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The gen X take on the failings of feminism
The Age ^ | 11/22/04 | Dina Ross

Posted on 11/22/2004 8:07:47 AM PST by qam1

One of feminism's saddest relics is the guilt many women feel at not being "perfect",

Joanna Murray-Smith raises important issues in her article entitled "Feminism's booby trap" (on this page on Friday). They are not new - every working mother has, at some point, questioned her rationale for balancing home and career - but worth re-iterating nonetheless. I would go further, though. When Murray-Smith discusses feminism's failure to negotiate satisfactory answers, she is also, unconsciously, uncovering a greater generational divide.

Those of us generation Xers just in or approaching our 40s, have come of age seduced by the baby boomer dream that we can "have it all". We were brought up on diets of Cosmopolitan and Shirley Conran, gullibly digesting ideals of Superwomanhood. On the menu: the ultimate feminist, who not only headed up a multinational organisation, but blissfully juggled three children and her relationship, as well whipping up a high-rise souffle in her spare time.

IS it any wonder we feel cheated and deluded when these expectations seldom match up to reality?

One of the saddest relics of feminism, it seems to me, is the guilt that so many women feel at not being "perfect". We set ourselves such lofty goals, such unreasonable targets so much of the time, that when we are unable to match up to them our instinctive reaction is for self-blame, sticking pins in ourselves for failing society and failing ourselves.

Feminism's cruel fall-out has polarised mothers who do not work and those who do. The stay-at-home versus work debate has become a minefield of prejudice and antagonism, frequently and unfortunately fuelled by women themselves. Such arguments not only fan the fire of guilt in both camps, they do nothing to ease the dilemma.

It's time to come out shouting that the baby boomers got it wrong. There is no such thing as instant gratification. For every working mother who complains of being time poor, consumed with guilt at putting her six-month-old into daycare, I can show you a stay-at-home mother who longs for a part-time job, emotionally stifled by an endless round of breast-feeding and nappies.

It's a fact of life that we can never have it all, so we'd better get used to it. We are human, fallible. Whatever our choices as mothers, there will be sacrifices. This is the legacy baby boomers never predicted, and one we are just beginning to come to terms with.

It's time, finally, to throw guilt and self-doubt out of the window, along with many 1970s notions of feminism.

Today's feminist needs EQ - emotional quotients - as well as IQ. That means acknowledging that Superwoman is a myth and, like all myths, it should be debunked. It also means becoming less self-judgemental, and accepting ourselves for who we are.

All mothers are battlers. Let's, for once, give ourselves a well-deserved pat on the back. We are brave and formidable.

If generation X women are struggling to come to terms with the impossibility of being Shirley Conran, then it will be interesting to see how generation Y - those born between 1980 and 2000 who are yet to become parents - cope.

Sociologists and statisticians indicate that generation Y demonstrate keen awareness of social and global issues, that they are free spirits who are motivated as much by ideology as ambition.

By all accounts, gen Ys accept the notion of a balanced life as a God-given right. Perhaps they will also give birth to a new dimension to parenting and eschew the agonies that have plagued their long-suffering mothers


TOPICS: Australia/New Zealand; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: feminism; genx
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To: eyespysomething
What a load of crap we were fed growing up, you can work, you can be a mom, and you'll still have time to party the night away.

Look, I don't know about you, but it was always obvious to me that the whole idea was total crap. Did you SEE anyone having it all? I never did.

21 posted on 11/22/2004 9:23:35 AM PST by Dianna
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To: Tamar1973
My experience is that most men (not all, but most) will commit hari-kari over a hangnail.

I have often had the same ailment or injury the men in my life have had. I got on with life, went to work, took a few Tylenol and dealt with it.

They, to a man, took to the sofa, wrote their last will and testament and answered the phone with "I am DYIN' HERE! DYIN" I tell ya!". Then launching into excruciating detail about their last bowel movement and the possibility of having anthrax.
22 posted on 11/22/2004 9:26:03 AM PST by najida (Charming Andrew Dan-Jumbo can build me a cabinet any old day!)
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To: najida

I think it is kind of pathetic that their idea of "perfect"
is someone who gets everything she wants. Perfect is someone who gives without regard for themselves. It is
someone who can love their neighbor as themselves. I'm encourage that the people on this board can see the
truth about motherhood. It is a full time job and a
very rewarding one.


23 posted on 11/22/2004 9:32:31 AM PST by Cowgirl
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To: anniegetyourgun
might explain why the suicide rate is higher for men than for women.

My understanding is that the suicide attempt rate is higher for women than men, men are simply more "successful" at it, if I can use such a phrase.

24 posted on 11/22/2004 9:41:41 AM PST by Tamar1973 (Liberalism is a philosophy of sniveling brats-- PJ O'Rourke)
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To: Ohioan

Ping!

When is your debate handbook coming out in hardcopy format? E-mail me with info when it's available!

regards,


25 posted on 11/22/2004 9:42:53 AM PST by t_skoz ("let me be who I am - let me kick out the jams!")
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To: bobjam

I got married to a widower with two kids. They had first been traumatized by the divorce of he and his first wife, and then by the death by auto accident of the first wife and their eldest sister (everybody but hubby was in the same car).

I decided right away that I had to be a SAHM...and it has been the right decision.

It does mean we don't get to do the Cancun getaway vacations. Or buy cars as often as some of his co-workers.

Our culture has so convinced us that various things are not luxuries, but necessities that we have been willing as a culture to sacrifice our children so we can have our goodies.

My kids may not have every CD or the designer name clothes they want. But the one left at home got to get rigged out for LaCrosse because this is what he wanted to do, and has good performance shoes for skateboarding and Lacrosse. So he wears walmart jeans so we can afford the important stuff? So he doesn't have his own cell phone?

He also doesn't have cable tv (cause I found out what they were watching behind my back), or some other toys. This is life.

I had a career as an English instructor at the community college level but gave it up for more important things (first to take care of my mother her last three years of life, and then to take care of my husband and step children).

Instant gratification and self-fulfilment at the expense of everybody and anybody were values the 20th century deemed most important and we see where it has led us.

Choose wisely people. The world you create around you is one you bequeath to your children.


26 posted on 11/22/2004 9:47:23 AM PST by Knitting A Conundrum (Act Justly, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly With God Micah 6:8)
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To: Tamar1973

You may be right....proving the earlier point further....


27 posted on 11/22/2004 9:47:53 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: SuziQ

Actually, you know I have been an odd person in looking forward to being with my daughter when she is older. Not to be her friend, but to show her then all the amazing stuff I have learned in my life. One can't wax mooney about Lord of the Rings with a five year old. I didnt look at my daughter as a chore when she was a baby, but I was impatient to get beyond the babyhood to find out what a mind my daughter has...and boy is it sharp now!! :D


28 posted on 11/22/2004 9:48:22 AM PST by Alkhin ("Oh! Oh!" cried my idiot crew. "It's a woman! We are doomed!" - - Jack Aubrey, M&C series)
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To: SuziQ
What happened to doing things in their time? Go to college and get a degree in something you think you'd like to do. Work a few years, get married, work a little more, have some kids and stay home and be a mother to them, enjoying their short time as little ones.

What's your answer for women who go through college on loans and have to work for a period of years to pay them off? It's not as easy a decision as some would like to paint it.

The bigger problem is that the entire education-career track is structured more for men than for women. Perhaps what makes more sense is 1) for women to start schooling earlier and 2) to think about advanced schooling after they've had children, not before.

29 posted on 11/22/2004 9:50:07 AM PST by independentmind
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To: Izzy Dunne

It's not black and white, everybody is different.


30 posted on 11/22/2004 9:50:23 AM PST by Hildy (The really great men are always simple and true)
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To: anniegetyourgun

They're too busy worrying about the size of their penis.


31 posted on 11/22/2004 9:52:51 AM PST by Richard Kimball (Four more years)
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To: Richard Kimball

That certainly would explain quite a number of life's big questions.....


32 posted on 11/22/2004 9:57:58 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: eyespysomething

My 20 year old asked me once when she was 12 if I thought I was "wasting my life" by staying home and "just" taking care of 5 kids. I sat her down and told her that I made a choice and enjoyed what I did. Then I told her all the things she wouldn't have if I worked, like a mom who was home when she came home from school, a home to have her friends come to, dinner together at 6 pm, fresh baked desserts, a lovely garden to play in, etc...

She is now hoping to marry the man of her dreams and (horrors!) wants to stay home and raise their children!

I'll take that as a compliment.


33 posted on 11/22/2004 9:59:15 AM PST by It's me
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To: Knitting A Conundrum

And then when they are 22 they tell you that they are glad you did what you did for them. I had my 22 year old son tell me the other day, again, thanks for not spoiling them when they were growing up.

It seems as if the kids who got everything handed to them find it harder to survive out there in the big, bad, real world.


34 posted on 11/22/2004 10:04:43 AM PST by It's me
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To: Alkhin

Oh my gosh!! It's so fun to have them older and have intelligent conversations!

THis election cycle was a fantastic example. We had great dinner conversations about kids at school and their views. It turns out that the kids at the local public high school are, according to a poll taken by the school newspaper, more pro Bush than Kerry. It was just that the Kerry people were more vocal. What an eye opener for the highschoolers in the fam.

I love this age!!! (14 - 22)


35 posted on 11/22/2004 10:08:41 AM PST by It's me
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To: qam1

Tough issue - my wife and I are grappling with the stay at home issue now.

We both rely on two incomes in order to make ends meet. She recently started working evenings, and stays at home with our two kids during the day. I work days, and care for the kids in the evening. We've eliminated the large day-care expense, but now we see each other 'in-passing' five out of seven days a week. It's not been the easiest transition, but we're adapting.

Ideally, she would like to stay at home full time, but my salary does not warrant that luxury. If my salary was doubled, well...there would be no issue here. I'm hopeful that the future will bring some upswing to the current job market.


36 posted on 11/22/2004 10:11:12 AM PST by dave k
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To: Dianna

"Look, I don't know about you, but it was always obvious to me that the whole idea was total crap. Did you SEE anyone having it all? I never did."

Obviously "Dian(n)as" think alike, LOL!

I totally agree. I'm GRATEFUL to my Mom for tending to us when we were girls. Of course, she hit the road when we were done with High School, but, she did her time and since we were both self-sufficient, she was entitled to do whatever she wanted with the rest of her days.

I put family life on hold for my military career until I was in my mid-30's, then married a man who had one son and didn't want any more kids. I then got to do all the fun "Soccer Mom" stuff, and raised two of my nephews during that time as well. Our son is now a Senior, and we're still young enough (mid-40's) to pursue our next careers, or whatever we want to do, be it travel, lay on the couch all day or dig in the garden.

You can have all sorts of "lives" inside of one lifetime. Women of my generation were totally conned by the NOW and NAG hags, if they bought into this BS. Hopefully the younger generation can learn from that mistake and lead a fuller, slower-paced life of their OWN design.


37 posted on 11/22/2004 10:13:34 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: HamiltonJay
Truth is most women who leave the work place would not go back to save their lives after they get past the initial phase

I worked for 15 years and have not worked for the past 10 years. I can tell you there is no comparison. I loved being able to take my children to and from school, help in their classrooms, make sack lunches and cook dinner. I have great kids and a wonderful husband.

I had an awesome career and a job most would envy but it all pales in comparison to my my years as a stay at home mom and housewife. My youngest is now a senior in high school but I will not ever go back to work. I would rather be poor.

38 posted on 11/22/2004 11:08:46 AM PST by Zevonismymuse
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To: anniegetyourgun
How come you never hear about guys fretting over the superman myth?

Don't be silly. The ladies couldn't get men to listen to this kind of talk. ;)

39 posted on 11/22/2004 11:14:44 AM PST by <1/1,000,000th% (Bush wins!!!)
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To: qam1

a rat is a dog is a pig is a feminist (with profound apologies to rats, dogs and pigs)...


40 posted on 11/22/2004 11:23:01 AM PST by martin gibson
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