Betty Friedan's book, "The Feminine Mystique" is 50 years old this week. It changed the course of American womanhood. Most importantly, that book and others like it made my life possible. I knew what it was to be trapped in the home with few skills and the expectation of life long dependence. My mother's life frightened me to the core. She never really understood even though she tried. In 1971, when I showed her the name on my checkbook was, "Mrs. Robert Waskis". She said, "Yes, so?" With tears running down my cheeks, I screamed, "I have lost my identity! I am Dorine Andrews, not his shadow!" She sighed, returned to reading her paper in her recliner, and said, "I don't see the point. It's how things work."
I saw what being Mrs. Colin Andrews did to my mother. She ate her way through depression until he died in 1979 and she weighed near 250 pounds and would remain so for the rest of her life. I promised myself never, never to let that happen. I was scared. I was insecure. I scratched my way into a career zigging and zagging my way to financial security. I made many, many mistakes; had three failed marriages; but I also raised a daughter, built many long lasting friendships with women over the years, married a guy who liked my independence, and have gained the recognition and contentment I always yearned for.
My daughter took her husband's name without a thought of loosing her identity. She expects equal footing and she gets it. I am proud. Thanks, Betty!
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Dorine...how interesting that our experience growing up in the same exact time frame was so different. My mother, the first in her family to get any college and only the second to finish high school (she did eventually get a masters), and who traditionally took her husband's name, started volunteer work when I was but 3 and paid work when her youngest went to school. Not because we needed the money, although I am sure it helped, but because she needed to have an identity beyond wife/mother. She had been raised to believe that women deserved the same chance for education, she held a professional job during the war and she was not going to be marginalized. The first few years were very hard on her as women did not work after they were married and even if they wanted to jobs were given to returning vets instead. Consequently I never thought twice about going to college, accepting any career, or believing that I could be anything. The feminine mystique was a revelation to me because it was my first introduction to the concept that other women did not feel the same way. Janet
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