keep the top on when I went for a swim. She hadnāt made me wear it the years before, but suddenly, she was very fussy about it. āLook, Iāve got one on, too.ā, she said to me. And I thought I understood: Women had to cover their breasts, because they were bigger than mensā. But I wasnāt a woman. I was a child. Later, I overheard a talk she had with my dad. āI donāt want old men to stare at her.ā, she whispered. I interrupted them and asked her why she thought old men would look at me. Her answer was: āItās just how it is. Itās because youāre a girl. And men do that.ā
When I was 9, I got in a fight with my best friend. I went home and complained about it to my grandma, who lived with us. She told me I should have seen it coming. āThatās how girls are.ā, she said. āA friendship between girls is always also a competition. Girls are jealous, manipulative and backstabbing. You canāt trust them.ā But I had never fought with my best friend before and I knew weād forgive and forget the next day, anyway. So, I asked my grandma why, and her answer was: āItās just how it is. Catfights will happen. Itās normal. Thatās how girls are.ā
When I was 13, I fell in love with a boy from the neighbourhood. I couldnāt hide my excitement. He was on my mind all the time and I caught myself wishing we were together, so I could hold his hand and kiss him, too. I wanted to meet him, get to know him better, and I told my dad about my plan of asking him out. āDonāt do that.ā, my dad said. āItās not appropriate for a girl to ask a boy out.ā Though I partly agreed, since I had never seen a woman proposing to the man in a movie, or read about a girl kissing her crush first, I still didnāt understand what would be so bad about being an exception, so I asked my dad why I had to wait for a boy to show interest in me in order to be allowed to openly requite it. His answer was: āItās just how it is, darling. The man makes the first move. Itās always been this way. Boys like to conquer, and girls love being chased.ā
When I was 17, I was part of a large group of friends. There was a boy who fancied me. I didnāt like him back, but I wasnāt used to anyone crushing on me, so I enjoyed the attention. Heād always tell me I was special. One of a kind. Different. āYouāre not like other girls.ā, he said. āYouāre not a bitch. Youāre funny, laid back, intelligent. You donāt just care about your nails or your hair. You get my sense of humour. Youāre not like most girls. Youāre my best guy friend. But with tits.ā I was flattered in the beginning, but soon, I started to wonder if his compliments were any at all. I began to feel disgusted with him. I didnāt want to be his best guy friend with tits. So I asked him whatās so good about a girl like me, a girl unlike what he called a typical one, and his answer was: āThatās easy to explain. A pretty model type of girl is good enough to jack off to, but in the end, a guy wants some drama free pussy. Youāre an exception. The majority of girls is superficial and slutty. The kind of girl you fuck, but dump when youāre ready to settle down. Or theyāre just plain boring and prude. This sounds harsh, but itās just how it is.ā
When I was 19, there was a boy I regularly had sex with. It was nice. Not the breathtaking kind of passionate, ecstatic fucking I had dreamed of; maybe we lacked chemistry, maybe it would have been nicer if we had been in love; but I was alright with it. I adapted, obeyed and swallowed. Of course I did. In the beginning, he really put an effort in giving me what I gave him. He really tried. But his attempts at putting his tongue to good work quickly faded into halfheartedly rubbing me dry and at some point, he said: āIām giving up.ā I asked him why. His answer was: āItās so hard to get a girl off. You women need ages to cum. Itās so exhausting.ā I laughed and told him I needed about two minutes when I did it on my own. āThen stick to that.ā, he said. āIāve got a cramp in my wrist. Women are so complicated. Itās just how it is. Iām sorry.ā
I am 20 now, and Iāve come to realize that my female identity has been shaped by a biased, hypocritical excuse based on ridiculous gender roles: āItās just how it is.ā All my life, I have asked them why, and all they said was āItās just how it is.ā And it didnāt matter whether Iāve asked men or women. Internalized misogyny is just as harmful. There were as many women as men who said: āItās just how it is.ā But that is not the answer I wanted. Not the answer I needed. These few words donāt fucking answer the countless questions concerning my gender identity.
Why canāt I sit with my legs spread? Whatās so shameful about what I keep between them? Why must I cover my breasts? Why am I being sexualized long before Iām even told when sex is? Why am I being taught to mistrust other girls? Why do I have to compete with other girls? Why am I only a good girl when Iām not like most girls? Why do I have to keep quiet about the way I feel? Why am I not allowed to show affection like men do? Canāt I conquer a boyās heart, too? Why must love be about conquering, anyway? What if I donāt like being chased? What if it scares me? Why do boys scare me, anyway? Why do you make me feel inferior to them? And why do I have to like a boy in order to be liked? Why am I being shamed for being a āslutā, them shamed for being āprudeā? Why am I expected to adapt, obey and swallow without praise when boys who return the favour are considered grateful, dedicated lovers, heroes, almost ,because to the majority of them, itās not fucking understood that if I make them cum, they should make me cum, too? Why am I exhausting to be with? Why am I complicated?
Is it because Iām a bitch? Because Iām an oversensitive little baby? Is it because Iām a slut? A prude virgin? Is it because Iām on my period? Cause women are just crazy? Cause I am jealous, manipulative, backstabbing, competitive or any of the other countless negative traits that are immediately connected with the female identity? All summed up, is it because Iām a girl?
Iāve asked them. And they said yes.
And when I asked āBut why?ā, they said it again: āItās just how it is.ā
"It" is that context, is a never ending circle of resigning acceptance of the circumstance that girls are being raised to disrespect their own gender from their childhood on. I was, and am, expected to accept the fact that being female automatically makes me inferior, and that I should be thankful for being treated equally, because thatās not the standard. I was, and am, expected to appreciate and take it as a compliment when people tell me that Iām not like other women. Because I was, and am, expected to look down on women even though I am a woman myself. But I refuse. I refuse to adapt, obey and swallow. I refuse to accept that "itās just how it is". I refuse to take this as an answer, and I will not stop asking why. I wonāt ever stop asking why. Not because I want people to give me a proper response, but because I want them to question themselves, too. I want them to start wondering. Want them to start doubting the concept of the role Iāve learned to stick to before I knew how to spell my "typically female" name. I want them to think about it, lose their sleep about it, until they ask, too: "Why?"
In order to eliminate misogynic stereotypes, we must unlearn to understand them. We must refuse to accept āItās just how it isā as an answer, until we forget what āitā stands for. Keep asking why, until nobody knows an answer anymore. āItās just how it isā is not an answer. Neither is āItās cause youāre a girlā. Or āThatās how girls areā. Because girls can be everything and anything they want to be. Thatās how it really is.