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  • 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

You Have the Power. You Just Don’t Know It.

I had a rough childhood, with a dad who was overwhelmed with work and financial stress, and a mother overwhelmed with him and four small children. How can I say this gently? Dad was violent. I grew up angry, and even into my late forties I had nightmares about punching him in the face. I’d wake up crying at the futility of it, and so pissed off I wanted to break something.

Around the time I turned fifty, I wrote him a letter saying his brutality and scorched-earth behavior was wrong, that he hurt us terribly and the least he could do now is apologize.

A great silence emanated from his part of town. Three weeks later, my sister told me he was pouting. He assumed I had severed ties, so he would sever ties longer. Yeah, of course he would interpret it that way. He always had to win every argument. So I called him on some business pretext and we talked politely, as if nothing had happened. Then we said goodbye and hung up.

The phone rang.

Him: “I want you to know I got your letter.”

Me, heart pounding: “Okay.”

Him: “And I want you to know I’m not offended.”

Me: (biting back astonishment, which corroded to mirth, which died in bitterness on my tongue). “Great.”

Him: “I’m sorry you had to carry that around all these years.”

Me: “Thank you.”

The End

The nightmares vanished. Our relationship improved overnight. I felt sorry for him, instead of hating him. For the next seven or eight years, until he died suddenly of a stroke in 2008, I was able to love him like a regular dad, to appreciate all the good stuff he did for us. All it took was that one sentence.

Now here’s the quirky thing: a few years later, I wondered, what if I misinterpreted his apology? This man NEVER apologized. What if I heard what I wanted to hear? What if he didn’t mean it the way I took it? What if he really meant he was sorry I was so stupid as to let a little thing like a broken eardrum or bloody nose bother me? Because that would have more been in character.

I’ll never know, so I chose to believe the first interpretation. And that’s what I’m thinking about today, a few days before what would have been my dad’s birthday: sometimes the prison in which we live is self-constructed.

The implications are staggering.

I just finished reading a memoir about a woman who had a rough childhood. Adopted as a toddler by inadequate parents, she was poorly nurtured and emotionally abandoned – and having survived that, she became an adult who was forever doomed to seeing every development in her life through that filter of rejection, of being unloved. Then, in her early sixties, she had an epiphany: she realized her parents had done the best they could, even though they should never have been given a child to raise. This caused her to rethink everything. She wasn’t trapped anymore. My friend was much happier from that point forward, but what a terrible waste.

In her case and in mine, our parents relinquished some information late in life, thereby freeing us. You can accurately say this wasn’t within our control. But what if either one of us had made up some excuse of our own and freed ourselves sooner? I could have told myself Dad was sorry and moved on. She could have done the same. Instead we waited, seething (in my case)  and pathetic (in hers).

To this day I don’t know if I read Dad correctly, but I’m free. I should have done it thirty years earlier. Freedom was within my power to achieve, but I didn’t realize it.

In next Friday’s post, I’ll give you another example of self-entrapment, in this case how older people limit themselves.

(If my words seem less polished than usual, or if you notice any typos, I apologize, but the baby’s waking up and he doesn’t permit multitasking! Stay-at-home moms, I feel ya.)

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26 Comments

  1. Lynne, as I have said many times, we have many things in common from our earlier life. I was raised in the same way. It took a lot of self help groups, counseling, and loving people to come to forgiveness prior to my father’s death. That power was released from me in my 30′s.
    Today,I can share my story to help others so they to can be free.

    Reply
    • Thanks for saying that, Ann. It’s a little hard to reveal such info about my upbringing but I know there are so many who went thru similar things, and succeeded in spite of.

      Reply
  2. Lynne
    Great post. Don’t we all wish our ephipanies came earlier in life? Years ago, I was at a inner healing seminar and the speaker explained the power of forgiveness like this: when we choose not to forgive, it is as though we’ve written I Will Not Forgive on a posty note and are holding it on the walls of the past, unable to move on with our lives. But the moment we take the note down in forgiveness, we release ourselves to move on. Keep sharing.

    Reply
    • Shawn, i like the anecdote. Like a lot of thick-headed peeps, I have a problem with the word “forgive” but if you substitute the phrase “move on” it sort of says it all, doesn’t it?

      Reply
  3. Hi Lynne,

    Love your post! I’ve probably carried around a similar resentment for my first husband, and I wonder if that could be the reason I’ve never been able to stay in a relationship with any of the assortment of men who’ve passed through my life. Who knows? It’s also possible I’ve always been too independent and itchy to settle in, too afraid I might lose my SELF, after wrenching it free from that first ugly marriage. But at least it was material for the bad husband in several novels. Always named Ralph.

    I’m half-way through Dakota Blues, enjoying it immensely, while also circling typos, missing words, etc. Most of what I’ve found are unnecessary commas or places that need commas, and I’m not sure you want to bother with that. Does anyone really care about commas? Besides overly anal English teachers. :-)

    One thought I had when Karen is reacting to being fired, feeling lost and adrift, her life unraveling… This is only days after her amazing night with Curt. Wouldn’t she have some thoughts about Curt? I think women do this even when they know better. That desperate hope beyond hope that maybe this new man is the answer. Oh, to be in his arms, immersed in the passion that chases away dark thoughts, at least for those hours.

    Of course, that would mean adding text, and at this point you might not want to go there. BTW – when I got the copy-edited manuscript of HOT WATER, they included instructions for adding text. I never knew that was possible in the production stage, but I’d been reading a book with a Goddess theme, and I actually added a chapter and a half late in the book.

    I hope I’m not out of line here. DAKOTA BLUES is wonderful. Now to get back to it.

    Why don’t I mail it to you when I finish? So you don’t have to wait till I’m back from Louisiana.

    Kathryn

    Reply
    • Kathryn, the more I get to know you, the more I think it’s just the fact that you’re one of the most independent people I know. You love life, and you chase after it with great zest! The Ralphs wouldn’t stand a chance of keeping you interested.

      Reply
  4. Lynne, I think you’ve got it right to hang on to what your dad said as an apology. My dad, too, was of that ilk — never apologizing. It’s hard growing up self-confident and at peace when you never hear the words, I’m sorry, or I’m proud of you. But somehow we manage, and whether it’s a trusted friend or a counselor or self-help books, we find the support we need. And we overcome. And that means we don’t need to revisit all that angst or harbor bitter feelings, now that they’re gone. Instead, we forgive what wasn’t done right by us, and we promise ourselves we won’t foist that on OUR kids. Well said, my friend!

    Reply
  5. For a guy who was gruff and not apologetic, I think that one sentence said volumes. And you did interpret it right! Thanks for sharing.

    Reply
    • Cyndy, I came to see him in my mind’s eye as that young man in the army picture from when he was about 20, and I know that man wouldn’t know how to apologize without giving up his soul. So that helped.

      Reply
  6. Good for you, Lynne, for achieving your freedom. And you’re right, too often we imprison or entrap ourselves. Very enlightening post.

    Reply
  7. Nanci

     /  August 31, 2012

    I sometimes feel like it would be a great service to younger people to compile a list of ways to break free from the toxicity of the past. For me it was in my 40 s when a friend pointed out that the conversation I had with mom was so repellent that she was shocked. I had been putting up with huge emotional abuse for my whole life. I went to a therapist and divorced myself from my mother in an empty chair protocol. I wouldn’t say I was totally free, but for the first time I actually recognized the abuse and could tell her that I wasn’t going to talk to her if she spoke that way. I’ve been told that emotional abuse is harder to get over than physical abuse, but it did help a lot.i felt more in control.

    Reply
    • Nanci, my husband has been a great mentor in this respect. I used to be such a doormat, but he helped me see that looking for some kind of reciprocity in a relationship wasn’t mercenary.

      Reply
  8. Thank you for sharing your story, Lynne. You are courageous and compassionate. I am fortunate to be able to read your posts, have my left brain working long enough to wrestle these issues best 3 out of 5 pins, blessed to have a spiritual neighbor bring some clarity. I, too, now understand that parents don’t get a manual for child-rearing with the child. Isn’t it FANTASTIC that we’re writers? When I recently discovered I have no memory of the years between 13 and 18, after serial panic attacks, and a desperate search for my analyst’s phone number, light dawned. If I don’t remember being 15, and I’m writing about a 15 year old girl, I can make everything up! Bonus!

    Reply
    • Wow, Zig. You prove it: Simple coping skills are anything but. How heroic. Spiritual neighbor, yup. Glad to be in the same neighborhood.

      Reply
  9. Lynne, As I read your story, I thought not only about forgiveness and how liberating it can be but also that it is a conscious choice we make that takes courage and humility. I feel relieved for you that you chose to interpret your father’s response as you did. It freed you and enabled you to reconnect with him in your last years together. Peace of mind is priceless. Thanks for sharing your brave and honest story. You remind us all that one sentence and a quick decision can change our lives for the better- in a heartbeat.

    Reply
  10. kate granado

     /  September 7, 2012

    My sister was 20 years older than me and her husband terrified me from a very young age. He would climb through windows to search me out and as he came in the iving room window i went out my bedroom window and hid in the bushes until he stumbled to his own home and forgot me in a drunken haze.
    It was not until i was 14 and we went on a road trip to his family home in rual wisconsin and i met his father that i began to understand his torment. His father kept telling me he was going to kill a little bunny rabbit for me to eat for dinner and of course i made all the disgusted 14 year old faces i knew how to make. One afternoon while napping on the screened porch, i felt a heat on my chest and startled, I awoke to a dead rabbit laying on me. I screamed and ran, with his father chasing me holding the dead rabbit by the ears and laughling through a toothless grin, searching for my mother. It was not until the ride back to california while gazing through the window in the back seat of the car, that i realized what a childhood my brother-law must of had. It had shaped him as a man and a tormentor. I dodged him for the next four years until they moved away to another state. Over those 4 years a calmness came over me in my resolve to avoid his hideous advances towards me. And it was not until i was in my twenties that i discoved my calmness was forgivness. He was a lost soul haunted by a nightmare of a father raised in a backwoods home.
    I did not come through unscathed, but i came through with the best of me and it helped me grow into a loving woman i’m proud of today.
    Forgivness sets us free. I am so happy you were able to believe that your fathers words were words of apology. You are a better woman for it.
    thanks for all your words of wisdom.
    And i loved the book, congratulations.
    kate

    Reply
    • Oh, Kate, what horror. And you are so above it all, and so far past it, to be able to feel sorry for your BIL. I think that’s the greatest ending: to feel compassion. BUT first, we have to feel safe!!! Thank God you were never damaged worse. And thank you for your kind words about Dakota Blues. It really was a labor of love.

      Reply
  11. I just did a couple of posts on my upbringing and your post reminded me of my own confrontation with my stepfather and eerily enough, I believed that he was sorry until years later, after his death. It didn’t improve our relationship, but it did make me stop being angry at him and just focus on getting my life good. I look forward to reading your book – it sounds like an enjoyable fall read.

    Reply
    • You believed he was sorry until after his death? Sounds intriguing. I’ll have to go check out your blog, Green! Thanks for stopping by.

      Reply
  12. Self-inflicted prisons are the worst kind. I’m glad you found freedom.

    Reply
  13. Lynne, both my parents died without apologizing for their alcoholism or their emotional (and sometimes physical) violence. It was up to us to come to terms with who they were and what they did–or not. It took me several years of struggle to finally accept that while there was never any excuse for what they did, they were flawed human beings, acting out their own internal pain in ways I couldn’t always comprehend. It sounds so trite to say that I’ve made peace with them, and there are still so many questions I’d want to ask them if they were a) alive and b) sober, but I’m no longer consumed with anger toward them. As you say, it’s like a burden is lifted when the anger clears. And maybe that’s the best we can hope for.
    Karen

    Reply
  14. Oh boy, don’t get me started. A big part of my long journey with my mother, which I wrote about in my blog for a couple of years (“Taking Care of Mom,” now Connecting Points–Stories Matter), was the past…an alcoholic and sexually and emotionally abusive stepfather, a mother drinking too much and in denial. She learned of the abuse when I was 29, but asked me why I was trying to hurt her. Thirty years later I was her primary person/advocate/manager of her life. Why, I would ask, am I determined not to abandon my mother after she threw me under the bus. But my mother and I were healing journey (the book). It took years to let her off the hook and it took even longer for her to forgive herself. The last time we spoke, however, she spoke words that told me she had forgiven herself. I knew it was closure when I heard the words, but was still shocked when she died two days later…

    Reply
    • computer glitch…meant to say, “were on” on a healing journey.

      Reply
      • I knew.
        But your Mom died 2 days later. That’s just mind-boggling. Life is rough. Sometimes really, really damned good, but often rough.
        I like your blog, BTW. Beautiful graphics. I’m going to explore. See you soon.

        Reply

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  • Lynne Spreen

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  • 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

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