Archive for February, 2012

Glad my grandmother was wrong…sort of

February 12, 2012

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When I told my father’s mother that I was going to get a PhD, she asked me to reconsider, pleading with me that no man would want to marry a woman smarter than himself. I politely told her not to worry and knew deep down that whether she was right or wrong, I still wanted to pursue my degree. I figured, “Well, I don’t want to marry a guy who can’t accept me the way I am.”

It looks like neither of us was entirely wrong. An Op-Ed piece in the NYTimes just reported on a study that looked at the changing attitudes of men when looking for a spouse. Back in her time, her advice was right. Men preferred to “marry down.”

The research findings also showed that current attitudes are consistent with my own (sample-size-of-one) personal experiences both when it came to my chances of marrying and marital satisfaction. In other words, I did find a guy who would marry me and I am happily married!

What I didn’t like about the article was the illustration that accompanied the article.

I get that what the images are supposed to portray the two extreme choices. But in its summarizing manner, it leaves us with a false dichotomy: one or the other. When I look at the images, I think, I am sort of both. I like to knit and bake but I also read.

Women today have lots of choices. Thankfully, we don’t have to settle for dichotomous choices; we have multiple options.

When I look at my daughters, attitudes and choices are likely to be even more diverse for them. I am not sure how. But I hope that I will remember not to give advice that apply to my situation but may be irrelevant to theirs.

Research aside, individual choices are probably best not made in the past or heavily influenced by family, peers, etc. but within the current unique context.

Lonely Parent

February 6, 2012

The other day I was talking to someone about travel guidebooks. Instead of saying the words “Lonely Planet,” I said “lonely parent.“ My friend didn’t make much of my slip, but it has remained stuck in my head ever since.

Parenting can indeed feel very lonely at times. If you Google “lonely parent,” you’ll find numerous Web pages regarding single parents. Certainly not having a partner or spouse can be very isolating, but it isn’t the only way parents can feel lonely. A once-popular woman first among her friends to become a mom can feel it. An employed father surrounded by stay-at-home moms at a school function can feel alone. Parents whose children are in some way different from others can often feel isolated in a world that seems set up for “typical” children. And, I would imagine, even the pretty, talented celebrity mom in the magazines must feel lonely, especially when accosted by admiring (or envious) fans who think they know her based on the character she portrays.

Despite having friends, a spouse, and my family, and even though I very much appreciate my moments of solitude, there are definitely times when I feel quite isolated and alone.

Thankfully, as with other lessons I have learned from my clients, I have received an important one about loneliness from them…

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