Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird. This is me demographically but I don't identify with the article at all. Maybe it'll catch to me in a couple of years. Married, 45, work FT, two kids in ES.
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just read the article. I’m 50 and can identity with most of it. I think GenX women were told we could be anything we want to be and have it all, but it’s just not true. We’re expected to be Supermom and CEO and Martha Stewart and a sexy wife. It’s impossible.
Add in the stress we feel about finances, politics, the environment, aging parents, etc. and it shouldn’t be a shock to anyone that we’re all having a mid-life crisis.
+1 Also 50 and identify with most of it. Especially the part about careers being stymied. When I was in college my professors used to tell us how the Boomers were going to retire and there would be workforce shortages all over the place. Instead what happened was that I graduated during a recession in my early 20s, got hit by two more in my early and late 30s, dealt with unrelenting harassment and gender discrimination in the male-dominated field I chose (because we can do anything, right?), getting underpaid all the while, waiting for workforce shortages that never materialized. In my field, Boomers still hold the majority of the senior positions. I don't fault the Boomers for not being able to retire, but I would have made very different career decisions as a 20yo if I had not been told to sit down, shut up, pay your dues, and wait your turn.
I really admire many in the millennial generation who simply refuse to take that horrible advice.
I do fault the boomers. They aren't doing the jobs they are holding and when they leave, finally, they leave a huge mess.
Eff those entitled a$$holes. I too admire the millennials even though they are a PIA to manage. They lead with the conditions under which they will be employed. Sometimes it seems like entitlement but it's not; it's perspective. (not always but still).
Anonymous wrote:Weird. This is me demographically but I don't identify with the article at all. Maybe it'll catch to me in a couple of years. Married, 45, work FT, two kids in ES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and the one thing really making me feel down is that 50% of my fellow citizens think it’s great that a racist misogynist who espouses hate is the leader of our country. I was totally okay with having been screwed out of promotions and pay because I’m a woman, especially since I had the pleasure of raising kids. But the fact that I don’t feel like I’ll be left alone to enjoy my hard-earned money in peace when I finally do get to retire . . . well, that makes me want to rip someone’s face off.
Same. I suddenly feel that I really don’t know people at all. Family and friends that I thought were educated, decent people are really not. It’s not enough for me that my 401K happens to be doing well, because companies have been given free reign to do whatever they want to maximize profit. Who cares about healthcare, the environment, or the deficit as long as the retirement accounts are growing, right? Makes me furious.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and the one thing really making me feel down is that 50% of my fellow citizens think it’s great that a racist misogynist who espouses hate is the leader of our country. I was totally okay with having been screwed out of promotions and pay because I’m a woman, especially since I had the pleasure of raising kids. But the fact that I don’t feel like I’ll be left alone to enjoy my hard-earned money in peace when I finally do get to retire . . . well, that makes me want to rip someone’s face off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and the one thing really making me feel down is that 50% of my fellow citizens think it’s great that a racist misogynist who espouses hate is the leader of our country. I was totally okay with having been screwed out of promotions and pay because I’m a woman, especially since I had the pleasure of raising kids. But the fact that I don’t feel like I’ll be left alone to enjoy my hard-earned money in peace when I finally do get to retire . . . well, that makes me want to rip someone’s face off.
I completely get this.
FWIW, I'm coming to a certain peace about doing whatever TF I want because it's not like society values me anyway.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and the one thing really making me feel down is that 50% of my fellow citizens think it’s great that a racist misogynist who espouses hate is the leader of our country. I was totally okay with having been screwed out of promotions and pay because I’m a woman, especially since I had the pleasure of raising kids. But the fact that I don’t feel like I’ll be left alone to enjoy my hard-earned money in peace when I finally do get to retire . . . well, that makes me want to rip someone’s face off.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and the one thing really making me feel down is that 50% of my fellow citizens think it’s great that a racist misogynist who espouses hate is the leader of our country. I was totally okay with having been screwed out of promotions and pay because I’m a woman, especially since I had the pleasure of raising kids. But the fact that I don’t feel like I’ll be left alone to enjoy my hard-earned money in peace when I finally do get to retire . . . well, that makes me want to rip someone’s face off.
Anonymous wrote:Yup, i thought i had it all under control at 42, and 45. I’m 47.4 and want to walk away from it all....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird. This is me demographically but I don't identify with the article at all. Maybe it'll catch to me in a couple of years. Married, 45, work FT, two kids in ES.
Yeah...come back in 5 years![]()
+1. I felt like things really start to spiral closer to 46.