Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you marry someone who doesn’t want you to succeed to your fullest?
For you to be your best self?
He’s a non confident shit move on.
That is the issue. Some people don't see climbing the corporate ladder as a measure of success. No one's tombstone reads "Larlo was the best CFO" and the odds of any one of your coworkers showing up at your funeral 25 years later is slim to none. Work is a mean's to an end not a measurement of importance or self worth.
I just recently went to the funeral of a well-known trauma surgeon in my area, and I can assure you that many of his colleagues and patients were there, and his success as a surgeon was a huge part of his life.
I went to another funeral last year of a man who started a charity providing food, laundry, hairdressing, toys, etc. to people in the community who couldn’t afford it. He had a history of addiction and employed only recovering addicts. MANY of his co-workers and people he employed came to the funeral, and there was a huge emphasis on his work.
Of course your work matters!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you marry someone who doesn’t want you to succeed to your fullest?
For you to be your best self?
He’s a non confident shit move on.
That is the issue. Some people don't see climbing the corporate ladder as a measure of success. No one's tombstone reads "Larlo was the best CFO" and the odds of any one of your coworkers showing up at your funeral 25 years later is slim to none. Work is a mean's to an end not a measurement of importance or self worth.
I just recently went to the funeral of a well-known trauma surgeon in my area, and I can assure you that many of his colleagues and patients were there, and his success as a surgeon was a huge part of his life.
I went to another funeral last year of a man who started a charity providing food, laundry, hairdressing, toys, etc. to people in the community who couldn’t afford it. He had a history of addiction and employed only recovering addicts. MANY of his co-workers and people he employed came to the funeral, and there was a huge emphasis on his work.
Of course your work matters!
“well known surgeon” and corporate Mary are two completely different things. And I said “odds are….” not zero coworkers will ever show up. There is also a lot of generational behavioral changes associated with someone passing now am vs someone passing away in 50 or 60 years.
Anonymous wrote:Which one of you planning on getting pregnant? If no agreement then just hire a surrogate and a live in nanny to outsource whole thing. Parenting isn't what its cracked up to be, your corporation needs you more and compensates you well.
Anonymous wrote:If he's traditional he probably wants to provide and may be very good at it if you keep your expectations at appropriate levels.
We bought my daughter a car last year since she needed it for family reasons and then we bought a car for my wife, even though she can't drive. But a BMW convertible is a cool mom car and I made sure it had a back seat so we could take our other kids. I drive it and my daughter won't touch itmy wife is the thrill seeker of the family.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you were very rich, traditional gender roles did not exist in the way everyone on this thread is imaging for most of history. I’m 60, and grew up on a farm. My grandmother worked her ass off from sunup to sundown, and childcare fell mostly on her elderly in-laws and the oldest daughter. She didn’t have time for doting on her kids or providing them with constant attention or enrichment opportunities
my wife is the thrill seeker of the family. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot be a good mother and have a career. Sounds like you both have different priorities and it will never work.
Oh, please! My mother had a very successful career and was a great mother. What really helped is that my father was very supportive of her doing what she wanted to do. He knew what her priorities were and trusted her. She made some mid career pivots that slowed her career but were best for the family.
Exactly. You are lying to yourself if you think there are no consequences to prioritizing your career. A lot of these women chasing these jobs are unattractive to men because it usually boils down to ego and proving that you're "somebody." Hard pass for must guys.
Except that women with college degrees and more are more likely to married and less likely to be divorced. So ambitious women are more likely to be married and stay married.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you marry someone who doesn’t want you to succeed to your fullest?
For you to be your best self?
He’s a non confident shit move on.
That is the issue. Some people don't see climbing the corporate ladder as a measure of success. No one's tombstone reads "Larlo was the best CFO" and the odds of any one of your coworkers showing up at your funeral 25 years later is slim to none. Work is a mean's to an end not a measurement of importance or self worth.
I just recently went to the funeral of a well-known trauma surgeon in my area, and I can assure you that many of his colleagues and patients were there, and his success as a surgeon was a huge part of his life.
I went to another funeral last year of a man who started a charity providing food, laundry, hairdressing, toys, etc. to people in the community who couldn’t afford it. He had a history of addiction and employed only recovering addicts. MANY of his co-workers and people he employed came to the funeral, and there was a huge emphasis on his work.
Of course your work matters!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you marry someone who doesn’t want you to succeed to your fullest?
For you to be your best self?
He’s a non confident shit move on.
That is the issue. Some people don't see climbing the corporate ladder as a measure of success. No one's tombstone reads "Larlo was the best CFO" and the odds of any one of your coworkers showing up at your funeral 25 years later is slim to none. Work is a mean's to an end not a measurement of importance or self worth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot be a good mother and have a career. Sounds like you both have different priorities and it will never work.
YOU can't but I can.
I'm a lawyer and a mom, my coworkers are mostly lawyers and parents. My kid's doing great at school, I manage my schedule so we spend lots of time together. You can manage to do these things and anyone who claims it's impossible has an agenda.
I don’t know, pp.
I’m a doctor and a mom, but I have a job, not the big career I thought I would. I couldn’t have a career and be a good primary caretaker to my kids.
My dentist only works from 9-2 Monday through Thursday so she can be there for her school aged kids. I always thought that was a pretty good schedule!
Yeah. This is kind of what I do. I wouldn’t say that I’m making big advances in my field or climbing the ladder. It’s just a job.