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Hannah Lang's avatar

Reading this nearly two years later, but found it so encouraging. Thanks for writing it and the following series! I want to send this to every college girl trying to plan out their life (relevant for far beyond college too). I am grateful I saw a lot of this modeled in my own mom who shifted in and out of paid work throughout my childhood. And now I've been able to get creative and (with family support) build out a life of work and mothering that has gone really well so far with my first baby. I also loved the casual "hostage negotiation" mention, because somehow that was the result of the career test they made us take in eighth grade and I thought it was so random. I guess there's time to pivot in that direction one day, haha.

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Haley Baumeister's avatar

All this is gold!! There's so much in here to mine and consider.

And I love that in a single post, you manage to link to The Reactionary Feminist, The Deleted Scenes, and The Blue Scholar, among other folks I admire and read. :) I think you shared her piece on homemakers, but Ivana Greco has some great stuff on supporting the fluid and eclectic way the modern worker (and parents) can better be supported with changes in policy. Because yes, this is not the Boomer's cut-and-dry, pension-secure world anymore. https://thehomefront.substack.com/archive

I am in the throes of parenting little ones, and never wanted a "career". I've had many people-focused jobs in the past. But the past few years have taught me so much about myself and am now dreaming about ways I can incorporate using my gifts and desires into (most likely) non-traditional work down the road. I suppose these days there really are more options than in the past. You mention looking at role models, and that has heartened me *so* much to see women (especially mothers) showing that constructing a life of family and work is not a zero-sum game. It might be delayed, it might be very very little in the early years of parenting, it might be remote, or any other combination. But I love seeing the drive of women who have gotten creative while knowing what they *actually* want - and it's rarely a one-track, full-time out-of-home job.

So, these are things I've actively been thinking about in recent years and would be a perfect candidate for your Clarity consulting. ha!

Thanks for this.

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