A new crisis threatens the nation. Some women are upset at having been called “bossy” when they were young. This term is so offensive to them that they want the word banned. Yes, that’s right, they want to banish the word “bossy” from the lexicon, never again to be used in any context, even to describe a male, as so many did to Mitt Romney during the 2012 presidential campaign.
“Bossy” is now the
“B-word,” but must not be confused with another B-word, which arguably is a
more serious insult to women.
In junior high, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg recounts, a
teacher stopped her best friend and told her: "Nobody likes a bossy girl.
You should find a new friend who will be a better influence on you."
"This is a very negative experience for girls,” she
said. “If you look at my childhood, if you look at the childhood of most of the
leaders we talked to, they lived through being told they were bossy,"
Sandberg said. "And it has such a strongly female, and such a strongly
negative connotation, that we thought the best way to raise awareness was to
say, 'This isn't a word we should use.’”
Okay, so young girls were often referred to as “bossy”
because they told others what to do. But isn’t the term “bossy” really just the
reaction to a particular type of behavior?
If someone is “bossy,” doesn’t that imply that the person
thinks they know better than everyone else how things should be done? Maybe
they’re right, or maybe they’re wrong, but their behavior sends that message.
I have worked for and with women who were good leaders, but
were not “bossy,” and I’ve worked along side both men and women who weren’t in
a leadership position, but were plenty “bossy.” Being “bossy” is
gender-neutral, and is not a requirement for being a good leader. Having been
called “bossy” does not seem to have hurt Ms. Sandberg’s career.
So that begs the question: why would anyone be offended at
having the behavior they willingly exhibit being accurately identified? Wouldn’t
the offended person’s proper response be to modify their behavior so as to no
longer impress others as being bossy? Or, just grin and bear it?
Ms. Sandberg and Girl Scouts CEO Anna Maria Chavez expressed
the idea in a Wall Street Journal op-ed that using “bossy” to describe girls is
at the center of the problem of unequal treatment of girls and boys, noting
that girls who lead are more often described as "bossy" and
"overly ambitious" while boys who lead are described as
"strong" and "determined."
Perhaps men and women are perceived differently and receive different
treatment because men and women are inherently different creatures. We know
this because Time Magazine told us so after it had an epiphany back in 1992,
and thought the discovery warranted a cover story. “Why Are Men and Women
Different? It isn’t just upbringing. New studies show they are born that way,”
the cover announced.
Since the women’s movement in the 60s there has been a
strong effort for equality between men and women, particularly in the
workplace.
There certainly is no reason women cannot be doctors,
lawyers, accountants, CEOs, politicians, financial advisers, etc. And there is
no reason that if women want to perform those traditionally male jobs, like
construction, carpentry, welding, truck driving, mining, or be police officers
and firefighters, etc., they certainly can.
But while women may want to have careers, just as men do, nature
has placed restrictions on them. Nature has deemed that women are the only
gender that can bear children and nurture them in the earliest part of their
lives, and the mother’s role is a critical and important duty in our world.
Men cannot be mothers; they are not built for the job,
either physically or emotionally. Which is not to say men cannot play a
stronger role in parenting and taking care of the home. But they cannot be
mothers, and mothers will always have a different role than fathers.
And for that reason, mothers and fathers can never be
totally equal, either in the workplace, or in the home.
In Ms. Sandberg’s book Women, Work, and the Will to Lead,
which she called "sort of a feminist manifesto," she encouraged women
to "lean in" to their careers, yield to their sense of ambition and
don’t shrink when they incur challenges in their work-life balance.
Ms. Sandberg’s efforts seem designed to show women as victims
who are discriminated against in the workplace.
But when you look at the studies, they show that women frequently
choose lower paying careers than men, tend to prefer a better lifestyle to
working the longer hours required by many better paying jobs, and they take off
blocks of time from their jobs, often due to childbearing, more frequently than
men, which affects moving up.
Some of us try to equalize things that are inherently
unequal, due to situations that those on the short end actually have helped to
create.
Cross-posted from Observations
Cross-posted from Observations
No comments:
Post a Comment