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Am I Male?
At times, being a woman in technology can get very frustrating. Just because we are good at it, many women get the back-handed compliment-they get treated as one of the guys! At times, it leads to an identity crisis-for because of our ability in engineering and computer science, many begin to wonder if despite external appearances we are really guys!
Thursday, March 23, 2006
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One of the Guys-Oh Brother!
While doing my undergrad in mechanical engineering, I was the only girl in a class of 67.  I had wonderful classmates with just one problem, they just would pretend I'm a guy and call me 'thambi', which means younger brother in Tamil. I realized that they felt more comfortable thinking of me as one of the guys than as a female. But I could never really understand exactly why thinking of me as a male made them feel more comfortable, while interacting with me. I didn't look, dress or act like a guy. I was happy being a girl and wasn't too comfortable when addressed as brother. So, when I asked some of my classmates why they insisted on calling me brother, I was actually surprised by their answers. According to some, since I had taken up a 'male' field, they felt I would actually enjoy being one of the guys as only guys were smart in mechanical engineering!  They thought they were actually paying me a compliment by accepting me as one of the guys! Others said, they preferred thinking of me as a guy, so they could be 'themselves'. The answers surprised me for I enjoyed being the only woman in the class, though at times it did get lonely. Being smart in mathematics and engineering and being a woman was never something that I considered mutually exclusive. But I was always proud to be a woman. If men are suppose to be more intelligent and better in engineering, does it mean that below all external appearances I am actually a man? I began to wonder if I was some weird she-man creature. No! maybe I was an alien from outer space!

Victims of Stereotypes
We are all individuals. Unfortunately the 'Men are from Mars and Women are from Venus' theory has done most of the society in. Broad statements about how females and males differ socially are just that-statements that are not intended to be useful in dealing with an individual. Simply put, not all women are great at cooking or bad in engineering just as not all men are great with finances or bad at cooking. As long as we keep that in mind before labeling someone, we would be fine and would be able to treat a person based on their ability than according to their gender or their so called or rather 'perceived' need.

Most men in the technical field have been raised on social stereotypes and this includes my classmates from college. As a result, they end up with a notion that a girl or a woman who can do things better in the so called 'male' fields (again a social stereotype introduced by society and is not really true) will have be to be more like a guy than a girl.

It is listening to the stereotypes that have us questioning who we are or what we are capable of as opposed to seeing for others and ourselves, what we are good at.

In my third year I decided that I couldn't play the 'guy' any longer as it was consuming all my energy and I had forgotten why I had taken mechanical engineering in the first place, which was because I enjoyed it. I was proud to be a woman, even though it was lonely most of the times. I still see the pattern repeated today in many perceived 'male only' areas of technology where the woman is treated as one of the guys except when it comes to getting coffee or donuts.

Women who are currently struggling with it need to let their colleagues know that they are not comfortable being treated as 'one of guys' when it comes to work, and as a 'secretary' during lunch breaks. If you don't speak up, your colleagues will never realize that you don't like doing it. Use humor or be smart. A friend of mine, a senior software executive was requested to fetch some coffee at a board meeting where she was the only woman. She did, but by calling up the office assistant and asking for 10 cups of coffee to be brought to the conference room. She smiled and asked, “Will that be all gentlemen?” Many in the boardroom were taken aback, but they got the point and she was never asked to get coffee or snacks again.

Remember, the lesson is simple. A woman technical professional is neither one of the guys nor a peon. A female colleague who does the same job is entitled to the same privileges, pay and respect irrespective of her gender. 

For the guys reading this, don't feel sorry for the girl in your class. She is capable and she made a choice to be there. For the girls reading this, remember you are not a she-male, but a woman /girl who is good at engineering and mathematics. If your colleagues or classmates treat you as she-man, it is important to remember they are just playing out the stereotypes due to their social conditioning. Remind them gently, but firmly, who you are.

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