+1 I have recently attended retirement parties for a submarine captain and long-time school teacher, both with many decades dedicated to their jobs. There were tons of people at both parties who spoke to how much those people had shaped them and affected their lives. |
This is what women without jobs say to justify not having a job. If it helps you sleep at night, sure.... I work in the climate change sector, on the finance side - so I am directly contributing to renewable energy projects being built. My best friend is a veterinarian and literally saves the lives of pets. My other best friend is a teacher; a friend's daughter ended up in her class this year, and has literally changed the daughter's life, because she has connected so well with her teacher, which has been much needed in light of the mental health challenges this girl has recently had (brother with cancer). My best friend from college is a researcher in a biology field. All the women I'm good friends with have meaningful jobs that impact people around them. Maybe you are hanging out with the wrong people. Perhaps an echo chamber of non-working women who don't actually know any working women, and just keep repeating the lie that jobs aren't important? |
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To me the big question is - Is this guy generous in spirit? Is he fair? Does he seem to be emotionally in tune with you and how you’re doing and what you need?
Because if the answer is yes, I’m sure you can keep an open dialogue and work towards a team priority (overall family well-being, inclusive of your feelings). If the answer is no, then you should walk away unless you are VERY aligned on life vision. |
DP. I’m sorry but these are poor examples of people in jobs mattering, except for the teacher who is filling a stereotypically feminine, pseudo-maternal role in a child’s life. |
| If both of you are flexible and focus isn't on must be super ambitious or must have a traditional spouse but on how happy, comfortable and stress free married family life can be. |
You’re not sorry and you’re wrong. NP |
Run. You need a man who elevates you and wants you to succeed. He is bringing you down. You will grow to resent him. Success together is a beautiful thing. It's exciting to be ambitious and grow and built wealth. It makes for an interesting life. And you can add kids into the mix. |
If you are going to be a nihilist, then you should go all in, not just this half baked trope about jobs being meaningless. We are all temporary specs in the universe, here for a short nanosecond of time. Nothing, at all matters. |
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Traditional role is more important during years of raising babies, once they are gone to full time grade school with a good afterschool program, both parents have more time for advancing careers and making money.
Disagreements and disputes due to stress of raising kids and managing home-life with two demanding careers often leads to resentment and frustration and affairs or divorce wrecking homes. |
| If ambitious career is lucrative enough to throw money at problems, like having a big home, day and night nannies, cleaners, house manager etc then its acceptable to more people. |
If you were my daughter, I would tell you to run, and ask you why you want to start married life with someone who already wants you to make yourself smaller. Everything else may be golden, but this - his desire to see you reign in your work life - is enough to tarnish whatever else you feel is golden. Every minute you spend with this guy, he is filling a space in your life that could be filled by someone who will love you as a full, ambitious human equal. |
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Forum is filled with women who married their husbands not knowing them or hoping to be able to change them, don't go with that strategy. Get to know the person and marry only if you can accept them as they are or turn 10% worse with ups and downs of life.
If you can't, stay single or keep looking. |
Not a given. You may end up single or settle for someone worse but fear shouldn't drive your decisions. |
Elevates her? How is climbing the corp ladder elevating her? Does it make her a better person? Does it make her superior within society? Does it improve her health? And before you respond I asked "does it" not "can it". |
| How do people make family life work with two demanding yet not lucrative careers? Who gets the short end of the stick? |