Quote:
Originally posted by Taualumna
What I was trying to say is that choices confuse us because whatever we choose, we are going to be criticized for doing so. Sure, I'll make more money if I go out to work, never marry or have kids (women without families make more money than women who do because there is less outside stress, making them more productive and are more likely to be promoted quicker than women with family), but my traditional relatives will always be on my back, asking me when I'm going to find a husband and when I'm going to have kids. If I choose to stay home, I might be criticized by my modern friends who are asking me why I'm not contributing to the family income. In a modern society, a stay-at-home mother isn't thought of as highly as someone who works. My mom quit her job when I was 12, and some of her friends started believing that she wasn't as up-to-date as they were about the industry she was in (technology) because she was no longer at the office.
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Fair enough. Thank you for explaining.
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"I have never made but one prayer to God, a very short one: 'O, Lord, make my enemies ridiculous.' And God granted it." - Voltaire
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