By Hilary Bainemisha
hbainemigisha@newvision.co.ug
Only one day separates us from International Women’s Day of March 8. Incidentally, the day was declared by the Russian revolutionary and founder of the world’s first socialist state, Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov Lenin, to honour the role of women in the revolution.
But, as usually happens with good ideas, the world took it on and later agreed to synchronise their Women Day to March 8 because it was already popular in the majority of communist countries.
Today, several Women’s Days later, and so many themes, therefore, the world has not only changed but also transformed.
It is no longer viewing women as producers of sex, children and comfort and will not frown if a woman commands at war, grows beards, eats government money or marries several men.
Women have indeed come a long way. I am awaiting Christianity to amend the constitution and add a fourth deity, God the Mother, to complete the conquest of male dominance.
Men haven’t taken this revolution hands down, although it is now obvious that women gains are irreversible. When I give talks on love, the common challenge is that we, counsellors, should turn our guns onto men.
Men, they say, are finding it difficult to handle empowered women and, yet, experts are focusing on simpler issues like the opposition to Valentines.
They wish our toughness on the opposition was as vigilant as when dealing with corruption, which is worse and more devastating to society.
Men, here I come
Today, men should gather for this important alert. I will start with the older generation which is about to retire, facing an impending loss of influence and, generally, having passed their peak time in life.
These men have a lot of problems, among which are their wives, who are in their 40s. This year, about 1,005,962 women will turn 40 or be within 40 – 44 years of age.
And if this includes your wife, you better pay attention (not in cash). If you are someone’s wife, and this is you, I need you here too. We need to talk.
My counselling experience has revealed that around the time a woman becomes 40, there are lots of things that shake her from her comfort zone to a more demanding stature, to the chagrin of marriage and husbandhood.
I hurried back to tell you so that we bring our heads together in order to do any of these three things: Either to save the institution of marriage or help husbands adjust or agree to roll down the drain together.
The dynamite of 40
The stroke of 40 years of age finds a calm wife of extraordinary traits and blows her humility into tiny pieces. Forty actually looks a humble number and tempts you not to pay attention to it. When we are not looking, it disorganises women in invisible processes of fear of old age, means self-evaluation and self-inflicted panic.
Most of them begin to look around and compare their achievements with peers, their own previous expectations and in the context of time running out.
As a result, they stop behaving like a normal wife of a Ugandan man. And you know what happens when you do this.
You tend to realise that wherever you are, you haven’t achieved your worth, peers are way above you and that the time to do something about it is NOW!
Such a frustrating discovery is usually accompanied by a defence mechanism known as scapegoating, and the blame game pointer lands on the husband.
Wives convince themselves that it is because of their husband and his family leadership that they are not ministers, cannot have their holidays in Europe, cannot afford a brand new car or be the ‘celebs’ they always see in social media!
Hilary Bainemisha