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Can we talk about how gender relations in the wake of layoff shakeup were portrayed in the media this week? And can we all just take a deep breath and get real?
In a bloated front-page profile in the New York Times Style section on Sunday, a headline informs us that a laid-off dad from Darien, Connecticut is "A Bit Lost." Scott Berry, the dad in question, lost his job as a technology analyst for a boutique investment firm in Manhattan in December 2007 and has actively been looking for a new position ever since. Meanwhile, Scott’s wife Tracey, who has gone back to work after a brief stint at home, balks at the prospect of buying her kids clothes at Walmart.
"How can you complain about my spending when you don’t have an adequate income?" Tracey asks Scott during their arguments. "How can you complain about me not earning an adequate income, when you can’t control your spending?" asks Scott. Less sympathetic is the anonymous wife from Tribeca who tells us that in her family it was his job to provide a nice lifestyle while hers was to run the household and the children’s lives. When he loses his Wall Street bonus and his income drops from $800,000 to $150,000 a year, she’s bitter and crushed. "Let me just say this," she tells the reporter. "I’m still doing my job."
Let me say this: I feel their pain. But is this Father Knows Best or the Great Recession of 2009?
On one level, truly, I can relate, and far be it for me to add insult to injury or poke fun at another woman’s unease. The other night my husband and I got into our first layoff snarl. It’s Day 2 of his official unemployment, and I’m a freelancer who works from home. Earlier that day, we’re making business calls in separate rooms. When I catch him lying down on the bed for a moment, I panic. Stupidly. Out loud.
"What are you doing? Hey there, are you okay?” I call out, holding my palm over my cell so my colleague won’t hear.
And he is. My husband is fine. It’s me who isn’t okay.
Indeed, I count myself among the legions of women in this country adjusting with less grace than they’d like to the new role of primary breadwinner -- for now. With a PhD and a consulting practice and a new book in the works, I’m relatively equipped for the job, and still it makes me nervous to have the burden fall entirely on me. Which is how men whose wives don’t work must be feeling right about now. So my heart goes out to the women in the Times article, in certain ways, and to their husbands, too.
But here’s where our stories part ways. When I married, I assumed my husband and I would both be earners. I assumed we’d be equal earners. I have confidence that we will be dual earners again soon. In the case of the women profiled in the article, the "deal" they brokered (He provides while She shops upscale and runs the house) is a hope less easily resurrected. And in truth, it’s historically naïve.
See more stories tagged with: gender, women, masculinity, men, relationships, femininity, recession
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