Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting! Noticed on the BBC site this AM that the latest trend out of Sweden is for employed women to abandon careers to become what the Swedish call 'Soft girls.' This is the artical:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0j1wwypygxo
At first I was kinda horrified; NGL. But maybe this could be overall good? Im intrigued.
I would also be happy to quit my job if my jobs were: "grocery store, a care home and a factory", per the article.
Thankfully, I work in tech and get paid well. I don't want to quit my job.
That's the part we're not supposed to say out loud. A lot of these women just don't have great options to begin with.
Did y’all know that in Sweden every single one of those jobs you listed pays a living wage?
Wonder what your plan is when your tech job goes away in the next decade…
A living wage isn't necessarily a good wage, and the jobs listed aren't stimulating. I'd be far more inclined to want to stay home if I was making a living wage working in a factory than if I was making a good wage running a business or practicing medicine.
Just as I thought. You have no idea what you’re talking about. You just reflexively look down on blue collar jobs. Typical modern American “feminist”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting! Noticed on the BBC site this AM that the latest trend out of Sweden is for employed women to abandon careers to become what the Swedish call 'Soft girls.' This is the artical:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0j1wwypygxo
At first I was kinda horrified; NGL. But maybe this could be overall good? Im intrigued.
I would also be happy to quit my job if my jobs were: "grocery store, a care home and a factory", per the article.
Thankfully, I work in tech and get paid well. I don't want to quit my job.
That's the part we're not supposed to say out loud. A lot of these women just don't have great options to begin with.
Did y’all know that in Sweden every single one of those jobs you listed pays a living wage?
Wonder what your plan is when your tech job goes away in the next decade…
A living wage isn't necessarily a good wage, and the jobs listed aren't stimulating. I'd be far more inclined to want to stay home if I was making a living wage working in a factory than if I was making a good wage running a business or practicing medicine.
Anonymous wrote:OP is here to plant "articals" Nothing to see here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting! Noticed on the BBC site this AM that the latest trend out of Sweden is for employed women to abandon careers to become what the Swedish call 'Soft girls.' This is the artical:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0j1wwypygxo
At first I was kinda horrified; NGL. But maybe this could be overall good? Im intrigued.
I would also be happy to quit my job if my jobs were: "grocery store, a care home and a factory", per the article.
Thankfully, I work in tech and get paid well. I don't want to quit my job.
That's the part we're not supposed to say out loud. A lot of these women just don't have great options to begin with.
Did y’all know that in Sweden every single one of those jobs you listed pays a living wage?
Wonder what your plan is when your tech job goes away in the next decade…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting! Noticed on the BBC site this AM that the latest trend out of Sweden is for employed women to abandon careers to become what the Swedish call 'Soft girls.' This is the artical:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0j1wwypygxo
At first I was kinda horrified; NGL. But maybe this could be overall good? Im intrigued.
I would also be happy to quit my job if my jobs were: "grocery store, a care home and a factory", per the article.
Thankfully, I work in tech and get paid well. I don't want to quit my job.
That's the part we're not supposed to say out loud. A lot of these women just don't have great options to begin with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting! Noticed on the BBC site this AM that the latest trend out of Sweden is for employed women to abandon careers to become what the Swedish call 'Soft girls.' This is the artical:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0j1wwypygxo
At first I was kinda horrified; NGL. But maybe this could be overall good? Im intrigued.
I would also be happy to quit my job if my jobs were: "grocery store, a care home and a factory", per the article.
Thankfully, I work in tech and get paid well. I don't want to quit my job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^or girl dinner. Whatever. The way we always eat and never thought to brag? share?
I rarely eat like that.
Eat like what? Wtf is girl dinner supposed to mean?
It's when you're alone and want a dinner that is easy, usually doesn't involve cooking or cleanup, and wouldn't be considered a "real meal" by a lot of people. So like, a glass of wine and some cheese/charcuterie with a hunk of baguette.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/08/style/girl-dinner.html?unlocked_article_code=1.fE4.X0T0.NYV2YGBlVT0K&smid=url-share
I absolutely hate this. It's so regressive. Like a woman alone does not merit a full home cooked meal. I get being tired and not wanting to cook, but OTOH it's implying women should subsist on air and a few handfuls of popcorn, and actual meals are just for men/families. I am single and enjoy cooking healthy hot meals. I can save the leftovers for tomorrow and/or know how to make quick meals in less than 10 minutes. I deserve a home cooked meal at the end of the workday as much as anyone else!
And I’m single and don’t give a shit about having a hot meal. I’ve apparently been “girl eating” my whole life. It’s not a comment on how much I value myself, I promise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^or girl dinner. Whatever. The way we always eat and never thought to brag? share?
I rarely eat like that.
Eat like what? Wtf is girl dinner supposed to mean?
It's when you're alone and want a dinner that is easy, usually doesn't involve cooking or cleanup, and wouldn't be considered a "real meal" by a lot of people. So like, a glass of wine and some cheese/charcuterie with a hunk of baguette.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/08/style/girl-dinner.html?unlocked_article_code=1.fE4.X0T0.NYV2YGBlVT0K&smid=url-share
I absolutely hate this. It's so regressive. Like a woman alone does not merit a full home cooked meal. I get being tired and not wanting to cook, but OTOH it's implying women should subsist on air and a few handfuls of popcorn, and actual meals are just for men/families. I am single and enjoy cooking healthy hot meals. I can save the leftovers for tomorrow and/or know how to make quick meals in less than 10 minutes. I deserve a home cooked meal at the end of the workday as much as anyone else!
And I’m single and don’t give a shit about having a hot meal. I’ve apparently been “girl eating” my whole life. It’s not a comment on how much I value myself, I promise.
🤮“Every month he gives me a salary from his money that he made. But if I need more, I'll ask him. Or if I need less, I don't - I just save the rest,” explains Ms Larsson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^or girl dinner. Whatever. The way we always eat and never thought to brag? share?
I rarely eat like that.
Eat like what? Wtf is girl dinner supposed to mean?
It's when you're alone and want a dinner that is easy, usually doesn't involve cooking or cleanup, and wouldn't be considered a "real meal" by a lot of people. So like, a glass of wine and some cheese/charcuterie with a hunk of baguette.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/08/style/girl-dinner.html?unlocked_article_code=1.fE4.X0T0.NYV2YGBlVT0K&smid=url-share
I absolutely hate this. It's so regressive. Like a woman alone does not merit a full home cooked meal. I get being tired and not wanting to cook, but OTOH it's implying women should subsist on air and a few handfuls of popcorn, and actual meals are just for men/families. I am single and enjoy cooking healthy hot meals. I can save the leftovers for tomorrow and/or know how to make quick meals in less than 10 minutes. I deserve a home cooked meal at the end of the workday as much as anyone else!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dang another black trend co-opted by white people. At least acknowledge the origins!
It's really crazy there's no mention of nigerian soft girls since it's the same news outlet. Do some journalism BBC!
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20221202-soft-girl-what-it-really-means-to-lead-a-soft-life
Well, I don't know about that. And this Swedish trend seems uniquely Swedish, it says "“It’s about leaning away from this ‘girl boss’ ideal that we've seen for a lot of years, where there are very, very high demands for success in every aspect of life,” explains Johanna Göransson, a researcher for Ungdomsbarometern."
So thats different.
But the "boss girl" push really hit home, since DC seems all about pushing the "boss girl" identity. Hard.
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting! Noticed on the BBC site this AM that the latest trend out of Sweden is for employed women to abandon careers to become what the Swedish call 'Soft girls.' This is the artical:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0j1wwypygxo
At first I was kinda horrified; NGL. But maybe this could be overall good? Im intrigued.