Breaking Glass Ceiling ©Dawn Minott |Happy International Women’s Day [March 8]

Beforeword: The “glass ceiling”, was coined by Management consultant Marilyn Loden in 1978. It symbolizes the invisible barriers that hinder women and marginalized groups from advancing in their careers. 

The thing about “glass ceiling” when smashed
is that the shards don’t vanish—
they fall
Sharp, jagged, relentless,
raining down like a warning,
like a punishment for daring to rise

Falling glass cuts deep—
Patriarchy, splintered but still clawing
Violence, turning freedom into something fragile
Laws, binding instead of breaking chains
Norms, polished smooth but when harmful they wound
Root causes slicing through progress
turning triumphs into scars
Rights into relics
Hard won gains into loss
Reproductive rights overturned—
choices stripped, voices silenced,
autonomy reduced to a battlefield
where laws are weapons,
and women’s bodies contested spaces

But how does the ceiling hold?
It’s not chains you can see,
not walls you can touch—
It’s an unspoken limit, the silent “no
It’s underrepresentation dressed as “not the right fit
It’s the weight of pay gaps
The care work not paid
The lock on leadership doors
The promotions that never come
no matter how qualified or how high women climb

They say, “You’ve come so far
But they don’t mention the cracks beneath our feet
The unequal shifting ground
The backlash waiting at every turn
Every step forward risks another wound, another push back, another war to fight—again

The thing about glass—
It was never meant to be a cage
Meant for clarity, yet it distorts,
letting light in but keeping power out

The thing about ceiling—
It was never meant to hold in
Meant to shelter, yet it confines,
holding dreams beneath its weight

So, like Maya Angelou, women—we rise!
Not just breaking, but building
Not just shattering, but shaping
Hands wrapped in armor, feet steady on the dust
Helmets on, hearts fierce, forging new foundations
Until the sky stretches wide,
and the only thing above us—
is rights, equality, justice

About Women’s History Month:

In the USA, President Jimmy Carter issued the first Presidential Proclamation declaring the Week of March 8th 1980 as National Women’s History Week. March was later designated as “Women’s History Month” in 1987.

About International Women’s Day (March 8th)

IWD is a worldwide day of activism, celebrating achievements while continuing the fight for women’s rights.

IWD began in the early 1900s as a movement for women’s labor rights, better working conditions, and suffrage. But the first milestone in US was much earlier – in 1848. Indignant over women being barred from speaking at an anti-slavery convention, Americans Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott started the US first women’s rights convention in New York. Inspired by protests in New York, socialist activist Clara Zetkin proposed an annual Women’s Day in 1910, leading to the first official IWD on March 19, 1911, in several European countries. The 8 March date was chosen after Russian women demanded “bread and peace” during a war-time strike in 1917. 

The United Nations recognized IWD in 1975, expanding its focus to broader gender equality issues. This year the UN theme is “Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL Women and Girls”

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In creative solidarity, Dee

We Are Golden ©Dawn Minott | closing Women’s History Month 2025

We are whole—
Strong. Unshaken.
Shaped by history’s hands, fired in the kiln of time.
But when the weight of patriarchy pressed too hard—
Cracks appeared.

What does the world do with women it tries to break?
It tries to—

Dismiss them.
Silence them.
Bury them.

They say once something fractures,
it can never be the same again.
That the scars will always tell a story
of loss, of defeat,
of what can never be reclaimed.

But they are wrong.

Because struggle is not the end.
The fight is part of the becoming.

Kintsugi—golden repair—
Not to erase the cracks,
Not to hide our place in HIS-story,
but to illuminate our legacy—
our resistance, our resilience, our power.
To honor our voices.
To make them art.

So let us treat our pain that way.
Let every crack of injustice,
every fracture of oppression,
every attempt to silence us
be transformed—not hidden, but held.

What if…
our wounds weren’t wounds at all,
but spaces waiting to be filled with something precious?

What if…
our struggle wasn’t our ruin,
but our revolution?

What if we take this pain,
these centuries of resistance,
this history soaked in defiance,
and forge something new?

What if like seeds, we grow
Piercing through, defying the -isms of oppression

What if we melt down discrimination into gold,
pour it into the cracks,
and let it bind us together—
not in spite of our struggle, but because of it?

We do not bow.
We do not break.
We rise.

We are not just survivors.
We are warriors.
We are visionaries.
We are unstoppable.

Let the world see us.
Let the world know—

We are golden.

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In creative solidarity, Dee

Becoming ©Dawn Minott |Women’s History Month

To the woman that you were—
I see you.
Standing in storms that tried to break you,
yet you bent like the willow,
never snapping, never folding.
You held your ground,
turned pain into power,
turned silence into voice,
turned fear into fuel.
I admire your resilience,
your unshaken resolve,
your quiet strength when the world tried to tell you to hush.

To the woman you are—
Your journey is not complete.
But oh, how far you’ve come!
You walk now with wisdom earned in fire,
scars that no longer bleed but blaze—
reminders that you lived, that you learned,
that you are still here.
You hold space for growth and grace,
shed doubt like autumn leaves,
rooted deep in lessons you once feared.
You are the bridge between who you were
and the promise of who you will be.

To the woman you’re becoming—
You are a whisper of dreams realized,
a vision not yet fully seen,
but I know you’re there, waiting.
A phoenix rising, a story still unfolding,
a force stepping boldly into her becoming.
You carry all that was,
but you are free to be.
No chains, no fear, no limits—
only the boundless sky ahead.

2025 All Rights Reserved
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In creative solidarity, Dee

Commemorating 16 Days of Activism: A World Without Fear ©Dawn Minott

Women’s Bodies, Contested Spaces

In a world we all know too well
Women’s bodies bear violence—scarred
A contested space, a battleground
Where autonomy is a forlorn wish
Where choice, stripped away and silenced, becomes
A ghost of it’s once true self
Where home is where the harm is
How can love unfurl its wings?
How can dreams find light when darkness lingers
Where safety should sing?

For one in three women—intimacy’s touch turns violent
Every 10 minutes—for one woman—intimacy’s touch turns turbulent
As love’s promise becomes the cold hand of death
With no right to say no, no right to say yes—
When to bear life or when to hold it close
Their own bodies betrayed by laws and customs, imposed
Written by hands that will never know
The weight of their words, death sentence proposed

Rape—A Weapon of War

In conflicts that rage beyond borders
Male invasion, rape—a weapon of war—a tool, a tactic
Conquering women’s flesh like spoils
While in the hollow halls of the United Nations
Resolutions inked by men with pens, spill
Like blood, staining sheets
Emptying hearts of life’s own source
Yet, still, governments choose steel and flame
Investing in war machines, no peace to gain
Conflicts on women’s bodies play out, the ultimate price paid

Uprooted!

Uprooted! from their soil
Women and girls drift like leaves falling from withering trees
Their homes lost to gunfire, to flood, to flame
Their world, quaking, shifting beneath their feet
Displaced by war, exiled by climate’s rage
They wander borderless, unanchored
Carrying memories of lands once called home
Searching for safety in a world, fractured
No longer their own

New Dawn, Reborn

But now, imagine a dawn
Reborn

A world rebuilt from root to sky
Where hands that hold are only gentle
Where bodies, once haunted, are fully free
Imagine a world where choice is sacred
Where every woman’s voice rings clear
Her body is her sovereign land
A place of power, of life, of joy

Imagine girls, unafraid to play
With futures bright as the skies above
And women, unbroken, now as rooted as trees
No longer the spoils of collateral damage
No longer bent beneath a burdened silence
No longer survivors, but whole
Free to choose, to create—
They thrive

A World Beyond Fear

A world beyond fear, a world that is just
Where equality stands as tall as the sequoia
And equity flows as long as the river of the Nile
Here, love needs no pen to promise, no ink to spill
Every woman, every girl
In freedom walks, unbounded—
Potential fulfilled, a force unchained in change

Afterword: This poem commemorates the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence (November 25–December 10). In it I reflect on the injustices faced by women and girls globally, from violence in their homes to the denial of autonomy. It envisions a future of safety, equality, and justice, calling for action to uphold their rights and dignity. This is my life’s work!!

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Happy International Women’s Day 2023: Equity Embraces ©Dawn Minott

IWD 2023 Theme: Embrace Equity
To my fellow women creatives—AND YOU GUYS TOO—let’s all give equity a huge embrace

Women and girls, in all their diversity
A life of equity and equality is their right fundamentally

Whether offline or in virtual spaces
NO violence! NO harassment! NO abuse—in NO places!

To have agency over their bodies and over their lives
Every year, March 8, International Women’s Day recognize

HAPPY INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY

The aim of the IWD 2023 #EmbraceEquity campaign theme is to get the world talking about Why equal opportunities aren’t enough. People start from different places, so true inclusion and belonging require equitable action.

2023 All Rights Reserved

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Celebrating Women & Girls Everywhere: International Women’s Day

On this International Woman’s Day:

Imagine a gender equal world. A world free of bias, stereotypes and discrimination. A world that’s diverse, equitable, just and inclusive. A world where difference is valued and celebrated.

Together we can forge women’s equality. Collectively we can all #BreakTheBias.

2022 ©DeeMin All rights reserved

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In creative solidarity, Dee