Since mutumia has decided to use alphabet time lately on male female issues.I too have decided to do my own series.Complete set will be out on tape and dvd soon!Anyhow now that we are in the new millenium and many women have the same access to the same education and career opportunities; which I think is great as I have no problem at all with women who want to climb the corporate ladder, pursue careers in traditionally male fields, etc.
I also agree with something a woman friend said in a discussion of men and women, that an intelligent and educated woman is a better choice for a wife, both for the genes that she splits with her husband and passes along to their children, as well as being a more interesting mate to talk to and be with.
What I see as the fundamental problem with women pursuing careers is the near-universal assumption these women make: That they will be able to "pencil in" a suitable husband at whatever point that they decide it's time to marry and have kids.That is a very dangerous assumption, because it's seldom true, and I'll explain why.
I have read several variations of this story in many magazines around the world. The story was about a woman, never married, who had risen to the top of some fairly big company. As I recall, it wasn't Fortune 500 size, but it was big and she had done a great job at directing the company's growth and making it successful. In the process, she herself had amassed a seven-figure net worth, with an annual income of a half-million dollars or so.Or in the Kenyan version she started her own company that was now making millions of shillings, take your pick.Fact is that she was a self made woman.
She was 46, as I recall, and couldn't find a suitable man to date and marry. The article chronicled her many attempts to rectify this situation, including her hiring an expensive dating service that specialized in matching up busy executives with suitable mates.
The service matched her up with some men, but none were much interested. This woman seemed amazed (and despondent) that the male executives the service fixed her up with (and that she was attracted to) weren't much interested in seeing her a second time. There had been a couple of men that wanted to see her again, but their incomes were a small fraction of hers and she didn't want much to do with them as she viewed them as not being successful.
The lady theorized that the men who weren't interested were "intimidated by a strong woman," and lamented that male executives had fragile egos, and needed doormats for mates, etc ( ladies I know you say that as I hear it all the time from you! ). It was a fairly detailed article.
Shortly thereafter, the letters section printed reader's responses to this article, and one guy nailed the situation dead-center.I wish I could find the exact article.
He said the woman was failing to see the basic economic principle of comparative advantage, on which all successful trade, commerce, and business is based. He wrote that he was surprised such a financially sharp person was apparently oblivious to what was so obvious to him.
Comparative advantage means you are most valuable to someone who needs what you have, because without you, they can't have it. Florida can sell oranges and orange juice at a profit to people here in Georgia, even after paying shipping costs, because orange trees won't grow here, and so if we want orange juice with breakfast, we have to get it from them.
Comparative advantage also says that you should concentrate your time and energy on that which rewards you the most highly, to the point of hiring others to do work that you may even be better at than they are.Mutumia put your hand down and take notes it is not yet question time.
Example: A neurosurgeon who happens to be a world-record typist that can type 200 words per minute is still better off hiring a 60 wpm secretary to transcribe his notes, because there are lots of secretaries who'll work for less than $20 an hour, and his time is better spent doing more neurosurgeries which pay hundreds of times that rate.
The letter-writer's point was that the woman executive in the article was failing to grasp this economic fact. The male executives weren't "afraid of strong women," they weren't interested because this woman didn't offer them anything they didn't already have. They already had lots of money. They already had financial and business success.
The letter-writer pointed out that the men who had shown interest were the ones that were younger and hadn't had the business success that she had. They were attracted to her because she offered what they didn't have. Unfortunately, the woman executive didn't grasp this, and for some reason didn't see that her situation made her much more attractive to pool boys than to Donald Trump.
This is the great tragedy of women's empowerment: The so-called women's movement has encouraged women to get specialized education and pursue careers right out of school. Feminists have said over and over that women can succeed at any business endeavor a man can. THIS IS TRUE. But what makes this message so damaging: Saying it over and over to young women has distracted them from remembering (or realizing) that they have a tremendous comparative advantage over men. This comparative advantage is their ability to have children, and it exists for only part of their lives.
If a woman doesn't particularly want to bear children, fine. But almost all of the young women I meet do have a strong maternal instinct and say they definitely want kids. Why don't they realize that their youth and ability to bear children are expiring assets? Why are they doing what you can do at any time (work in a business) during the only time they possess those valuable assets?
What if a recent college graduate who was the star striker for his college soccer team told you that he intended to play professional soccer in the English Premiership, but not until after he'd gotten his law degree and had established a successful law practice? You'd think he was crazy, yet women do the equivalent every day.
Here's a fired idea for the women who want to "have it all": Do it in the logical order, which is the reverse of what you've been doing.
I will expand on this topic in my next post.Now yes you in the back I will answer your questions now.
Press Freedoms Under Threat In Kenya
5 years ago
8 comments:
I hate it when some guy starts making sense of the liberation thing.
I hear you. You have a valid point.
It would not hurt for the 'wimin' to get off their high horses and listen.
@mutumia it has plenty to do with C.A as IN he will go for you and not the other if you have more of the stuff he wants. It is business at the end of the day. Really!
It is indeed possible to have a career and home life.
My honest opinion has always been that us men are naturally favoured by nature in that we can pursue "all" the education, career goals, personal interests etc without really feeling the pressures of being bogged down by the natural ability to bring forth a family.
Our women folk however aren't as lucky since whether they/we like it or not they have a biological clock that ticks loud as the 30s approach & a hell lot louder once into the 30s. A guy can put off having kids until his early 40s knowing he will have kids. A lady can hope to have kids in her 40s & isn't too sure she will.
I'm neither for, nor against the argument & I agree with Aco, Mutumia & Prousette for you all have valid points. Am not sitting on the fence on this...I point fingers at mother nature.
@ mutumia
Yes I do agree that you can have both career and family as I will show in my next lecture!
"Taking charge, problem solving becomes second nature if you're any good at your job. Which spills into our private lives."- yes the same aggressiveness that got you to where you are to jobo will not take you too far in the dating area esp if you want a man with the full ego.Men with ego are rarely attracted to aggressive women.Remember the saying about 2 bulls in a pen also oppossites attract.But just wait for lecture #2!
@ prousette
At least here is one person who has understood CA as i put it down!
Yes you can have a career and kids.Please read lecture #2.
-Here is a thinking point.Ladies you think that you become more dateable with more education,status and money?That is how we men gauge our success and appeal.We have another gauge for ladies.I have rarely seen a jamaa look at a chic and say, "oooh she is the MD of company X, that makes her so hot!"but more on that later!
Ti hi hi hi I know Mutumia is going to have my head thinking I';ve gone to the other side but by golly, kijana you have a mighty strong point there!!! It makes so much sense and goes to the basic principle of Yin and Yang. Basically we want someone who's got what we don't, who 'completes' us. C'est la vie.
Aii lakini you nailed that one! Let me read Next-ed and the second part.
You are very right. We need to face reality we all have a time clock and too many of us are waiting too late to use up our eggs!
The comment to Mutumia to put her hand dwn and take notes had me floored wth Kicheko!!
My guy, yu be hilarious!!!
Who says making mucho dinero is a sign of success? I know happy poor people and sad rich people...
We need to determine what the real definition of success is first!!!
The comparative advantage thing does make sense in this case of the self-made woman.
But there are many assumptions in play here that don't apply to everyone. First of all, women pursuing a career are not always going into traditionally male fields or into the corporate world. And while the ability to bear children can be an asset, it is also the source of so much pain and is a disadvantage in some lines of work. There's this assumption that a woman's job is to be a mother first. But not everyone is cut out for it.
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