>

AW Home| Jobs- Posting/Search | Search By Google - Web or Site | Advertising | Site Map | Awards | About Us

Workplace Strategies Home Page

Home | Job Search | Career Strategies |Employment | Resumes | Communication |Write |Successful Women | Business | Home Business | Entrepreneur |Loan - Credit | Web | Network | Balance |International| Book Store

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

Lynda Obst, the famed producer of such films as Sleepless in Seattle wept because the dinner she was trying to prepare was in a state of disaster, her guests were almost due and her husband refused to pick up the fish. When her friend, Nora Ephron, famous author of "Heartburn", called and said "Lynda, what on earth is the matter?" Lynda told her and she snapped back " Get a hold of yourself, Lynda. Call a delivery service to pick up the fish." And that is the lesson we must all learn.

One of the most important strategies you will have to decide on, is one which will allow you to balance work and family in every aspect of your life.

A Women's Chamber of Commerce Money and Power Conference, featured such luminaries as General Karen Rankin, Director of an Air Force Training Command; Lynda Obst, producer of such films as Sleepless in Seattle, Contact and Hope Floats; Liz Coker, a single mom with two kids who earned her GED at night school and launched Minco Technology Labs, now a $17 million dollar company, and Wendy Lopez; CEO of a Dallas engineering firm with annual billings of $5million and one of the 10 fastest growing Hispanic companies in the U.S.

What was the most pressing question on women's minds that day, and what did most of the discussion eventually revolve around? Balancing work and family.

That's right. It is a common misconception that as you rise up the professional ladder you escape some of the challenges which are common to all of us who wear many hats and juggle many chores: How to be two places at once? How to pick up your son at soccer when an emergency meeting comes up? How to get the dry cleaning when you're watching the oven?

> Lynda Obst, the producer , relates how she once tried to cook an elegant dinner for company. She had opened a cook book which, for her was like reading a treatise on nuclear physics; she was crying over an onion; her husband refused to pick up the fish; she was afraid to leave the kitchen because the rest of her dinner might burn; and she was terrified the guests might arrive while she was still unkempt and covered with flour.

At that moment, as she was in tears, Nora Ephron, famous author of "Heartburn", called and said "Lynda, what on earth is the matter?" When Lynda told her, she snapped back " Get a hold of yourself, Lynda. Call a delivery service to pick up the fish."

As Lynda Obst looked back on it, she realized that was the kind of trade off she was going to continue to have to make. She began to invest in herself and her career by spending more money.... in the beginning almost as much as she made, getting other household chores accomplished.

As discussed in The New Glass Ceiling,in addition to the burden of household duties, women must overcome the burden of being exclusively responsible for "child rearing duties at home". This is particularly tricky as most women are , by nature, more nurturing and more committed to caring for both children and elders. Men tend to not only assume this is "women's work" but, perhaps unconsciously, turn their care giving side against women in the workplace by use of such cliches as "women are distracted by motherhood, not sufficiently committed to work, unable to travel or work over time", all of which have been proved untrue by various studies, many of which have been conducted by Catalyst.

The fact is men don't volunteer to share 1/2 the workload for children or elders and women must demand it. Working is a full time job. If both you and a spouse have full time careers, demand that you both do 1 1/2 jobs, instead of leaving the wife with what amounts to two full time jobs: full time work and full time parenting. Off load some of the domestic duties by determining to pay for more of them: pick up, delivery, dinners out, personal shoppers, ordering online, whatever it takes. Don't accept; communicate, work it out, think of it as a challenge you must solve just as you do at work. Push your company, your industry, for more and better day care and elder care.

Whether it's weighing the decision to opt for a delivery service, or choosing a childcare or eldercare provider, bringing balance to our lives is one of the central concerns of women. Since our work lives are constantly fluid and in motion, our challenges at home constantly shift and evolve. Women must learn to look, not for a solution, but for a process, a way of addressing these issues that we use over and over as each issue arises. Just as we weigh the pluses and minuses of each course of action in work, just as we perform a cost-benefit analysis on our work expenditures, we must learn to bring this level of concentration, focus and discipline to our decision making at home.

Home | Job Search | Career Strategies |Employment | Resumes | Communication |Write |Successful Women | Business | Home Business | Entrepreneur |Loan - Credit | Web | Network | Balance |International| Book Store

About Us | Advertising Info| Content, Reprints | Privacy Policy | Sitemap

Copyright © Advancing Women (TM), 1996-2006
For questions or comment regarding content, please contact publisher@advancingwomen.com.
For technical questions or comment regarding this site, please contact webmaster@advancingwomen.com.
Duplication without express written consent is prohibited