When I was growing up my very feminist mother always told me that I didn't need a man to get ahead and suggested I could make my own way, and have a good quality of life, by achieving academically and professionally. I did that and went to the right schools and built a good career. I was also single for the majority of my life, for lots of reasons, but I never felt I needed a man to 'complete me' as it were.
I'm now in my 40s, all well and good and I'm happy with how things have turned out generally. However I don't have an amazing quality of life and as I look around I do feel like the women I know who are the best off got there through marrying well or just marrying young (and thus having someone to support them or a dual income), not through academic or professional achievement.
I appreciate that quality of life isn't just about money and I wouldn't change my life and experiences, but it does make me wonder when I look amongst my peers and realize the best off are the ones who achieved it by aligning themselves with a successful man. I suppose thus it has been through time - but it makes me sad that 50 years after Betty Friedan it still is thus!
And knowing this, what do I tell my DDs? Yes, do well in education and yes, pursue a career but the most important thing you can do to improve your quality of life is to get married, and ideally marry well? Perhaps it's not a meritocracy but a marriage-ocracy?
Please don't flame me - I am curious if others wonder/think the same thing.