
2.7M
THThe short story begins with a daughter asking whether women are equal, opening a casual yet layered family conversation. The mother recalls an early marriage incident during a meal at a relative’s house, narrating an embarrassing moment with humour. This light tone introduces gender norms, marriage expectations, and everyday patriarchy hidden inside ordinary domestic memories and social storytelling contexts shared.
Laughter follows as the daughter reacts, while the mother continues describing how the father accepted blame publicly. The grandmother’s compliment praises humility, revealing cultural conditioning. This moment exposes normalized sexism, respectability politics, and silent rewards given to women who absorb embarrassment, reinforcing unequal power dynamics within families, marriages, and everyday social interactions across generations, traditions, routines, homes, spaces.
The narrative concludes when the mother reveals the father’s private explanation that women farting in public is unacceptable. This reversal reframes humour into critique, suggesting women are not always unequal but conditionally protected. The smiling delivery sharpens irony. Chronologically simple yet layered, the story critiques gender inequality, double standards, and internalized misogyny, showing how patriarchy survives through politeness, affection, silence, and love within marriage, family structures, and everyday cultural domestic life, social behaviour, norms, traditions, persist.
@thoughts.daniel










