Green flag energy

Courtesy: Instagram/Dustinpoynter, 2024

Vampires. Werewolves. Billionaires. Surgeons. Pirates. The dream archetype literary hero of a majority of women. Allegedly. And so for the longest time, we were inundated with vampire plotlines. Back then, I kept up with the Joneses so of course I was a twilight babe through and through. Until I came to my senses and stopped watching TV. The point however is that green flags for many women equals high aggression in the male dominance hierarchy. Á la vampires and werewolves. Do you believe it? I don’t know of any healthy woman who craves violence to tame, as suggested. What? Like animals? Come on now.

Back to the archetypes- surgeons and billionaires, okay let’s bite. Do we have morally upright billionaires? Who stand by a consistent set of values throughout their wealth building? I’m not talking about billionaire philanthropy- the idea that one’s charity is announced and very visible astounds me. That aside, isn’t the very nature of extreme wealth concentration unethical? How do you build it without trampling on others’ rights? How do you sustain it? I would love to be wrong- can you imagine the sadaqa opportunities?

Now surgeons, I approve. I don’t think it gets any better than this. I advise anyone seeking career guidance these days to study medicine. I digress, the archetypes are just that, archetypes. Dare I say researched and disseminated by men? Again, I’m happy to be wrong. Are all women online? Of course not. But even if they were, are the archetypes achievable by women too? Of course. Believing women. You know, the flavour of the Mother of the Faithful, Khadijah bint Khuwaylid (May Allah be pleased with her). As I get older, I’m even more persistent on creating and sustaining a standard of life and luxury that can solely be financed by me Inshaallah. And I firmly believe that even in my brokest of days. Ahem.

My sisters read my journal- and now I can laugh about it, but back then, I was mortified and traumatized from owning a journal for ages. An entry recalled a dream about being saved from a waterfall. Now do not ask me how, why and where I needed to be saved in a waterfall- I don’t even think I had ever seen one at 13. But what I mean to say is they were dreams, so when I first heard about this alleged research on the significance of vampires and werewolves, it made sense to me. Not because of aggression and violence that needs taming. But in the sense of having a friend to lift you and defend you and save you- the so called ride or die.

My Lord does my saving these days, even in my dreams. And I’ve come full circle. I remember having debates with friends on freebies. For a long time, I could not understand the concept of freebie coffees or lunches from unfamiliar men. I recall once getting into it with one who’d bought a friend lunch, and saw nothing wrong in extending to me. I went a couple more rounds with colleagues or school mates who’d complain that I was a weird friend. My dude, I have no male friends. It goes without saying that any offers for dates was an immediate red flag. I’m trying to recall when I have had polite gifts from men? Besides my tailor, whom I persistently promoted with a bad shopping habit? I mean free, I don’t expect anything else from you offers? Are there no strings attached freebies from strange men? I read somewhere that most men would never go out of their way to be polite to someone they don’t find attractive. I don’t know how true this is outside of my world, but I’m sure glad for akhlaq and sadaqa.

As to the green flags – drama kings and queens are a firm no. Unjustified violence- verbal, physical and the whole shebang, is an ick. So is cursing. It’s popular to curse these days. I acknowledge that this can be hard to drop. But can you imagine if we all cursed? Reminds me of people whose anger is more important than yours. I once had a Client’s wife call me to tell me that her husband has anger issues and that I should just understand him. Really πŸ™‚

A firm moral compass is a given- when I was younger, I couldn’t really articulate what this meant. Now though, it’s a simple case of equity, equality and justice. Oh well, not so simple after all. It comes through in how one treats waiters or people they do not expect to gain from, or when they trample another’s rights. Even, ‘please can you ensure we never give a quarter to this party in this deal?’ is worthy of a cut sublime. Politely- with an internal reminder that this is definitely not green flag energy. And that you are the company you keep. These days, I don’t put up any polite facades- we will never get along, personally or professionally, so let’s not even try.

I take that back. I am fairly tolerant to my friends and acquaintances. It’s a completely different story for me. I have incredibly high standards for myself, to the point of idealism. And I fall so many times, my Lord knows. But He helps me rise up every time. Sadly, I’m not tolerant either when it comes to a future partner. I expect you to walk the most walkiest of walks. A leader, in every sense of the word. An imperfect one, mind, but one who grows from mistakes, reflects and makes amends. Can you ask for forgiveness from the Creator, without asking from His creation?

Have standards, they said. Finished school. Work. Then relax them, they said. They like to say a lot of things. Never settle, my ladies. Never. Inshaallah.

Muslim handshaking: What about it?

offense-offense-everywhere

Credit: Consequences Toy Story, he.memegenerator.net

I’m not a scholar, I’m not a theologist, I’m not a teacher, I’m not even the most practising of Muslims. When it comes to faith, my life is chaos, chaos! We’re on some positive vibes train this year, so I’ll rephrase that. My life isn’t all chaos, granted it could be more sharply refined – we realize that and are trying our best to smooth over those rough edges and live as per the tenets recommended to us. We try. Obviously, part of this trial entails much testing in our interactions with the world. And testing obviously requires that you receive some bit of resistance, commensurate to the effort and action you put out. Basic science. Sometimes though, its reaction is vastly superior to the action you put out, and you’ve got to give Newton’s assumptions a rest.

So if you haven’t been living under a rock in rural Afghanistan, you have obviously come across cultures and people who are vastly different from you. Vastly. Beliefs, cultures, languages, views, chins. The whole shebang. And because they’re used to this very particular way of thinking and living, affirmed daily by the societies they inhabit, they automatically think everyone lives like them. And would further think you’re intolerably gauche if you adopted a different perspective to life. Different era gauche, that should no longer exist in this world. Sometimes when they say this, they mean you should not be living amongst them.

And sometimes these norms translate to a perceived authority regarding how we’re all required to interact with each other. It extends to what our physical boundaries should conform to, and what our personal spaces should look like. It’s kind of difficult, when you’ve got a large part of the world thinking and behaving in a certain manner and then you, singular lone you, attempt to go against the tide. It looks a bit like this.

Going against the tide

Credit: gozzim.blogspot.com (2015)

It does, I have realized, stretch the limits of everything Newton believed. Err, throw in the entire world too. And all because, when you extended your hand to me, I declined to shake it.

It’s not just a Muslim thing. It’s a hippy thing. In the world of “me too”, throw in a quarter of the scarred women involved. Orthodox Jewish women favour it. And until recently, in British Victorian society, it was not good form for a man to shake a woman’s hands unless it was offered. Certainly not when they were mere acquaintances. Everyone wore gloves, and there were strict rules governing interactions with the opposite sex. Such simple times those. Err, excluding the lack of inheritance, property, financial and just about every single legal right that would equate the value and status of a woman to that of a man, of course. Could we bring back the gloves idea, though? I’m crazy about that.

So the shaking of hands people, I’ve come to discover, is a minefield rife with the most violent of detonations. I’ve had all sorts of reactions to this, from the sweetly accepting, to those who bear fixed smiles though their eyes scream “weird!“, to the aggressive opposers, condescending mockers. Everything across that spectrum, I have heard it all.Β 

And I do understand them. Really. You see, once upon a time, I was one of those bare minimum kind of Muslims who thought everyone else was too extreme. I never wore hijab throughout my primary and high school, as we weren’t allowed to, and once I joined the real world, was the farthest thing from what you would call a practising Muslim. I was also deeply unhappy. If you’d told me there was meaning to life, besides the accumulation of wealth, and beating everyone to it before I died, I’d laugh at you and tell you to stop spinning stories. Nothing ever seemed worth doing. Until one holiday season in university when a friend encouraged me to learn more about Islamic jurisprudence, and recommended a strict religious institution to enroll to. It’s the best thing that has ever happened to me. I got to make friends with women I had previously thought had nothing to do with me, and I got to see a side to life that I deeply long to go back to. It’s the happiest I’ve ever been, the most peaceful I ever was. Life was simple, too simple it seemed – it was “will my Creator approve of this?” Yes, move on. Nay, chuck it out.

And once I went back to uni, I was a changed woman. I wore niqab, I stopped shaking my classmates’ hands, and carried on with life, using the frame that I had acquired in those few months I was there. Blissful times those. While I had to stop wearing niqab (story for another day), the rest I diligently maintained. No big deal, until I joined the workforce. And had to constantly tell my colleagues and clients that I did not wish to shake hands. I could understand the embarrassment that accompanied it. And would always try to comfort them, citing a longstanding rule, that applied to everyone. But I learnt from this, and desiring a bit more control in such interactions, would warn each new person beforehand, either through email, or through whomever was introducing us, to respect this boundary.Β 

It almost sounds petty. And you know what? I kind of get why you would think so. You see, I come from a culture that values tradition, and in many cases puts its merits, before religion. Personal boundaries are completely disregarded, and I have met several distant relatives who’d brush this all aside and hug and kiss me, as they wished. My attempts to enforce this rule met with much opposition and derision. But I hardly ever meet these people, you see, so I can deal with this circumstance once in a while. And its accompanying hypocritical sentiments. It kills me, this evident discriminatory treatment I have seemingly adopted, it does. Some of my work involves meeting with communities and constituents who live unimaginably difficult lives. It’s painful to decline someone’s hand, in these set of circumstances. Extremely so.

My day to day work however occupies a huge chunk of my life. And I must be comfortable, and at peace, if I’m to be productive. I recall one of my bosses telling me to lose this habit, if I wanted to progress. Lose myself you mean? It’s not that easy you know. I used to be bothered when people gave such unsolicited opinions, and went through unnecessary turmoil in refuting ignorant statements when I was younger, now I laugh about it. I shake old men’s hands. I shake children’s hands. Some Muslim women don’t find all this to be terribly important. It confuses people. It does, Wilbur, doesn’t it? What’s even more confusing though is that you noticed it, and would want all of us to act in the same manner. For you. And your comfort. Would you also like to pay my bills then, since you’re so invested in my life? No?

It singularly has to be one of the most negative first impressions one could make in this modern world. I’ve had several people completely decline to engage further with me. Muslims, even the most devout you’d think, have criticized me for it. But I cannot stomach the alternative. The alternative is immense sadness and extreme guilt from choosing to obey the creation over the Creator. How could I ever pick man, over God? How could I ever think I’d be successful by choosing to be dutiful to fickle, malcontent subjects, who have no real power over my life, before the Most High, who routinely fulfills the deepest of my desires. And how could I ever derive peace from such a decision?

My Lord has directed me not to do it, that is why I do not shake hands with strange men in my life. It’s not a recourse that interferes not with the central tenets of my religion, nor is it a discriminatory symbol of my faith that I could simply do away with (I’m looking at you ECJ), it’s my raison d’etre. It’s my sanity. There are many reasons behind it of course. This blog is not about those reasons, and the philosophy behind it all. It’s enough for me that my Provider is displeased to see me interacting in this manner, and that He would wish that I refrained from it. This far He’s brought me, this greatly He’s honoured me. This far He’s guided me, through much ferment, and brought immense happiness into my life, when I have least expected it. When I have least deserved it. And remains my lodestone in this tumultuous, chaotic world. Quite simply, He, and everything about Him, is the reason why I’m still alive today. That is your competition.

To live and let live, it sounds almost too simplistic. I don’t intend to interfere in your life, I won’t encroach into what brings you comfort. Why is it so hard to extend the same to me? Does it offend you? Your entire life does offend me if I’m honest with you. But I don’t care enough really to address it, I’ve got stuff to do. And as long as it does not harm me, I will never raise it to you. You’re entitled to my respect and dignity, as a human soul, however offensive your life. So why is it so inconvenient for you to extend the same favour? And why only you, and people like you? And who said you get to dictate how to interact with me?

It’s not trifling. And it’s not personal. I hate to see you embarrassed, it’s the last thing I want, believe me. I certainly don’t think I’m better than you. You write great books, I admire that. But this is way above you, and your offended sensibilities. The next time you meet a Muslim woman, try and behave like a reasonable human being, and errm, respect her views and personal boundaries? However offensive. Please?