JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Forty years ago this month, my sister sent me the following birthday card:
I found it when sorting and consolidating a couple boxes of old letters and cards that went across the Atlantic and from state to state between me, my sister, and my mother. I was feeling a bit melancholic, realizing that my daughters and I won't ever have this kind of physical record of our thoughts and conversations (who knows what will eventually become of our massive chat logs?)
Then I hit this card, and my mind did that record scratch thing.
This was a perfectly normal funny card to send in 1986. My friends and I, who all had masters degrees or were going to law school, lamented that we were never going to find husbands. Why? In part, because that same month and year, Newsweek Magazine came out with a cover story that put fear in the hearts of every single straight woman (or in the hearts of their parents, who wanted them safely and legally coupled.)
Yep, by turning 25, my college-educated self had reduced my chances of getting hitched to just 50%!
Of course, years later when sociologists revisited the study the Newsweek report was based on, they found it had ALL sorts of problems, and in fact, a woman was not more likely to die in a terrorist attack than find a man at 40.
But it says a lot about the American culture at the time that we all believed it. Somehow, despite our accomplishments and the jobs we were doing and the great social life of Washington, DC, my girlfriends and I had absorbed a message that our lives would only really start when we 1. got married 2. bought a house and 3. had a baby. Maybe it was just my group from college and grad school, but I didn't know any heterosexual young women who didn't want to hit these goals.
And that, thank heavens, has changed.
My oldest daughter wanted that triple achievement, but she didn't consider herself a failure before she tied the knot. She went out and bought her own house. I don't think any of her peers from Smith were wed before 30 (in contrast, my girlfriend who went to Smith got married at 30 and she was the absolute last one of our circle to do so - we were all biting our nails for her!)
My youngest wants marriage and kids, but at 25, she doesn't think she's anywhere old enough yet, and besides, she has to establish her career first.
The sense that having a ring on your finger was somehow the portal that let you into your actual life, and everything you did before buying a big poofy Princess Diana dress and dancing to 'Endless Love" at your reception was just a prelude? That's gone. (Although I'm waiting for those dresses to come back into style...)
Today, women at 25 still want to fall in love, find a wonderful, life-long partner, and go through the adventure of building a life with someone. But they know it's a part of their lives, not the whole bag of sugared almonds.
So we won't have boxes of letters and card, probably, but I'll take all those written-down memories in exchange for the sense your life belongs to you, before, during, and after marriage.
How about you, dear readers? Do you recall the expectations about pairing up when you were young? And what else to you think has changed for the better in our world today?
PS: I guess I let my history geek side too far out on Monday, when I decided to refer to The Very Tall Dutchman as VOC. (I have to get some use out of that masters degree.)
VOC, or Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie, is the commonly used abbreviation for the famous Dutch East Indian Company, the mercantile powerhouse that arose in the late 16th century and turned the small nation of the Netherlands into an economic giant on the world stage. Their ships were well known for venturing into exotic and uncharted waters and returning with treasures. Like, I imagine, my youngest daughter!














It was tough for women when I was younger . . . . Often, the expectation seemed to be that having a job [not necessarily a career] was sort of a "placeholder" until a woman was married and settled in at home . . . so glad that this expectation no longer exists . . . .
ReplyDeleteI kind of missed out on all of that - met my husband when I was 15, married when I finished college, then moved away so I didn’t see my friends going through that stress. While I did all of that, I didn’t feel pressure - it just happened. As a young engineer, I fought against the gendered expectations that I saw. The first I really thought about how the horrors of single life were portrayed was when I was reading BRIDGET JONES’S DIARY.
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ReplyDeleteWhen I was in college in the 1960's, everything was starting to change but had not changed yet. I see my generation of women, plowing through, breaking the barriers, with few of us actually succeeding in men's jobs and vocations, but planting the seeds, and watching the following generations grow and thrive and reap what we planted.
Just think of what Title IX did for women's sports! I went to UCONN before there was a women's basketball team. In fact, women at UCONN in my era competed in synchronized swimming and field hockey. That's it.
As far as husbands, I think that most people want to be loved, and find the ONE. I sure did. I had purchased a condo and a car and had a dog. I was in my 30's when I met Irwin and I wanted to be married, have a child, build a life with him. There wasn't a career I wanted more than that. Quite possibly, I would feel the same if I were young now. I was the "dinner on the table at 5:30" wife. It is who I am.
When I was at U.C. Berkeley, and struggling, I went to see a TA for tips about a particular course and how I should approach it. He actually told me, "Why do you want a degree? You're only going to get married and have children . . ." This was in 1965. It made me so angry that I was determined to pass that course, got a study buddy, a tutor, the works, and passed it. In a really backhanded, upside down way, he motivated me like crazy, although I wouldn't recommend that as a motivation technique. Really horrible man.
ReplyDeleteI graduated from college in 1974. In my cohort of college friends, we liberal arts types, both women and men, knew we didn't want the lives our parents had, but we weren't quite sure what would replace it. (The scientists went straight on to grad school.) We floundered for a bit, traveling, driving buses, tending bees, until each of us settled into a career. I always knew I wanted to have children, and I wanted a romantic partner, but that didn't come together until after I was thirty and had lived in Japan and then earned a doctorate.
ReplyDeleteSo glad your daughters don't feel locked into the expectations we had. And thanks for clearing up the VOC thing!
Loved seeing those cards Julia! I have boxes of old papers that I keep meaning to get to, when I'm not so busy!! I think our generation wanted everything and maybe even believed more was possible than really is. We see our daughter struggle with trying to juggle everything as well. It's still hard for younger women I think!
ReplyDeleteMy generation were all trying to be Supermom working full time and also caring for their homes and families. They were exhausted. And women who chose to stay home were scorned and their children were destined to be failures if they didn’t go to daycare and preschool.
ReplyDeleteAnd it was the birth of latchkey kids home alone after school until their parents returned from work.
DeleteYes, late 1960s expectations were different than now. Although not related to love and romance, a similar feeling arrived yesterday at my first dentist appointment with a new dentist, probably in her late 30s. As I told her how at age 8, after my first dental appointment (understand that now waiting this late to start a child at the dentist is “awful”), I went to dentist appointments by myself…small town, half a block from Dad’s business… and was just fine. We also spoke of that time when a title of Dr. meant you were a man. And, just another “antiquated” idea: if you taught elementary school, that meant you were a woman: a “Miss” if you were not yet “lucky” or definitely an “old maid”; a “Mrs.” if you were waiting for “your first” or passed the childbearing age. Ah, the changing expectations…Elisabeth
ReplyDeleteJulia, most/all of us missing your VOC reference is surely evidence that too much education is harmful to women. Groan, wink, wink. Elisabeth
ReplyDeleteAs a guy, I guess I don't really have to worry about all the considerations and expectations that were and are placed upon women to find a mate and produce germ factories with legs.
ReplyDeleteAnd to that I say THANK GOODNESS!
I've known since around 14 that I didn't want kids and had no desire to get married. (Or rather, give someone to take half my stuff for the rest of my life).
Of course, whenever I said that to anyone they'd say, "Oh just wait til the right woman comes along and then you'll be doing all those things." As if I was somehow incapable of following through on my plans.
And while those plans likely mean that I'll die alone and undiscovered until people realize I haven't posted on Facebook in a while, it's not like I have to be worried about beating eaten by my pets before the body is found. Since I took the step of not having pets either.
I may be seen as cantankerous and grumpy but, in this case, for the sake of my goals of no kids, no wife, I see those as positive character traits. After all, they are occasionally good for bouts of witty humor too.
In a million years I would never have guessed what. VOC meant! Ah, Cathy, although I almost always laughed at the comic strip and cards, they often made me cringe. And boxes of letters, cards, and phtos! I was 32 when I got married, 10 years out of college, nut using my not practical French literature degree but enjoying my job as sci-tech buyer at the BU bookstore. (Which eventually led to publishing) I had always assumed I’d get married someday, maybe, maybe have a child, and definitely have a job I liked, maybe a career. Mostly that worked out. I had no pressure from my Mom. She knew how difficult it all was. I”m currently reading “The Mystery of Mrs. Christie” by Marie Benedict and have been thinking about how difficult it had been for women who didn’t want the life that times and tradition dictated. And we’re still pushing for our rights!
ReplyDeleteOur parents never really pushed us to marry and have children. They tended to talk more about education and finding a meaningful career (although mom famously encouraged us to consider being plumbers--stable work that paid well!) I didn't feel a lot of pressure from them, although the expectation for girls to marry was certainly out there in the ether. I managed to buy a house and have a child without doing the marrying thing. There's a lot to be said for independence :)
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