Hi,
@Tatiana Jennys,
Congrats on getting your Private!
I'm not an airline pilot, but I have been in a male-dominated field (physics) for pretty much my adult life. As with any pursuit that requires training, and time, and dedication, aviation is not without its hassles and challenges, and some of them are things that your male peers will not share... But the short answer is YES this dream is well within reach.
Women make up about 7% of certificated pilots, only 4% of commercial pilots. What that means is that you'll be noticed, watched, scrutinized more than your peers; not because of ill intent, just because you are different and people are curious. It can take some practice to get used to. It also means that in a typical get-together dinner-table made up of pilots -- say the table seats 8 or 10 -- you'll be the only woman at the table most of the time. Whether this makes you uncomfortable is a matter of personality, but I have found that this also gets easier with time and practice and confidence.
For the most part, I love aviation culture. As you've likely already found from getting your Private, it's it own kind of cool "nerd" culture, where folks are willing to spend hours arguing the finest of technical minutiae for the sheer joy of the argument, something I enjoy too. It's also very much a help-each-other fraternity (and I mean that in the gender-neutral sense), where folks will go out of their way for a total stranger because of the bond of the passion we share. I've traveled around the country a lot by plane, and have stayed in a lot of guest rooms of complete strangers. Have a breakdown at an unfamiliar airport, and this community will rally to find you a mechanic on a weekend. But aviation culture also has its bad apples and hostile outliers, as does any male-dominated field where the people in it have grown too accustomed to saying whatever they like and going unchallenged -- sometimes too much a "fraternity", in the not-so-good sense, crass and insensitive. There are many techniques for dealing with it; we women are all different, and our experiences are all different, and we all have to find our own ways of navigating the world and gaining control of our chosen environment. If you stick with it, you'll earn the respect of whose whose respect you want, and ignore the ones you don't.
Seek out other women pilots! There's the 99's, Women In Aviation, Facebook groups... You're not betraying some kind of "equality dream" by doing so; there's something wonderful about the kind of tribal camaraderie that comes with being naturally accepted in a room full of people who understand you, and you deserve that experience from time to time as much as the next pilot.
That being said, also find your aviation role models wherever you can, in whatever gender, color, size, or shape they may come. For instance, you specifically asked to hear from women airline pilots on this thread, and in typical PoA fashion, a bunch of men jumped in to cheer you on -- and then me, even though I'm not in the airlines. This is pretty typical (the "help-each-other-fraternity", despite what you actually asked for), so take this as a strike in favor rather than a strike against. It's only a matter of time before someone says something well-meaning-but-insensitive on this thread, but don't hold it against them too much; they're learning.
. Meanwhile, allies are all around; find them, and fly!
If ya like, tell us a little about yourself!
All the best,
--Kath