• A STORY OF MIDLIFE TRIUMPH! ONLY $4.99 ON KINDLE

  • Recent Posts

  • Categories

  • Review of Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg

    Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to LeadLean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead by Sheryl Sandberg
    My rating: 5 of 5 stars

    As I read Lean In, I was intrigued at being able to get inside the head of a dynamic, smart woman who is one generation younger than me, and see the corporate world through her eyes. One of the cultural questions she answered for me was this: why are younger women so averse to the terms "feminist" and "feminism"? Apparently, Sheryl Sanders and her contemporaries believe(d) the following:

    1. Equality having arrived, there's no need for feminism anymore
    2. Feminists are man-haters who resist makeup and the shaving of one's legs

    Okay, #2 was a bit tongue-in-cheek. However, having observed conditions in the real world for a few years now, Sanders has come to see that the playing field is not and will not be level until more women occupy positions of power in the corporate hierarchy. She doesn't suggest that this is due to any malicious intent on the part of men, but rather it's simply a matter of ignorance.

    To illustrate, she describes having to park far away from her office door when hugely and uncomfortably pregnant. When she designated preferred parking spots to accommodate pregnant workers, no one complained. It was seen as logical. But prior to her taking her place in the C-suite, the issue hadn't been raised.

    Sanders talks about not slowing down out of consideration for what might happen in the nebulous future. The example she gives, now famous, is of a young woman confiding her fears of not wanting to accept a job with a lot of responsibility due to the impact it might have on her family. The woman was planning ahead - she didn't even have a boyfriend yet.

    With this example, Sanders makes the point that women, having been highly trained and educated, are waving off promotional opportunities. The jury is still out as to why, but she suggests, and I agree, that part of the reason is this: in corporate America, a woman's decision to go through pregnancy, childbirth, lactation, and child-rearing is viewed as a private matter that should not impact her ability to work long hours and irregular schedules, including lengthy and frequent travel as needed. Rightly fearing this may drive her insane, a woman who wants a family may leap off the corporate ladder at a very early stage.

    Sanders argues that if a young woman stayed on it long enough to secure a more powerful position, she would be able to exert more control over her work life (a perspective the young woman must trust will happen, since at her current low place on the corporate ladder she can only see her lack of power and control.) After a few promotions, she will be able to delegate some of her work to subordinates, afford more help at home, and influence workplace policies that unfairly impact women and families. Who can find fault with this argument?

    Sanders is honest about her own mistakes, and I found that charming. For example, I was amazed that, for all her intelligence and education, she didn't originally intend to negotiate her starting salary with Facebook. Luckily a nice man (her husband) set her straight, and she made a counter offer to Zuckerberg. Reams of guidance have been written about how this error could have impeded her in later years, both at Facebook and with future employers, yet she didn't know. For other women who have not yet made this horrifying discovery, please read Ask for It by Babcock and Laschever (http://www.amazon.com/Ask-Women-Power...) which in addition to being enlightening and entertaining, offers tons of strategies for preparing yourself to negotiate. And not just for salaries. After reading that book I saved $150 on furniture I was going to buy anyway, by asking one question.

    But back to Lean In.

    I was also surprised that she wasn't well informed about how women can sabotage other women in the workplace, particularly women in power. This is an unfortunate truth with roots in biology, and is brilliantly explained in the amazing book, In the Company of Women by Heim and Murphy (http://www.amazon.com/Company-Women-I...) which I reviewed here:
    http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... This also suggests the reasons Sanders was hit with such a backlash for the well-intentioned Lean In.

    There is so much more to say about Lean In, but let me close with this: I enjoyed learning how this stellar corporate executive struggled, made mistakes, and ultimately learned some strategies that will enable her, her family, and the women (and men) in her corporation to thrive. It's not perfect, and sometimes it's not even pretty, but part of the lesson is to let go of the need for perfection.

    The other message, younger women, is to get as far and as fast as you can before starting your families. Don't opt out just because it looks too hard from where you're sitting now. The view improves with each rung on the ladder.

    View all my reviews

X-rated Reasons I’m Happy to be a Boomer

It was never easy. Dating, having sex with a new flame, figuring out the protocols. Now there’s a new reason for being happy you’re old: you’ve figured out sexual navigation. Not like the kids. They’re all screwed up. In Frank Bruni’s latest column, The Bleaker Sex, he says,

Young women are trying to feel the whole liberation thing by having the same meaningless, indiscriminate sex as men have always had.

Bruni quotes Ms. Lena Dunham, director of a new HBO series called Girls:

…modern cultural cues exhort her and her female peers to approach sex in an ostensibly “empowered” way that she couldn’t quite manage. “I heard so many of my friends saying, ‘Why can’t I have sex and feel nothing?’ It was amazing: that this was the new goal.”

This is why we burned our bras? Okay, nobody ever really burned bras – that’s an urban legend – but I was hoping that Women’s Lib was about being true to yourself, not imitating men.

But to my point, and I did have one: Thank God I’m no longer young, and embroiled in the sexual turmoil of dating and all that follows. If you’re ever tempted to feel bad about being old, consider this: apparently, the abundance of high-def pornography is tricking the brains of young men into preferring their online “relationships” with porn stars over that of their girlfriends. A 41-year old lawyer, single, describes the shift:

I don’t like to believe that porn is replacing anything I have with my girlfriend,” he says, “but she asked me recently why she always has to be the one to initiate things. And she was right; I guess I’ve been fading from her. It’s like all that time with these porn stars was subduing any physical desire for my girlfriend. And, in some weird way, my emotional need for her, too.

Imagine being a young woman, intrigued by a new man, and finding out the first time in the sack that he’s overcooked rigatoni, and then your girl buddies tell you that it’s happening to them too.

It turns out that being twenty or thirty-something, with taut, smooth skin and thick hair isn’t enough. Now young women are expected to compete with porn stars.

Here’s what you’re up against, according to Bruni:

…the buffet of fetishistic porn available twenty-four-seven has made age-old sexual practices seem unexciting. Insufficient, somehow.

Every now and then you see a letter in the advice columns written by a lonely wife whose husband comes home from work and spends the evening in front of his computer screen, checking stocks. (That’s probably code for “pants around socks.”) He’s addicted to porn, the wife laments. How do you compete with that? In my day, porn was found in magazines, and later, the adult section of the video store. Men were happy just to have someone to go to bed with. Now they expect – well, I can’t say it. This isn’t that kind of column.

However, in researching this issue I learned that there are real men out there, guys who are sophisticated enough to know the difference between a real woman and the screen version. (I also bookmarked this website – it’s geared toward young men, so for me it’s like spying on the other side. Fun!)

So here’s my question: have you heard of this new preference of young men for digital girlfriends as opposed to the living, breathing, real thing? Do you think it’s just young men, or is it Boomers, too? What do you think?

Leave a comment

18 Comments

  1. Oy- quite a post Lynne! And quite frankly this is one subject I don’t have an opinion about!

    Reply
  2. It seems to me that the more sex is out there (in all forms), the less meaning it has. And from the data I’ve seen, the tsunami of sex in our society hasn’t done anything to increase peoples’ satisfaction with sex. Regarding Boomers, I’ve seen mixed data. Some studies show greater satisfaction with sex after 50, some show less. One thng I do know is that I’m glad I’m not coming to sexual awareness now. I can’t even imagine dealing with the mixed messages young girls get now.

    Reply
  3. I know!! It was bad enough when I was a teenager in the 70s. But now – yikes.

    Reply
  4. ziggityboomer

     /  April 6, 2012

    Time spent in front of the computer is distancing us. Distancing results in lessened ability to engage in any meaningful way with real people. This is evidenced in new postgraduates being unable to interview successfully, and sounds like in sexual partnering too. There’s a couple dozen Ph.D. dissertations in the making here perhaps! Interviews conducted via texting? Skype? Bra burning was more than urban legend! Google images has the evidence.

    Reply
    • Hi Zig, Snopes says it’s a myth (my source) but because I know you’re a smart woman I checked further just now. I saw pictures relating to bras and fire, but nothing specific to the Women’s Liberation movement, although I could go out in my back yard right now, make a sign about liberation, set my Wonderbra on fire and contradict history for all time.

      However, as I kept reading, I saw that in 1968 at a Miss America pageant, demonstrators tossed their undergarments in a trashcan intending to burn it. (This incident is the entire source of the bra-burning legend.) The area had just suffered a rash of fires, though, and the authorities talked the women out of using actual flame. From this point there is some question as to whether or not there was a fire – it seems there was a bit of a smolder which someone hastily extinguished, although reporters disagree on whether it was a flame and whether the protesters set it. But if we credit the women in 1968 with intent, even if they didn’t carry it out, they were pretty determined in spirit to make their inflammatory point!

      So that’s my history brush-up for the day. Month. Okay, year.

      Reply
  5. So glad I don’t have to deal with any of that. The upside of being older :)

    Reply
  6. All I can say is “Amen”, Lynne to the beauty of the aging process. Plus, our high tech,digital world has affected the way we communicate (or not). Just look around in any restaurant and watch couples sitting across from each other staring into their cellphones rather than at each other..GEEZ!

    Reply
    • Kathy, every now and then when Bill and I are out, I have to do something with my “phone” (these days, they’re more like computers). I always apologize! I feel like one of those people you’re describing.

      Reply
  7. Pornography of any kind, taken in abundance, causes changes to the brain. That is a given. It does not surprise me that this happens to men (probably of all ages). Good post.

    Reply
  8. Pennie

     /  April 8, 2012

    Recently I went to a Celebrate Recovery meeting with my brother who is a recoveriing alcoholic. This group deals with addictions of all kinds. I was surprised at how many at the meeting spoke about their addiction to porn. Their stories of hitting rock bottom and loosing everything to their addiction (jobs, families, etc.) were no less affective than those of drug and alcohol addiction. However, I have yet to hear of a woman who suffers from this type of addiction.

    Reply
  9. Let me say this about that. Any man who believes the woman is the aggressor as in porn, has not experienced the real life. The dating that goes on in high school and college and after is certainly more liberal in results than when I was there, but with few exceptions, women act like women and men like men–meaning the man starts the action and is responsible for it and how it turns out. Good grief, I would hate to be dating as a teen now.

    Reply
  10. Peggy

     /  April 13, 2012

    Older men often become addicted to on line porn, too, boomers and beyond. Porn is not only a young man’s past time. AND, there are a surprising number of women of all ages addicted to on line porn.

    Reply
  11. Peggy

     /  April 13, 2012

    Good article on women’s addiction to porn. http://karen-stephenson.suite101.com/female-porn-addiction-a90676

    Reply
  12. Of course there was bra burning… the most famous incident being at the Miss America Pageant in 1968.

    Reply
  13. I can’t tell if my post was posted… I just wanted to say that bra burnings are not urban legends. The most famous – the first? – was in Atlantic City at the Miss America Pageant, 1968. Easy to Google.

    While I’m at it, I have a website called boomersrememberwhen.com. I’m trying to pull together first person observations on the Boomer experience rather than the mediated stuff we always get from TV, magazines, etc. I have some great stories collected already and always looking for more. I want to tell our story in each individual’s words. Thanks. Great blog here!

    Reply
    • I think you’re right, Robert, about Atlantic City, but Google isn’t a solid reference source. Anyway, thanks for dropping by and I’ll check out your blog. Best wishes.

      Reply
      • Well, google isn’t a “source,” it’s a directory. But here’s NPR’s take on it… nothing actually was burned because of fire laws… but pretty good demonstration.

        Reply

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

  • Lynne Spreen

  • Follow LynneSpreen on Twitter
  • my read shelf:
    Lynne Spreen's book recommendations, liked quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists (read shelf)
  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 2,102 other followers

  • Review of Fierce with Age: Chasing God and Squirrels in Brooklyn

    Fierce with Age: Chasing God and Squirrels in BrooklynFierce with Age: Chasing God and Squirrels in Brooklyn by Carol Orsborn
    My rating: 5 of 5 stars

    When I saw the blog post, "Why You Should Treat Aging As A Mystical Journey"(http://www.mindbodygreen.com/0-8682/w...), I thought I might have found a kindred spirit in the author, Carol Orsborn. When I read this book, Fierce with Age: Chasing God and Squirrels in Brooklyn, I knew for sure. Carol Orsborn is on to something that I, at age 59, am really hungry for. I want to know how to feel valuable, powerful and at peace in the second half of my life, while still fully functioning in a society that demeans, caricatures, and negates older people.

    Carol, who is a good writer, describes a story arc that begins with everything falling apart. She is unwanted and then fired from her job in a world that worships youth. She tries to fight aging by staying in the ring with the younger people, but it gives her no real sense of security. She keeps coming up with ideas for holding back time, only to fail over and over again. Telling of her disappointments, Carol does a good job of layering the blows, one atop the other until we are reeling with her. When everything has been tried, every avenue exhausted, what the hell do we do next? Lie down and die? But we’re old, not dead! How do we navigate this new country?

    Nearly immobilized with discouragement, Carol struggles with the questions I’ve wrangled with: So now what, at this age? Who am I without the accouterments of my earlier life? My job, my youth, my expertise in a particular field? If I’m not running the race, do I even have value?

    One night, in the middle of a furious electrical storm, she stands on her balcony, screaming and shaking her fist at God, daring Him to kill her now.

    And He tells her to get over herself.

    From this point, Carol begins to glimpse another, more powerful reality. A gigantic paradigm shift later, the unfurling of which she describes in the second half of the book, Carol is once again back on top, no longer burdened by but rather fierce with age. And we’re fierce right along with her.

    Carol is very skillful in using metaphor to describe her journey. Particularly satisfying is her change of heart regarding the story of Moses, wherein she finally understands that God was saying, “It's okay to get old. I love you just as you are. So should you.”

    The only problem I had with the book was the spiritual, God aspect. It’s not like Carol misled me. God is in the title. Since I am not a believer, however, some points left me a bit frustrated until I got a brainstorm and began replacing the term "conscious growth" with God, and it worked fine! Here's an example:

    Carol: To stop "doing" my personality and leave space for God requires...

    Lynne: To stop "doing" my personality and leave space for conscious growth requires...

    At some point on our nation's timeline, I believe people our age will stop trying to be young and start seeking and finding the intrinsic value of age. It takes courage, though, because so much of it is beyond our control. Carol makes the point that we have to develop the ability to be at peace with that, and with the strength of maturity, we ought to be able to.

    The reward is freedom to become our true selves, unbound by the constraints of society as currently drawn. As Carol says, "The one thing that is up to you is whether you will make getting old a tragedy, or embark upon it as another of life's great adventures."

    View all my reviews

  • Blogs I Follow

    1. Lead.Learn.Live.
    2. Not quite at my wits' end...yet
    3. Waiting for the Karma Truck
    4. Deborah Batterman
    5. bobsbooksblog
    6. Guerrilla Aging
    7. krpooler.com
    8. Rock the Silver
    9. The Woman Doctor's Guide
    10. Life in the Boomer Lane
  • This Blog Got Five Stars!

Lead.Learn.Live.

David Kanigan: Inspiration, Ideas & Information

Waiting for the Karma Truck

Thoughts on work and life and everything in between

Deborah Batterman

there is a crack in everything . . . that's how the light gets in – Leonard Cohen

bobsbooksblog

A place of Elegant Review

Guerrilla Aging

Navigating the Third Half of Life

Rock the Silver

MIDLIFE MAGIC

The Woman Doctor's Guide

A guide to good health, women's wellness and getting it all done

Life in the Boomer Lane

Musings of a former hula hoop champion

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 2,102 other followers

%d bloggers like this: