you. Boomer women are
reinventing themselves at midlife by choosing to follow their passions.
As little
girls we lived the simple life. Moms were at home caring for their
children and husbands; dads worked nine to five and dinner was on the
table at six. We jumped rope, played hop-scotch, married off Barbie and
Ken, and
played with our
Hula
Hoops and Slinkies. Violence in school meant the few boys who threw eggs
at the windows of their least favorite teacher. We practiced
duck-and-cover drillsBy Dotsie Bregel
There are 38 million baby boomer women turning ages 42-60. The sheer number of us is changing the image of midlife women like no generation before.
We
helped seed the modern day drug culture, had illegal abortions, and
protested Vietnam while losing boyfriends in battle. Some of us
burned our bras and helped spark a sexual revolution in the 1960s and early
'70s.
The second wave of boomer women benefited from the women's movement. We had
greater access to legal abortions and the pill. We led a metamorphosis from
housewives to career women. This group came of age in the late 1970s and
early '80s. We created the diet and fitness craze, but were also responsible
for ushering in a society that is more global in its thinking while becoming
more conscious of individual rights and our environment.
In the 1960s, when some boomers were in diapers and others entered
adulthood, society-shaping events took place: the assassinations of JFK, MLK,
Malcolm X, and RFK; racial riots; Roe v. Wade; the moon landing; and The
Beatles. Woodstock, the celebration of peace, love, and rock and roll,
codified a generational divide once and for all.
As young women we were told the world was our oyster. We should DO something
with our lives. We should never become dependent on a man. We were the
generation that could have it all, do it all, and be it all. Education,
Prince Charming, families, careers; you name it and we could have it. We
chose diverse paths. Some of us aborted our babies while others gave birth.
Some chose the corporate ladder while others chose to stay home. Some lived
together while friends married. Some of us divorced and became single moms
while others chose to stay in loveless marriages.
We chose to challenge ideas and reinvent lifestyles. We altered the
traditional role of the sexes as we played tug-of-war with work and home.
Believing the voices we heard, we attacked life with a vengeance, entering
the workforce while exchanging our roller skates for pumps, candy necklaces
for pearls, and wax lips for lip gloss. We returned to the workplace three
months after giving birth, pumping our breasts at lunchtime. The societal
expectation was for us to work. Our self worth was questioned when we chose
to stay home like our mothers before us. Staying home meant we didn't get a
pay check and chanced missing the next rung on that corporate ladder. We
felt guilty leaving our children in child care while our friends who stayed
home felt guilty for not working.
At midlife the 40s and 50s are no longer as old as we once thought. We are
more educated, spiritual, wealthy, and healthier than any generation of
women to precede us. We've changed society's expectation and continue to
redefine womanhood. We will be the biggest and richest market segment by the
year 2010.
At midlife we're transforming and influencing every segment of society. With
children leaving the nest, we have time to reflect. We're going inward,
hiring life coaches, exploring, and finding new direction. We're seeking
spiritual guidance and questioning if we've been true to ourselves or
society's expectations. We're searching for peace, solace, and direction for
the rest of our days on earth and the afterlife. We're seeking balance and
pursuing our passions. We're no longer obsessed with being who others want
us to be. We're finding contentment in who we are being called to be.
We've had more choices than our mother's generation and have lived and
continue to navigate uncharted courses. We are pioneers in our own right.
We're faithful, loving, and hard-working women who multi-task to survive. We
continue to better ourselves so we can help those who need us. We come from
various backgrounds carrying different baggage. We love our country, but
we're probably not the rebels we once were. We're trying to be all that we
can be.
At midlife we're celebrating and reflecting while experiencing midlife
epiphanies. We are wise women who have lived, loved, and enjoyed making a
difference. And will continue to do so.
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