Interview with Sofía Díaz

After taking time to think carefully and prepare the presentation for the assessment, I realized I still needed more feedback from external advisors. So, I took on the task of reaching out to even more people.

I have a spreadsheet where I have a track of anyone who I have ever contacted. Here’s the link.


The idea I have so far is to create a board game as a tool to spark conversations about behaviors we’ve made invisible. This was my major insight: How do we identify what we don’t know? How do we imagine something that doesn’t exist in front of us? Very complicated, right?

So, I already have a list of people whose opinions I want to hear. I’ve sent out many emails, and I’ve had a conversation with Sofía Díaz.

She is a great university friendwho has dedicated her professional career to working on gender-related issues, specially from the sustainability focus. I reached out to her because I’ve always respected her opinion, and I know she has experience working with communities in Colombia, always with a gender focus. Right now she’s working with a charity that do workshops on gender and sustainability in rural areas of Colombia.

During our conversation, I shared my creative process, and I think what stood out most to her was the perspective on the design of objects as a reproduction of the oppressive system. I tried steering the conversation back to gender norms, but she kept circling back, genuinely surprised by something she had never considered before.

Here are some key points from her comments, which also reflect much of what I think about my project:

  • Objects evolve with the populations, and we all interact with them in different ways.
  • There’s a clear difficulty in inventing something new, but above all, what are objects really?
  • How masculinized are our thoughts?
  • The feminine struggle lies in the fact that we’ve never truly known what our bodies need. It’s hard to recognize those needs and fight for them because we were never taught.
  • She asked me, What happens after the game? The encounter alone is already positive, but how can we turn this into something bigger?
  • What do we do with so much frustration?
  • What can we do together? The sense of togetherness makes us feel like we can handle anything. We need to awaken that emotion. En manada
  • What we can’t see, we can’t change, but we’ve never liked inhabiting rage and frustration.
  • Going out into the streets with a group of women responds to impact and change—transforming the gaze.
  • But definitely, I would make the target group even smaller because each population has a different relationship with objects.
  • Thinking about carrying a little red flag all our lives—this is the fight to recognize what we deserve.
  • There’s no dialogue with our bodies, and we are afraid to talk about what we feel and what happens to them.

At the end she was very happy to be part of the conversaion but was not sure on how much she could add to what I’ve done.

I have a feeling that most of the times when I reach out to experts it becomes a little bit like a tutorial and it’s hard for me to cut that habit.

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