Where is the way out for women's rights?

Ethan 2022-04-21 09:03:52

20180614: One of the points given is because of the consideration of women's rights it brings. How to truly respect women is a question that many women, even Kochi women, do not really want to understand.

In the newly opened studio upstairs in Auchan, I watched this two-and-a-half-hour Indian comedy with Miss Liu, who I haven't seen for a long time. Funny, at the same time, I sighed even more for the fact that Indian films have left many streets behind domestic films.

When many educated women in India realize that they should fight back in the face of any injustice, in Shanghai, which is already the most tolerant and fair city in the country, they still hear many surprising remarks and meet netizens. All of them will be charged with malicious "crazy" charges, and the misfortune in the subsequent marriage will be taken for granted as punishment. If there is such a lack of cultural ignorance in small villages and towns, it is shocking to spit out of the mouths of highly educated women.

The toilet hero Rigaya decided to start fighting for a very simple and difficult right. It was not without compromise. In the rare relationship with Koshav, they cherished each other and tried to avoid it in various indirect and short-term ways. But the moment she was trapped on the train, Gaya finally realized that some problems could not be escaped by avoidance. From the moment she chose to divorce, she started a long struggle that others could not understand. There were religions, traditions, love, and even thousands of women who were clearly suffering but stood on the opposite side of her.

Fortunately, Gaya has a lovely father and uncle, two middle-aged and elderly uncles who seem to be wretched and like to watch various large-scale MVs, and stood firmly beside Gaya to express their support. And Koshav, who loves her deeply, from constant compromise to side by side with her to finally rushing to the forefront of the struggle. But what shocked me the most was Gaya's answer in the interview: It was those women who continued to go to the field to go to the toilet tomorrow morning, and her marriage finally broke down. The saddest thing is that this is actually the reality. On the road of women's independence, it is often other women who bring the greatest resistance, and they give the greatest malice to those women who are trying to change the status quo. Therefore, there will be a resurgence of female Durban, and there will be public contempt for older leftover women.

As a post-80s generation, the biggest feeling is that the influence of the original ecological family on this generation of individuals is too great to be easily removed. Gaya is fortunate to have the support of both family and love in this battle. But being fortunate enough to have a good family of origin, or to meet a love that can make up for the lack of emotion in the family of origin, are all opportunities given by the outside world. But as women themselves, what they need to think about is how to strive to establish and maintain their own rights and lives without external force? A little heavy, but equally unavoidable

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