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天天主妇和职业女性的吵来吵去,建议你们读一下lean in这本书
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2017-04-06 16:57:19
很多年没有一口气读完一本书了,也听说这本书很久了。终于把它从图书馆借回来,这几天几乎有空的时候就在看这本书,看完我在想,如果十年前读到这本书,我的人生会不会有很大的改变呢?我想会有的,因为我现在就想改变,也对自己的想法更自信一些了。强烈推荐板上年轻的妹纸们去读,特别是对自己的人生有更高期待的妹子,会对你的职业规划和择偶标准有很大启发。 这本书讲了很多关于两性平等,提到mommy war,就是家庭主妇和职业妇女之间的战争,说明美国社会也是和我们一样充满了各种互相看不起。我非常赞同她说的原因,两方都是不够自信,没有安全感,所以打击一方来justify自己的选择。如果你自己内心强大,非常自信自己的选择,不管做哪个选择都应该很坦然,会体谅做另一种选择的人。读过这本书的妹子来讨论一下吧
更新一下:大家不要又歪倒家庭主妇职业妇女之争了,我不该举这个例子。我想讨论的是两性平等
更新一下:大家不要又歪倒家庭主妇职业妇女之争了,我不该举这个例子。我想讨论的是两性平等
是的,就是因为很难,大家才有这么多共鸣,容易的话这本书就不会这么火了。我们不是要和这种名人比,重要的是和自己比,能不能勇敢地走自己想走的路。
那美国人的mommy war 是怎么回事?只能说人性是相通的
[url=http://nypost.com/2017/04/02/is-leaning-in-a-joke-a-scam-or-both/]http://nypost.com/2017/04/02/is-leaning-in-a-joke-a-scam-or-both/[/url]
Women, you lazy bums, you can have it all — if you just work at it. So said Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s seminal book from 2013, “Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead,” anyway, though the “lazy bums” part was implied.
With chapters like “Sit at the table” and “Don’t leave before you leave,” Sandberg managed the feat of writing a celebrated feminist work that essentially spent 200 pages insulting women to their faces.
In the years since, “lean in” has become a running joke to many, something with which women ironically tag their Instagram selfies. Here I am on a conference call after my toddler puked on me, #leaningin. Or: Here I am wearing uncomfortable shoes to a job interview, #leaning in.
Four years later, Sandberg admits little has changed since her book appeared — at least according to her metric: “We are stuck at less than 6 percent of the Fortune 500 CEO jobs and their equivalent in almost every country in the world,” she told USA Today’s Jessica Guynn. “There were 19 countries run by women when ‘Lean In’ was published. Today there are 11. Congressional numbers have inched up a tiny bit. And so, overall, we are not seeing a major increase in female leadership in any industry or in any government in the world.”
Sandberg is encouraged, however, by “Lean In Circles,” groups of women who get together to espouse Sandberg’s philosophy. If I wrote a hit book and rubes were getting together to promote my brand, I might be similarly encouraged.
Though perhaps I’d feel a twinge of guilt over plumbing eager women’s expendable income to boost my book sales.
Most susceptible to this hustle are previously overachieving women who feel guilty about their muted role at work because they actually prefer to “lean in” at home with their kids.
Sandberg’s marks continue to believe that women are suffering, penalized by men and unable to advance due to the unfortunate accident of their gender.
By all objective measures, women are in a great place in 2017, and it’s getting better all the time. Far more women than men go to college. Women are the primary breadwinners in 40 percent of households with children. In 2007, 90 women served in Congress, described at the time as a “record number” by the CRS Report for Congress. Today there are 104. There have been 50 women senators in the entire history of our country and 21 of them serve currently.
The problem is that it remains in the financial interest of many feminist leaders to keep us worried and feeling like we aren’t achieving enough. If you do think you’re doing OK as a woman in America today, you’re told to check your privilege and try to relate to a woman who is struggling. We end up grasping at straws trying to empathize.
In a USA Today piece this month about what women want, University of Houston political historian Nancy Young said, “My right to vote as an upper-class white woman with multiple college degrees is not in jeopardy but what about a working-class African-American woman or Hispanic woman?” Also not in jeopardy.
But saying that things are going well for women, better than ever before, just doesn’t sell enough books or get women riled up enough to march in the streets. Pretending our rights can be snatched from us at any moment or that women as a group are failing professionally are much more useful in keeping women agitated.
In her book, Sandberg admits that women in America are in a good place but laments that men continue to “run the world.” Her goal is numerical parity — that is, having 50 percent of CEOs and members of Congress and world leaders be women. But that’s a shallow form of equality, and a silly way to judge.
A truly pro-woman, pro-equality stance wouldn’t require a certain number of women be drafted onto various industry boards so snake-oil saleswomen like Sandberg can claim credit. The goal, instead, should be to ensure women have those options and letting them decide for themselves.
There’s just not a lot of evidence that a majority of women want to be senators or CEOs. Some do, of course, but we’re not matching Sandberg’s numbers because lots of women have other priorities — they value things Sandberg doesn’t think they should.
How feminist of them, and how backward of her.
beefcuurtain750 发表于 4/6/2017 5:13:52 PM [url=http://forums.huaren.us/showtopic.aspx?topicid=2153378&postid=74544330#74544330][/url]
Women, you lazy bums, you can have it all — if you just work at it. So said Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s seminal book from 2013, “Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead,” anyway, though the “lazy bums” part was implied.
With chapters like “Sit at the table” and “Don’t leave before you leave,” Sandberg managed the feat of writing a celebrated feminist work that essentially spent 200 pages insulting women to their faces.
In the years since, “lean in” has become a running joke to many, something with which women ironically tag their Instagram selfies. Here I am on a conference call after my toddler puked on me, #leaningin. Or: Here I am wearing uncomfortable shoes to a job interview, #leaning in.
Four years later, Sandberg admits little has changed since her book appeared — at least according to her metric: “We are stuck at less than 6 percent of the Fortune 500 CEO jobs and their equivalent in almost every country in the world,” she told USA Today’s Jessica Guynn. “There were 19 countries run by women when ‘Lean In’ was published. Today there are 11. Congressional numbers have inched up a tiny bit. And so, overall, we are not seeing a major increase in female leadership in any industry or in any government in the world.”
Sandberg is encouraged, however, by “Lean In Circles,” groups of women who get together to espouse Sandberg’s philosophy. If I wrote a hit book and rubes were getting together to promote my brand, I might be similarly encouraged.
Though perhaps I’d feel a twinge of guilt over plumbing eager women’s expendable income to boost my book sales.
Most susceptible to this hustle are previously overachieving women who feel guilty about their muted role at work because they actually prefer to “lean in” at home with their kids.
Sandberg’s marks continue to believe that women are suffering, penalized by men and unable to advance due to the unfortunate accident of their gender.
By all objective measures, women are in a great place in 2017, and it’s getting better all the time. Far more women than men go to college. Women are the primary breadwinners in 40 percent of households with children. In 2007, 90 women served in Congress, described at the time as a “record number” by the CRS Report for Congress. Today there are 104. There have been 50 women senators in the entire history of our country and 21 of them serve currently.
The problem is that it remains in the financial interest of many feminist leaders to keep us worried and feeling like we aren’t achieving enough. If you do think you’re doing OK as a woman in America today, you’re told to check your privilege and try to relate to a woman who is struggling. We end up grasping at straws trying to empathize.
In a USA Today piece this month about what women want, University of Houston political historian Nancy Young said, “My right to vote as an upper-class white woman with multiple college degrees is not in jeopardy but what about a working-class African-American woman or Hispanic woman?” Also not in jeopardy.
But saying that things are going well for women, better than ever before, just doesn’t sell enough books or get women riled up enough to march in the streets. Pretending our rights can be snatched from us at any moment or that women as a group are failing professionally are much more useful in keeping women agitated.
In her book, Sandberg admits that women in America are in a good place but laments that men continue to “run the world.” Her goal is numerical parity — that is, having 50 percent of CEOs and members of Congress and world leaders be women. But that’s a shallow form of equality, and a silly way to judge.
A truly pro-woman, pro-equality stance wouldn’t require a certain number of women be drafted onto various industry boards so snake-oil saleswomen like Sandberg can claim credit. The goal, instead, should be to ensure women have those options and letting them decide for themselves.
There’s just not a lot of evidence that a majority of women want to be senators or CEOs. Some do, of course, but we’re not matching Sandberg’s numbers because lots of women have other priorities — they value things Sandberg doesn’t think they should.
How feminist of them, and how backward of her.
beefcuurtain750 发表于 4/6/2017 5:13:52 PM [url=http://forums.huaren.us/showtopic.aspx?topicid=2153378&postid=74544330#74544330][/url]
it is not about how many people want to be CEOor senator. It is about if we should give in before we are limited, at least it is what I got from the book.
所以要看准老公,老公能够承担一半的家务。所以书里强调这个,也强调男性也需要读这本书。我的感觉是社会离真正女性解放还很远。如果你说妇女解放是折磨的话,搁在以前我们恐怕都不能上大学,也没有话语权
看样子你们的理解和我的不一样,我不觉得是鼓励大家都当女强人,有些人适合,有些人不适合。重要的是社会能够让有梦想有职业追求的女性享有和男性一样的社会资源。我觉得是要大家真正的有平等观念需要很多人的努力,不管你是当家庭主妇或职业妇女
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没想到大家都这么悲观。也许我是一个比较乐观的人,我一般愿意学习正面的一面。书上说的那种高度我肯定做不到,但是我愿意去学习这种态度,用在我们这种渺小的人物上,更重要的是教育我们的女儿,不要限制自己的梦想,对我们的儿子,让他们知道真正的平等对待他们的爱人
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