Anonymous wrote:It's his choice. He can be a low attachment 2 career power couple with a nanny if they have kids, or I can go for a more traditional one career with mommy track.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a hard time believing high powered men actually want a high powered woman.
This. No man wants an equal. Too threatening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a hard time believing high powered men actually want a high powered woman.
Some men want to double their own salary and still have the wife manage everything in the household, keep herself in shape and well-groomed, and be sexually available. And there are women who will attempt that.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of men want a woman that will look up to them, make them feel needed, respected, important, and authoritative. Sometimes they have to look pretty far down to find that. You shouldn’t judge… this is more about them than it is about you. Why do you care so much?
Anonymous wrote:A lot of men want a woman that will look up to them, make them feel needed, respected, important, and authoritative. Sometimes they have to look pretty far down to find that. You shouldn’t judge… this is more about them than it is about you. Why do you care so much?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: In my current and past orgs, any moderately ambitious person with a strong work ethic is promoted past senior analyst by the time they are 5-7 years out of undergrad. So if she’s 10 years plus into her career, I can see that being somewhat of a red flag for him. It speaks to a mismatch in ambition and possibly in other characteristics he values.
He needs to ask himself if he truly does want what he "values". Because that kind of ambition comes with tradeoffs and expectations.
And he needs to ask himself if he's actually able to attract a more ambitious woman. They might not be interested in him.
Anonymous wrote: In my current and past orgs, any moderately ambitious person with a strong work ethic is promoted past senior analyst by the time they are 5-7 years out of undergrad. So if she’s 10 years plus into her career, I can see that being somewhat of a red flag for him. It speaks to a mismatch in ambition and possibly in other characteristics he values.
Anonymous wrote:Where does everyone stand on this? I have a very good friend who was fast tracked in his career and he met a girl who is still very junior. Let’s say same age, one’s a senior director and one’s a senior analyst. Both mid 30s, large fortune 100 companies.
I’ve never seen this guy so stoked over a girl, he barely dates and it’s usually a train wreck. His only holdup is that she’s just…not there with career which is a huge part of him. I told him he’s an idiot if that’s stopping him and not everyone cares about their career like he does, but I can’t force him to change his stance.
Is this weird or am I off base?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a hard time believing high powered men actually want a high powered woman.
Some men want to double their own salary and still have the wife manage everything in the household, keep herself in shape and well-groomed, and be sexually available. And there are women who will attempt that.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a successful partner at a law firm. I met a nice woman who was a senior associate with unclear prospects. We had a great time, but the conversations kept veering into mentor-mentee territory. I hated that. We broke up pretty quickly.
Anonymous wrote:So is she not there *yet*, or is it more like she's never gonna get to a high place in her career, or she just doesn't want to? Because that changes the answer, especially if she's a little younger. 33 and 36 are both mid-30s but those are clutch years for getting to the next level professionally.
There are plenty of women who want to work a lot and make money in their 20s and early 30s so that they can downshift when they have kids but maintain a high standard of living. And that is a very sensible and realistic plan IMO.
Your friend should take a long look in the mirror and say aloud "You're no great prize either, you know." He should then very seriously consider what it's like to be married to a woman with a high-level career and whether he is truly up for it. And what kind of parenting and family setting he wants for his kids if he does want kids. If he's not truly willing to do 50% (and with an ambitious wife, 50% will be a lot), then he should count his blessings, marry this woman, and be content.