I am not a cricket player. All I have for credit are the little  cricket games I played with my elder brother as a kid. So when my neighbours  planned to form a cricket team for a local cricket tournament, I  didn’t think much of it. But… I didn’t think they would not even  consider women in their team. They didn’t know if any of us were  interested, had experience or were good players. They assumed it is  going to be a men’s only event. Now that, more than irk me, shocked me.  Yes, that’s how it is in international cricket. But I thought local  matches were more casual, more gender free-friendly. The year is 2011 and  we still think fights and sports are for men and cooking and sewing are  for women?
When I asked if I could be in the team – just out of curiosity in  fact – I was generously offered a cheerleader’s place. They meant it for  fun. But repeatedly when the comment came from every guy i interacted with, in the neighbourhood,  I was again, puzzled. This was not anymore a joke. They seriously could  not even imagine a woman as a player. It is because the cricket ball is  too hard for a fragile little woman’s soft skin, I gathered.
 
If I say more, I will only be branded a desperate feminist. I say  ‘only’ because that would only make the depth of my words and  concerns seem unimportant. I am not asking for justice. I am not thinking of a different  picture where all is fair. I am not in the least asking to be in the  team (ahh, i am no good at it)! I am just realizing discrimination is just another norm, an  accepted reality of the world. It would always exist in subtle forms  unquestioned. Wouldn’t it?

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
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