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I Am Woman Lyrics

I am woman, hear me roar
In numbers too big to ignore
And I know too much
To go back an' pretend
'Cause I've heard it all before
And I've been down there on the floor
No one's ever gonna
Keep me down again

Oh yes I am wise
But it's wisdom born of pain
Yes, I've paid the price
But look how much I gained
If I have to, I can do anything
I am strong
I am invincible
I am woman

You can bend but never break me
'Cause it only serves to make me
More determined
To achieve my final goal
And I come back even stronger
Not a novice any longer
'Cause you've deepened
The conviction in my soul

Oh yes I am wise
But it's wisdom born of pain
Yes, I've paid the price
But look how much I gained
If I have to, I can do anything
I am strong
I am invincible
I am woman

I am woman watch me grow
See me standing toe to toe
As I spread my lovin' arms
Across the land
But I'm still an embryo
With a long long way to go
Until I make my
Brother understand

Oh yes I am wise
But it's wisdom born of pain
Yes, I've paid the price
But look how much I gained
If I have to
I can face anything
I am strong
I am invincible
I am woman
Oh, I am woman
I am invincible
I am strong
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Cover art for I Am Woman lyrics by Helen Reddy

1970s girl power all the way , I love this song helen sings so nice . I think the spice girls moms must have jammed this on the hi-fi and 20 yrs. later the result was um well you know .

The result was latch key kids (they really did wear the keys around their necks in the 70's). Lots of downers from the feminist movement, but there were many positives as well. It's always a good thing when a man can't beat his wife and get away with it; when he no longer can rape her under the law; and when a woman can get credit to own property and escape abusive marriages, etc.

Cover art for I Am Woman lyrics by Helen Reddy

I can just imagine a generation of girls, burning their bras, listenng to this song.

You obviously didn't live through that time. Bra burning was not exactly great....women walking around w/o bras and breast feeding in public were not necessarily great visuals, much like the time when thongs were popular and 400lb pound women decided they, too, liked the look!

Cover art for I Am Woman lyrics by Helen Reddy

I have loved this song since my days (and marching) with the feminist movement that is sadly no longer recognizable as the voice of choice (not just sexual) and equality (not preferential treatment). It truly was the anthem of the early 70's when I was blessed with my best friend's mother 'Nancy' who sat around drinking Fresca when she was not homemaking, and who shared her Ms. Magazine and political and personal war stories with me. Love the song! Love Helen Reddy. “I am woman. I am invincible” and I have family arriving today for the holiday which caused me to turn down two dates (with one person) set up by my good friend “T,” who’s always trying to find men for me. Merry Christmas to all you grinches and scrooges, but do notice the last two user names.

Cover art for I Am Woman lyrics by Helen Reddy

This is Helen's song, not Barbra's or Jordan's or any woman who follows. Helen made it an anthem of the 70's at a time when one was needed. Over 50% of women living in poverty (often with children) were displaced homemakers. It wasn't until 1972 that a woman could get credit on her own. We may have gone to the extreme in the form of not appreciating the lives of innocent growing children and some may have sacrificed older children for extreme careers, but the movement WAS needed at the time. And today I celebrate this sense of freedom and accomplishment after having just installed my VERY FIRST new toilet seat! It sounds like nothin' (don't hate....appreciate), but when it's a first it's always special and important. (But now I do know that y'all men need to be assigned more work; you've been skatin'!!!) LOL. (...always a bad sign when one laughs at herself:) Helen's song ROCKS!

Cover art for I Am Woman lyrics by Helen Reddy

Great song by Helen that gave women a voice at a time when they didn't have much of one. It said basically that girls and women deserve respect and the right to live life on their own terms and making their own choices. No more no less. I was just a kid but it was a powerful song that I still love. And she got so much s**t for singing this song.

Cover art for I Am Woman lyrics by Helen Reddy

I can't help but wonder if the women's movement of the 1970's, which is typified in Helen Reddy's "I Am Woman", resulted in a better world for women. Many women at that time thought that child-rearing, housework and taking care of their husbands was mundane and that men were 'keeping them down' at home. This movement led to a proliferation of dual income families that we still have now. In fact, I recently heard a statistic that there are now more women in the workforce than men. Are women happy about this? Do they like competing in the modern workplace - replete with mundane tasks at work, travel, projects, layoffs, small pay raises (if you're lucky), taxes, the daily commute, office politics, etc. As a recently minted stay-at-home Dad who has 'retired' from 20 years in the workforce, I can tell you that at least for me, being home is much better than being at work. Do the women of the 1970's, so desperate to escape their at-home lives, still prefer working over child-rearing, housework and taking care of their husbands?

I don't think they were so much escaping the home, as wanting to have a choice, a say in their own lives. To have a career in their early 20's and marry/have children when they were in their 30's. My mom married at 18 - my great grandmother married at 15 (and lived to be 85-luckily she married a "good" man).

Neither do I believe that they were man-haters who were against marriage and children.

I didn't realize till I started researching that women in the 1800's couldn't own property and that abuse wasn't a crime but considered a...

AMEN. Love this song. Always have. I recall when it first hit the airwaves. It was OUR song...the white woman's anthem. Minority women didn't have the choice to stay home due to finances, which is why they were (as a whole) absent from the feminist movement. There was also a reason for the movement which you didn't touch on...the number of 'displaced homemakers" was growing...divorce was now becoming acceptable and the number of women (with no work history or fiscal credit) were left to raise children while living under the poverty level. Many men (today it's both men and women)...

Good for you! I wouldn't trade the decade I spent fulltime with my children. For approx 3 years I actually felt guilty for staying home and not bringing home a paycheck. It wasn't until my spouse looked at me and told me to stop it; he assured me I was the only one who felt I needed to earn a check as he viewed me as a huge contributor to the family (and its needs). My years in the feminist movement had conditioned me to value working outside of the home over what was best for my children...the next generation...

 
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