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By Caroline Allen
Being a woman can be pretty cool.
Women live longer, we have the ability to grow an actual human being and we don’t have to wear boiling hot three-piece suits to formal events.
There’s also a bang-your-head-against-a-brick-wall side to being a woman. From fighting for equal pay to being penalised at work for giving birth to the aforementioned human miracle.
Sometimes, it’s the everyday little things that can weigh us down, though, as this new research from polling company, Ginger Research, discovered.
The poll surveyed 2000 millennial women to find out which daily annoyances wound us up the most.
Be prepared to eye roll really hard…
- Being sent explicit pictures, when you didn’t ask for them
- Being charged VAT for sanitary products
- The notion that women are bad drivers
- Being asked if it’s your time of the month
- Not being paid as much as male colleagues
- Being approached by someone in a bar just because you are alone
- Being chatted up on LinkedIn direct message
- Being told to cheer up as “it might never happen”
- Being told to calm down
- When someone talks to your breasts rather than your face
- Airbrushed images of women
- Being wolf-whistled at
- Being told your biological clock is ticking
- Being asked if you plan to get pregnant
- Tradesmen insisting on talking to your partner rather than you
- Being asked why you do not have children yet
- Having your right to choose debated by male politicians
- Being mansplained to
- Being called “love”
- Being ghosted by someone you have been dating
- People assuming you’re not the main breadwinner
- Being bought household appliances for your birthday
- Being asked if your breasts are real
- The view that you should not have long hair over 50
- Being told you have childbearing hips
- Being described as a housewife
- Being told you look good for your age
- Being left with the wives of your partner’s friends at dinner
- Waiters assuming the healthy meal or salad is for you
- Anti-aging adverts
- When the bar person assumes you want a half pint, not a pint
- The waiter assuming your male companion is picking up the bill
- Being chatted up in the gym mid workout
- The assumption that you’ll change your name after getting married
- The assumption that you look after the family calendar
*Culled from Yahoo Style UK

