What Cinnamon and Tatjana’s stories both show is that your choice of profession isn’t dependent on typical gender roles, but on your enthusiasm for the job. Ultimately it was their true passions that led them both to their current roles. The usual clichés about women in manual trades haven’t passed them by. Both Cinn and Tatjana have felt a sense of having to “prove” themselves in order to be fully accepted as women in the industry, both in their training and in the workplace. In fact, long-held ways of thinking can be very persistent, especially in male domains such as manual trades.
However, when you look at the profession and its requirements, there’s no real reason why the number of female specialists in the welding sector should be so low. Among the attributes required for welding are patience and dexterity. According to a study by the University of Munich, the latter in particular is an area in which women perform even better than their male counterparts. The results of the study showed that women’s fine motor skills were about 10 percent higher than those of men, and around 6 percent higher when you look specifically at the fingers.
Cases like those of Cinnamon and Tatjana are proof that gender stereotypes cannot be magically eliminated overnight, but that there has definitely been a shift in thinking, and preconceptions no longer need to be an obstacle to pursuing a profession you feel passionately about.