WOMAN SPECIAL
Ladies First
Young girls these days are spoilt for choice
when it comes to role models
There is not much about
the young that arouses my envy. I don’t grudge them their top-notch metabolism,
their wrinkle-free complexions, their insouciance that all will turn out okay,
or even the fact that life is full of endless possibilities for them. That’s
because I was young once myself, and I know what a tortured time this can be
for most of us.
This is an age when we
are yet to get truly comfortable in our skin, no matter how firm and
unpigmented it may be; when we are tortured by the spectre of failure as well
as dreams of success; when we feel things so deeply and viscerally that it
marks us for life. This is a time when the best of us are often reduced to
emotional wrecks, tossed on the waves of our hormones and the moods they
induce.
These are only some of
the reasons why I wouldn’t want to relive my youth, for all the money and
anti-ageing face-cream in the world.
But there is one thing
that I do envy about the young girls growing up right about now. And that’s the
fact that they have so many positive female role models in the world they live
in. Growing up, my generation had to be content with such stock figures as
Indira Gandhi and Mother Teresa. But while these were towering and
inspirational personalities in their own right, they were not relatable in
quite the same way as the female role models of today are.
And they are everywhere:
from sports to arts; from politics to business; from the movies to the media.
Wherever you look, there are strong, brave women taking on the world – and
winning.
Let’s take sport, to
begin with. Yes, we had PT Usha and Ashwini Nachappa, both leading track stars
of their time. But that was about it. There were no tennis or badminton stars
on the international circuit who looked like us. And few of us even knew what
our female cricketers looked like, though we may have been familiar with Diana
Edulji’s name.
How things have changed
since then! Sania Mirza has been a bonafide international tennis star for
nearly a decade now, winning international titles and endorsement deals with
equal elan. Badminton champion Saina Nehwal has won over 20 international
titles, an Olympic bronze medal and attained number one ranking in the world.
Somewhere along the way, she has managed to find the time to become the brand
ambassador for a range of companies as well as for the Government of India
campaign to promote the girl child.
And now we have a new
stable of stars in the Indian women’s cricket team, all of them with
inspirational stories behind them. There’s Mithali Raj, best known for reading
Rumi on the sidelines before she lights up the green with her fiery shots all
across the field. And keeping her company are such stalwarts as batting wizards
Harmanpreet Kaur and Punam Raut, allrounder Deepti Sharma and fiery fast bowler
Jhulan Goswami (no relation, alas!).
A quick look at the movie
business also gives us hope. Gone are the days of heroines who hid behind
Mummy’s pallu or depended on their ‘Godfathers’ to shore up their careers.
Today, the film industry is full of independent women who have succeeded by
dint of their own efforts. These are women who make their own rules rather than
play the roles prescribed for them. Whether it is Deepika Padukone and Priyanka
Chopra, who left the security of Bollywood to make a splash in the West, or
Kangana Ranaut and Anushka Sharma, who revel in their ‘outsider’ tag and create
their own opportunities, the landscape is heaving with female stars who are not
just strong and confident but also secure in their self-belief. And these are
qualities that every young girl can aspire to, whatever career she chooses.
The banking sector is as
rich in female role models as it is in term deposits. The largest bank in the
country, the State Bank of India, is headed by Arundhati Bhattacharya, the
first woman to be appointed to that role. Chanda Kochhar is the managing
director and CEO of ICICI Bank, the second-largest bank in India (and the
largest in the private sector). Shikha Sharma is the managing director and CEO
of Axis Bank. Naina Lal Kidwai is the country head of HSBC India. Kalpana
Morparia is the CEO of J.P. Morgan, India. I could go on, but you get the
picture.
The media landscape is
also dotted with strong female figures. While NDTV gets the credit for
producing the largest number of female stars – Barkha Dutt, Nidhi Razdan, Sonia
Singh – others news channels are now fast catching up. Navika Kumar rules the
airwaves at Times Now while Mirror Now’s Faye D’Souza is fast carving out a
place for herself in the overcrowded media landscape. And then, there’s my
friend, Priya Sahgal, whose discussion programmes on NewsX are an island of
sanity in this era of outrage-fuelled TV.
Publishing is also rapidly
being overrun by women bosses: Meru Gokhale at Penguin Random House; Karthika
V.K. and Sudha Sadanand at Amazon Westland; Diya Kar Hazra at HarperCollins
India; and Chiki Sarkar, who heads her own start-up, Juggernaut.
So, if you are a young
girl growing up right about now, what do you see around you? You see strong,
capable women, following their dreams, working hard, creating their own path,
and enjoying the journey. And it gives you hope – even the certainty – that you
can do just that in your own time.
How I wish I had had that
when I was growing up!
Spectator TBR
13AUG17
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