Is Work/Life Balance Possible?
By Courtney E. Martin, Tuesday, February 26, 2008, 3 commentsIt’s the topic du jour. Conferences are chock full of panels on the topic, bloggers clamor to take the latest and greatest spin, and an entire industry of consultants and coaches has emerged to serve mothers aching to “on ramp” back into the workforce after years of breastfeeding and dirty laundry.
Ballsy feminists like Linda Hirshman have written popular books making strong cases for how financially and psychologically dangerous it is for women not to work; in short, women who stay home to raise their children become economically dependent on men who may divorce them, get fired, or die (harsh, but true) and women, like men, need fulfilling work lives to be whole human beings.
I wasn’t really one of those young women who needed to be convinced to “stay in the workforce” (do my laptop and I in my cramped Brooklyn apartment constitute a “workforce”?) in the first place, but it’s hard to see how anyone could disagree with their argument. Only 74 percent of stay-at-home mothers who want to return to work land jobs; of these, only 40 percent are able to find full-time, professional employment. And that's after being out of work for an average of just 2.2 years. Half of marriages end in divorce and women outlive men by an average of seven years. Widowed and divorced women make up a
disproportionate share of the elderly in poverty. Should women give up their financial independence lightly? No!
Should they torture themselves by chasing after that panacea of “work/life balance”? Sadly, no again. In today’s world—with the lack of support, policy, and social buy-in—it is more like a mirage.
But there is always tomorrow. Sure, today we must wrestle with inflexible workplaces, archaic policy, and unempathic supervisors in order to protect ourselves from economic ruin. We can’t just throw our hands up and shout “To hell with it all!” when we have children to feed and goals to achieve. But if we just put our noses to the grindstone and keep churning away at the hamster wheel that is the contemporary American workplace, we also won’t change the world. And wasn’t that the point in the first place?



















3 Comments
Great Article
Hmm, I dunno about this.
Ack. Are you suggesting that the modern woman take the typically toxic workload that is dished out to her? That she suck it up, lest she be forced to depend on her man?
Surely you must be kidding.
There is a glorious third choice that lies in-between a) eating corporate dust and b) quitting altogether. Freelance! Do your own thing!
Perhaps I am still "chasing" this dream, but the hunt is a thousand times more satisfying than twiddling my thumbs in a cubicle with poor benefits. And you can be darned sure I am not relying on my man for my success; I'm busting my butt.
No woman (OR man) should accept the heinous condition of the modern American workplace without actively challenging it.
Escape Artist http://escapeart.wordpress.com
What's wrong with staying home to raise your children?
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