Blueprint for a Woman’s Life
When I drive, I have arguments with people in my head. I think of someone who does not realize how smart I am about what I am smart about, and I go on tirades to show them how misguided they are.
And I realized one day, while I had a particularly long car ride, that I am actually feeling like I know what women should be doing with their adult life.
Most people would be too humble to say this. But I’m the woman who, after ten years in the workforce, built a career on telling people how to manage their career. So, it makes sense that after getting to age 45 I am ready to tell all women how to live their adult life.
To be clear, I have made lots of mistakes. But I like to think I would not have made those mistakes if I had had a blueprint for adult life like the one I’m giving you, right here. The blueprint starts at age 18 and goes to 45.
1. Do less homework.
Women do better in school than men, but school is not a harbinger of doing well in life. Other stuff is. Other stuff that men do all the time. For example, involvement in sports is a foreshadow of a great career. And video games are, too, because they are both collaborative and competitive–two essential skills. So do stuff guys do, and get grades that are as bad as theirs–after all, you should not be the hardest worker, ever.
2. Get plastic surgery.
This is the must-have career tool for the workforce of the new millennium. You will earn more money and you will have more opportunities for mentoring. Also, you will have a wider choice of men, which, of course, is another way to earn more money.
3. Go to business school right out of the gate.
Everyone has always wanted to go to business school right after college, but good MBA programs didn’t allow it. Now there is an unwritten rule that women can get in earlier because it’s so clear that women who want to have kids don’t really benefit from going to an MBA program later. If you get your MBA early, you accomplish a few key things. Not only do you set yourself up for skipping entry-level jobs, but you also make re-entry after kids an easier process because you have higher level experience before you leave.
On top of that, you are more likely to marry well. Men like women who are smart but not making more than they are. (I do not have a link for this. I have instinct.) Business school is a way to show you are smart, but you don’t make any money in business school. Side benefit: You will be surrounded by men equally as smart as you are but a little older, which is a good hunting ground. (Note: I still think business school is stupid if you are using it to actually become qualified to do something.)
4. Start early looking for a husband seriously.
If you want to have kids, you should aim to be done by the time you are 35, when your eggs start going bad fast. This means you need to get started when you are 30, which means you need to get the guy you want to have kids with by the time you’re 28. People who marry too early are very likely to get divorced. But by age 25, you are safe from those statistical trends. So why not marry early? In any case, start looking very seriously for a husband by the time you are 24. Here is a blog post that summarizes this argument and links to the research to back it up.
5. Milk maternity leave for all it’s worth.
Maternity leave is a complicated political issue, but whatever: For now, it’s your right, so just take what’s yours. Use all your maternity leave, and then make it very difficult to fire you when you return. Start a year before you want to get pregnant, by getting a job at a company that legally must give you maternity leave. I’m not saying you HAVE to take maternity leave, but if you don’t have any, you can’t decide to take it. Position yourself at that company in a job you can do with your eyes closed, in case you want to go back after maternity leave and work. Because if you are taking care of a newborn baby and working full-time, you’ll be doing everything with your eyes closed.
There is an incredible amount of research to show that there should be a single, primary caregiver for the first year. I know that’s not good for feminism. But none of this post is. So look, unless your husband is taking a year off, you’re better off spending most of your time on your kid and not your job. The way to do that is to take all the maternity leave you can and then keep pushing for people to let you keep your job even if you’re not really doing it. Make them fire you. It’ll take their legal department a long time to give permission for that, and you can be collecting a paycheck the whole time. The extra cash can fund the rest of your transition.
6. Guard your marriage obsessively.
Educated women divorce at less than a quarter of the rate of everyone else. Divorce is not socially acceptable for most women reading this blog. We have decades of great data (read Judith Wallerstein) to show that divorce permanently ruins the kids. Yes, it’s true, divorce makes life better for the parents. But kids don’t care. They don’t notice. Kids notice if two parents are paying attention to them, and that is one of the first things to go in a divorce. If you love your kids, you stay married to their parent.
This means that the wife needs to just bite the bullet and maintain the marriage. Stay-at-home spouses keep marriages together more effectively . I know: this is not popular, and not fair, but you do not need to make a crusade out of your family by showing that you can get a divorce and not fuck up your kids. So just bite the bullet and make sure you are keeping your husband happy so your kids can grow up with two parents.
7. Practice austerity.
Austerity is not fun. But you can call it something trendy, like minimalism or slow food.Your ability to manage your life will be nil if you are ruled by financial problems. So that means no big house, no expensive car, no huge vacations. You need control over your life more than you need that stuff. You have more career flexibility, more time flexibility, and more personal flexibility if you can keep your expenses way below what you earn. In this scenario, you do not have to fight with your husband about money. (You can fight about sex and in-laws, which are the other two of the three most popular fight topics.) Also, you can stay home with kids if you want to. And if you don’t want to, you can just be you and admit it. Don’t say you are not with your kids all day because you need the money. That would be a lie.
8. Do a startup with a guy.
Having your own company will give you tons of control over your life. It’s nice to have a funded company because then the investors are taking the financial risk and you are drawing a nice salary even when you are not really earning any revenue. The problem is that VC funded startups require 100+ hour weeks, every week. You should only do one of these types of companies with a guy.
Smart women in their 20s are looking for husbands and cannot be 100% focused on some pie-in-the-sky startup. Women in their 30s are having kids and trying to figure out how to work less. Men are more easily focused solely on work. That’s why there is a salary gap between men and women: Because women focus on work and family, and men focus only on work. Don’t judge. Just get a male business partner. The problem is that men don’t like doing startups with women—it’s bad for them. But still, you can try.
9. If you can’t get men to do a startup with you, do a lifestyle business.
A lifestyle business is one where the revenue is yours to keep. This is good since you will need to earn money, but it’s a little more risky for you personally than a startup because you’re not in it with deep-pocketed investors. Still, a lifestyle business is attractive enough to a woman with kids and a hankering for something interesting in the business world. Also, given the choice between no work, full-time work, or part-time work, Pew Research reports that 80% of women with children would choose part-time work. And we all know that the part-time work opportunities in corporate America suck. So a lifestyle business is the best path to that goal.
10. Homeschool. Your kids will be screwed if you don’t.
The world will not look kindly on people who put their kids into public school. We all know that learning is best when it’s customized to the child and we all know that public schools are not able to do that effectively. And the truly game-changing private schools cost $40,000 a year.
It’s clear is that homeschooled kids will rule the world when Generation Z enters the workplace. So figure out a way to alleviate mommy guilt by homeschooling your kids to get them on that path. You don’t have to do the teaching yourself. You can pay someone. But you need to get your kids out of a system that everyone knows does not work. (Note: I just realized this. This month. And last week, I decided: I’m taking my kids out of school.)
11. Spend money on household help and Botox to keep more doors open longer.
Look, it’s really hard to be a parent and still have an interesting life. Not for men. We have seen enough of feminism to be certain that men are not derailed personally by kids. (In fact, Catalyst reports that having kids increases a man’s earning power. Probably because he is then more likely to have a wife at home inadvertently performing the role of pseudo personal secretary. ) So the more money to spend to get people to help you with your kids, the more time and energy you’ll have to help yourself.
Also, as women age they become more invisible. I know, this is not nice to say. And we are told it’s only true in Hollywood. But since when has something that catches on in Hollywood not been relevant to the rest of us? Even pre-nups went mainstream. So the longer you can look younger than 45 the longer runway time you will have to figure out how to raise kids, hold a marriage together and still keep things vibrant and interesting intellectually. It’s no small feat, but Botox and Restylane will be your best teammates in this part of the adventure.
12. Break the mold in your 40s.
Women get more unhappy as they age. So you can say you don’t like the advice I’m giving. But look, in order to change the trajectory of women’s happiness, we are going to have to drastically change the advice we give to women about how to run their lives. Most of the news about women in their 40s is pretty bad, to be honest. But the good news is that you can change that, by living differently in your 20s and 30s than women did before you. And, if you are in your 40s and reading this, take solace in the fact that by the time women are in their 40s they are great in bed, so if you do nothing else, figure out how to have a lot of sex to leverage your hard-earned talent
PLASTIC SURGERY!!! I really hope you joke about that… for someone who has been in a Church.. you certainly know nothing of God. God made every woman exactly how she should be. I thought you might help me with my career issues… but you are one sad lost woman. And I sincerely hope that No one follows your Advice… You need God, cause you are seriously preaching some crap… Course what do you want from a .com website?
Wow. Where would I be in life if I didn’t have shallow idiots like Penelope Trunk giving me sound life advice? Up until now, I didn’t realize business jobs were the only jobs worth having. It’s not like people can be scientists, doctors, nurses, and engineers. I should have just gotten an MBA instead of going to engineering school!
BARF – this is disgusting.
I know this article is now several years old, but I somehow stumbled across this. I’m kind of glad I did for entertainment purposes only. With that being said I think you’re advice is nothing but purely disgusting.
First of all women don’t have to go to “Business school” or any school for that matter to be considered successful, or to find a successful career.
Secondly, plastic surgery? No. How about just taking care of the appearance you already have? This bullet point is ludicrous. I have no issues with plastic surgery or botox but not for the reasoning that you bring up?! Sure it’s fine if you want a younger appearance or to gain confidence in your life but not to appease society. You are a reason people are purging their food, or what is dictating that you have to look a certain way.
If we are all following the “rules” you have listed you should probably consider getting some work done yourself because you are nothing special sweetheart.
I would NEVER home school a child EVER. I severely place judgement on those who don’t let their children grow up in ‘normal’ society. Unless for a health or another type of severe reason not to. Children need to socialize daily to be able to survive in the real world. It is not healthy for a childs mental development to be home schooled? Home schooled parents…. they are the ones who get screwed.
LOVE this. Your wisdom just needed to be shared. LOL. I just wish I read this when I was young. I married at 40 gave birth at 42 started my career at 35. Geez I am exhausted. I know now why they suggest to have kids when your eggs are farm fresh. My daughter goes to Montessori and she LOVES it. Quite frankly they are doing a much better job than I can do. Kids need a wide range of healthy influences so they can expand their little spirits. I have a lot of friends who home school and it works for them. I may at some point ( middle school) opt for that but for now Montessori works for us. Thanks for sharing your brilliance.
This is a damn good post. You seem to hit the head on so many things that many women think, but do not always express. Finally, also someone separates the lifestyle business from that of the rest. I like to call the ‘rest’ W.O.W or With Out Woo. My favorite point was that of partnering with a man for a start up. It is beyond true, and in one area not mentioned is their tenacity and lack of fear when it comes to business, or as Sheryl Sandberg mentions ‘sitting at the table.’ Unfortunately women even start creating their own ‘tables’ and miss the boat entirely.
I’m turning 32 this year, and my sex life has always been… em… how can I put it? Uninteresting? I’ve just never had a good sex, not one.
As a man I’m a bit shocked by some of the assertions in this post. My wife makes more money than me working part-time and leads an active social life and does everything she can for the kids. She runs our house! And like alot of guys, sometimes I’m scared of her!
I don’t know, seems like the woman in this post is relagated to the closet and would have a pull starter attached to her. I also can’t imagine a relationship that succeeds by one party constantly biting the bullet! Do you mean this in real life?
And “Men are not personally derailed by kids!”. They’re not? (Mick Jaggar aside) Men are doing more than ever and I see it everywhere. With three kids and a full time job I know that I’ve personally told job recruiters to “consider me a working mom” and that I couldn’t take on too big a job. That’s because I was exhausted at the time from getting up for the kids when they were babies. Yeah dads do that too.
While other points in the post are good I see no point in women taking on the role of the botoxed martyr in order to stay married, of interest and to feel relavent. No issue with women or men taking botox if they want to look better. Point being the post just goes too far and hence sounds a bit out of touch.
This is just…appalling. And I truly feel bad for the women who took this seriously.
Very nice article Penelope. I really appreciate your frankness, you really let us all peep into your mind, and that is why i like to read your blog. At the same time, I dont agree with most of it, or rather I would want to say the blue print wont apply to me. Yes, I inadvertently achieved a few of them. But, not necessarily by the same method. start looking for a husband at 24, get married by 28 plan kids by 30. I have one son born to me just before i turned 30. I am turning 35 now and still undecided about having more kids. Ya, and I was in a job where I had the privilege of maternity leave and no one was going to fire me. I believe in giving my child the environment where he has both the parents for him, ie I too am against divorce.
But, when I see the methods, I am completely astounded, astonished, (my vocab doesn’t have an appropriate word for it). Enter a B school, to find a husband???? Plastic surgery???? Use men??? After reading the article I feel that I really am from the other side of the world, literally. And am I glad for that!! I belong to a different culture. (I don’t want to make it sound like a war between the cultures.) The relationships are based on trust. Unmovable, Unshakable. Yes, we do have our set of differences of opinions. We have to make compromises, but they are happy compromises. After reading your story , my story would seem like a fairy tail. But, its true. The divorce rates are very low in our society, to such an extent that it is looked at as an anomaly. And spouse don’t cheat on each other, again looked at as an anomaly. Yes, I try to keep my husband happy, its out of love. Basically, we on this side of the world are much more secure in our relationships. About children again, I feel its irrational to think “its irrational to have children”. You are completely going against nature. It is so silly you agree about sex (again a natural instinct!) but not about having children!! You were born because your parents had children. And having children is the only way your genes survive. You will die one day. Your children are an extension of you.
Anyways!! I guess I must have way exceeded my word limits. Thanks for a nice insight, and thanks for inspiring a thought in me.
Prabasini
Your article disgusts me. The assumption that Botox and plastic surgery are essential elements to life make me embarrassed to share a gender with you. the fact that you think that bagging a man is the most important thing (and that you think botox and plastic surgery will attract a man worth having) is preposterous. Your outlook on women and their role in the world is a major step back in women’s empowerment. I feel sorry for you and any unwitting female you mentor. Shame on you. I hope someday you can accept yourself and those around you even without a perfect nose.
Some of this the worst advice I have ever seen in my life. Good job grinding in social stereotypes for women.
I’m a 20 year old female and I am appalled by this “blueprint.”
2) Get Plastic Surgery
You argue that “dying hair” used to be philosophized about, but today is commonplace. My question is how does that even correlate with SURGERY. Scalpels, heart monitors, and surgeons are a much more serious level than chemically changing your hair for a few months. If I cannot further my career due to my looks, then that company needs to be reevaluated because looks will not dictate someones’ success at a job.
3) Business School
Follow the links, readers. Not only is she taking things out of context, she also makes outlandish conclusions. Seriously, read and evaluate sources. Please note that blogs of so-called professionals do not count in academia so take that information as you will.
Besides the sources, I’m all for business school after undergrad, but not because I’m “hunting for men” or about to have a baby soon after entering my career. Also, good job on the discrepancy about wage differences in men and women. In the post here a few months after this one (http://blog.penelopetrunk.com/2011/12/11/men-are-getting-all-the-vc-funding-and-thats-fine/) , you say that women in their 20s make more than men, but here you say that men make more than women period. Well which is it? Side note: 20 yr old women in big cities of only 2,000 companies surveyed make more than men in their 20s.
4) Marry Early
Interesting. Now you don’t take into account women who don’t want kids, those who medically cannot or advised not to, and those women are just plain not ready for the responsibility. Also, I know people in their mid-20s that are married, single, and dating and guess what? Those who are single or dating say that they don’t want to get married yet because they are still to inherently selfish to handle the stress of marriage. The few who are married are struggling everyday.
5) Maternity Leave
Not only is that an ineffective business practice to pay an employee to be out for an entire year, but everyone needs a break. Hiring a babysitter or daycare is a much better alternative for those who can afford it. Plus, many businesses have a limited amount of time for maternity leave and they don’t have time for someone who cannot make work a priority (notice I don’t say over the baby, just a priority).
6) Divorce
My parents divorced when I was 14 and I am a well-adjusted young woman. In fact, I was relieved that I no longer heard them arguing at night in their room. Now I sleep through the night, whereas before I only slept anywhere from 2 to 4 hours a night because I was so stressed that something was wrong between them. The key was that my mom talked it out with my brother and I so that we knew what was going on. Communication between kids and parents, who knew?
7) The way you say this is just flat wrong.
8) Business Startup with Male
I’ll be damned if I startup my business with a man just to focus on family because “it’s easier for a man to focus.” Hahaha. No. If a woman wants a business, she can damn well get it going with or without a family and without having to make it a lifestyle business without investors.
10) Homeschool
Great. That might work for your children, but not everyone can pay for or has access to homeschool materials. Also, while the public education system is not phenomenal
in the US, I have not found any difference except social abilities between those who have been in public school, private school, and homeschooled. Of course, I have a limited number of people so data cannot be generalized.
11) House Help and Botox
Amount of citizens in the US who are at or below poverty level: https://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/data/threshld/
There is all sorts of information here that lets you know that many people can’t afford house help. As for botox, either my man loves me for me, gray hair and sagging skin and all, or he can divorce me.
Overall there is only one phrase that succinctly says my opinion on your blueprint: Fuck that shit.
I remember being told all sorts of advice over the years about what I should do to create a successful life as a woman. Typically their idea of “success” did not match mine, nor does yours. Had I lived my life by their/your statistics and advice (especially unexamined stats and stereotyped advice), I never would have built the life I lead now. A life that meets my own standards of being meaningful, fulfilling, and financially successful. At 43, I have a loving partner who likes and loves me as I am (+ he always points out how women look better in the “before” shots of plastic surgery ads!), I became a successful and respected Creative Director doing what I love, and I spend a great deal of time inspiring and empowering younger designers and women in general to focus on finding what lights them up and chasing the hell out of it — in work and life. None of us have any guarantees that our choices will lead to fulfilment and success, not even if we follow all the rules and stats, or if we follow our passions and listen to our hearts. Personally, however, I believe my odds at being happy/successful are better if I make choices that match my external actions with my internal truths. Additionally, I would rather fail chasing my dreams than succeed or fail at chasing someone else’s idea of a good life, because “winning” in that case would be meaningless if it wasn’t a good fit for who I am and what matters to me. There are harsh realities in our world and I certainly have come up against all sorts of barriers that stood in my way (glass ceilings, beauty ideals that tear our souls to shreds, small minds, lack of vision), but facing those obstacles is one of the challenges of life. Some challenges we may not defeat in our lifetimes, but perhaps we will breakdown the barriers enough for others to do so after us —just like all the incredible freedoms and power we enjoy as women in the western world today, that we did not have access to only a few generations ago. As a Gen Xer yourself, I would have thought you would instead be raising the rally cry to “fight the powers that be!” I truly hope your readers recognize that women have a whole lot more agency to create full, rich lives for themselves than your post suggests.
Ridiculous! Am I in a time warp? I seriously think we may be back in the ’50’s….Mrs degrees, keeping your man happy, sacrificing everything…thank goodness my nieces are smart enough not to fall for this stuff.
This advice is contradictory. Get Botox ($400 / pop and you need to do it every 6 months) and plastic surgery to look young, but live way below your means? Give me a break – looking young for a long period of time means having a lot of expenses (well-fitting clothes that are not only expensive but probably need tailoring, gym memberships & personal training to keep a great body, facials to keep your skin looking young, etc). How do you do that and also keep a ridiculously low budget? This advice would be great if the author had actually read it all together instead of just posting individual maxims she believes in / lessons learned.
One day, through science and medicine, women will be as physically strong as men, and have the ability to grow a penis.
You will then have everything.
Would that make the you all happy? … finally?
The life of many women unfortunately, should have a plan for later life are better. Great article