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How Women Unknowingly Support Patriarchy: 10 Telltale Signs That Often Go Unnoticed
They don't always come with a megaphone. Sometimes, patriarchy hides behind good manners, sweet smiles, and 'it's-just-how-things-are' logic.
Patriarchy isn't just about laws or big, overt actions-it's also built into everyday behaviour, expectations, and habits that have been passed down for generations. And while men are usually seen as the primary upholders of patriarchal norms, women, too, often end up reinforcing these systems-many times without even realizing it.
From innocent-sounding advice to well-meaning sacrifices, women sometimes unknowingly become the very gatekeepers of the power structures that limit them. Here are 10 signs of how that happens, often unnoticed.
1. Judging Other Women For Their Choices
When women criticize other women for being "too ambitious," "too sexual," or "too loud," it reinforces the idea that a woman's behaviour must be policed according to patriarchal norms. Calling someone "too much" is often code for "too non-traditional."
2. Glorifying Sacrifice As A Woman's Duty
There's a thin line between strength and silent suffering. When women are praised only for how much they endure-whether it's giving up a career, tolerating in-laws, or staying in unhappy marriages-it sends a message that pain is a virtue, especially for women.
3. Being Proud Of 'Adjusting' Too Much
Many women are taught to adjust-to make things work no matter what. While compromise is essential in any relationship, constantly adjusting at the cost of one's own needs or identity often perpetuates the idea that a woman's role is to shrink herself to make space for others.
4. Shaming Other Women In The Name Of Culture Or Tradition
"How can she wear that during a festival?" "What kind of daughter-in-law behaves like this?" When women become enforcers of 'sanskaari' behaviour, they uphold the same restrictive systems that once boxed them in too.
5. Preferring Sons Over Daughters
Even today, in many households, mothers are the first to express a preference for sons-whether it's during rituals, inheritance discussions, or even casual family planning. This subtle bias teaches children that boys are more valuable and girls are a responsibility.
6. Defending Toxic Male Behavior as 'Just Being a Man'
"He's a guy, that's just how they are." Normalizing controlling behaviour, emotional unavailability, or even infidelity by excusing it with gendered logic enables harmful masculine stereotypes and leaves women responsible for emotional labour.
7. Encouraging Daughters to Play It Safe
Telling girls to avoid certain clothes, stay quiet to be likeable, or choose "safer" career paths for stability sends a strong message: the world won't change, so you must. This quiet endorsement of fear keeps the system intact.
8. Policing Women's Appearance-Especially Other Women's
From schoolteachers commenting on girls' skirts to mothers criticizing celebrities' clothes, the obsession with how women present themselves is another way women participate in regulating each other. The male gaze thrives when women internalize it.
9. Turning A Blind Eye To Inequality At Home
Many women don't question why they're the only ones cooking, cleaning, or caregiving-because they've seen their mothers and grandmothers do the same. But unchallenged domestic inequality often sets the tone for broader gender imbalance.
10. Believing That Feminism Is "Too Much"
When women say, "I believe in equality, but I'm not a feminist," they distance themselves from the very movement that fights for their rights. This perception-that feminism is angry, man-hating, or extreme-is a patriarchal narrative that thrives on misinformation.
Most of these behaviours come from conditioning, not cruelty. They're inherited from generations who thought they were doing the right thing. But patriarchy isn't dismantled just through protests or policies. It's challenged in kitchens, classrooms, bedrooms, and WhatsApp groups.



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