Heels in a Man’s World: Power, Patriarchy, and a Pop of Lip Gloss
I couldn’t help but wonder…
Is it really “a man’s world” or just a poorly lit room we forgot to redecorate?
In Indonesia, you don’t have to look far to see who holds the mic. As of 2024, women make up only 21% of the national parliament. In the business world? Just 5.7% of top leadership roles in major companies are held by women. And don’t even get me started on religious or customary leadership structures where women are often expected to speak only when spoken to, and preferably after making the coffee.
Meanwhile, women are everywhere on the frontlines of community organizing, running small economies from their kitchens, and holding families together with emotional duct tape. We are working twice as hard for half the recognition, all while being told to be sabar, lembut, dan tidak banyak bicara.
Well surprise. We’re talking now.
We walk into meetings where men casually call us ibu-ibu like we’re all the same breed of harmless. We pitch ideas only to have them mansplained back to us. We wear batik, heels, and armor made of pure self-control.
And still we slay.
We push policies. We lead protests. We teach girls to code, farm, speak up. We translate rage into reform and lipstick into defiance.
Let me break it down for you:
- In 2023, women were 30% more likely to experience workplace discrimination in Indonesia.
- 1 in 3 women experienced gender-based violence, according to Komnas Perempuan.
- And yet, millions of women still go out every day and build empires from scratch. Sometimes in wedges.
We don’t want a seat at the table we want the whole damn building. We’re done making ourselves small to fit someone else’s idea of what “feminine power” should look like. Power can wear red lipstick. It can cry in frustration, then crush a presentation. It can cook dinner, write laws, and burn it all down when needed.
So no, we’re not waiting anymore.
We’re here. We’re loud. And we’ve got receipts.
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