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- <text id=90TT2973>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: The Dreams Of Youth
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ROAD TO EQUALITY, Page 10
- The Dreams Of Youth
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington,
- Elizabeth Taylor/Chicago and James Willwerth/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> A generation from now, if all the dreams of reformers have
- come true, a special issue devoted to women will seem about as
- appropriate as a special issue on tall people. This is not to
- say that by then men and women will have become
- indistinguishable, their quirks and cares and concerns
- interchangeable. Rather, the struggles of the last decades of
- the 20th century will have brought about the freedom and
- flexibility that have always been the goals of social reform.
- Issues like equal pay, child care, abortion, rape and domestic
- violence will no longer be cast as "women's issues." They will
- be viewed as economic issues, family issues, ethical issues, of
- equal resonance to men and women. A woman heading a huge
- corporation will not make headlines by virtue of her gender.
- Half the presidential candidates may be women--and nobody will
- notice.
- </p>
- <p> But what will it take to get there from here? As the century
- fades, women find themselves at a critical juncture, a moment,
- perhaps, for reflection and evaluation. The cozy, limited roles
- of the past are still clearly remembered, sometimes fondly. The
- future looms with so many choices that the freedom it promises
- can be frightening.
- </p>
- <p> The opening year of the new decade has richly sketched the
- dizzying choices of roles and values facing the next generation
- of American women and men. When Barbara Bush arrived at
- Wellesley College to celebrate motherhood and wifely virtues,
- she sparked a national debate among the young about what it
- means to be a successful woman. That debate was further fueled
- by the announcement by TV newswoman Connie Chung that she would
- abandon the fast track at CBS in a last-ditch drive for
- motherhood at age 44. Meanwhile, male role models are also in
- flux. Wall Street wonder boy Peter Lynch hung up his $13
- billion mutual fund to do good deeds and have more time with his
- family. What generation in history has enjoyed such liberty to
- write the rules as it goes along? Over the past 30 years, all
- that was orthodox has become negotiable.
- </p>
- <p> Young Americans inherit a revolution that has largely been
- won. One measure of the success of the women's movement is the
- ease with which it is taken for granted. Few daughters remember
- the barriers their mothers faced when applying for scholarships,
- jobs and loans--even for a divorce. Today's young adults
- dismiss old gender stereotypes and limitations. They expect
- equal opportunities but want more than mere equality. It is
- their dream that they will be the ones to strike a healthy
- balance at last between their public and private lives: between
- the lure of fame and glory, and a love of home and hearth.
- </p>
- <p> If there is a theme among those coming of age today--and
- a theme for this issue--it is that gender differences are
- often better celebrated than suppressed. Young women do not want
- to slip unnoticed into a man's world; they want that world to
- change and benefit from what women bring to it. The changes are
- spreading. Eager to achieve their goals without sacrificing
- their natures, women in business are junking the boxy suits and
- one-of-the-boys manner that always seemed less a style than a
- disguise. In psychology the old view that autonomy is the
- hallmark of mental health is being revamped. A sense of
- "connectedness" to others is now being viewed as a healthy
- trait rather than a symptom of "dependent personality disorder."
- In politics women candidates are finding that issues they
- emphasize may carry more weight than ever with voters tired of
- the guns-not-butter budgets of the 1980s.
- </p>
- <p> In many ways the 16 million or so women between the ages of
- 16 and 22 are the generation that social scientists have been
- waiting for. They were born between 1968 and 1974, a tiny but
- explosive glimpse of history in which the women's movement took
- hold. Studies of women's changing expectations have found that
- during those years the proportion of young women who planned to
- be housewives plunged from two-thirds to less than a quarter--an astounding shift in attitude in the flick of an apron. Child
- rearing became less a preoccupation than an improvisation,
- housework less an obsession than a chore. Young daughters
- watched as their mothers learned new roles, while their fathers
- all too often clung to old ones. They were the first generation
- to see almost half of all marriages end in divorce.
- </p>
- <p> Disheartened by their mothers' guilt during the '70s and
- their older sisters' exhaustion hauling baby and briefcase
- through the career traffic of the '80s, today's young women have
- their own ideas about redefining the feminine mystique. When
- asked to sketch their futures, college students say they want
- good careers, good marriages and two or three kids, and they
- don't want their children to be raised by strangers. Young
- people don't want to lie, as their mothers did, when a baby's
- illness keeps them from work: they expect the boss to
- understand. Mommy tracks, daddy tracks, dropping out, slowing
- down, starting over, going private--all are options
- entertained by a generation that views its yuppie predecessors
- with alarm. The next generation of parents may be less likely
- to argue over who has to leave work early to pick up the kids
- and more likely to clash over who gets to take parental leave.
- </p>
- <p> Wild optimism is youth's prerogative, but older women
- shudder slightly at the giddy expectations of today's high
- school and college students. At times their hope borders on
- hubris, with its assumption that the secrets that eluded their
- predecessors will be revealed to them. "In the 1950s women were
- family oriented," says Sheryl Hatch, 20, a broadcasting major
- at the American University in Washington. "In the '70s they were
- career oriented. In the '90s we want balance. I think I can do
- both."
- </p>
- <p> It is not that older women begrudge the young their hopes;
- rather they recognize how many choices will still be dictated
- not by social convention but by economic realities. The earning
- power of young families fell steadily during the '80s, so that
- two incomes are a necessity, not a luxury, and a precarious
- economy promises only more pain. When factories cut back, women
- are often the first to be laid off. As Washington battles its
- deficits, cutting away at food, health and child-care programs,
- it is poor women who will feel the hardest pinch.
- </p>
- <p> These prospects are not all lost on young people: there is
- plenty of room for realism between their dreams and their fears.
- A TIME poll of 505 men and women ages 18 to 24 by Yankelovich
- Clancy Shulman found that 4 out of 5 believed it was difficult
- to juggle work and family, and that too much pressure was placed
- on women to bear the burdens. But among those with the education
- to enter the professions, the response often comes in the form
- of demands. "What's different between these women and my
- generation," says Leslie Wolfe, 46, executive director of the
- Center for Women Policy Studies in Washington, "is that they
- say, `I don't want to work 70 hours a week, but I want to be
- vice president, and you have to change.' We kept our mouths shut
- and followed the rules. They want different rules."
- </p>
- <p> And if the economy cooperates, they may just pull it off,
- with some help from demographics. This baby-bust generation is
- about one-third smaller than the baby boomers who came before,
- which means that employers competing for skilled workers will
- be drawing from a smaller pool. Today's young people hope that
- that fact, combined with some corporate consciousness raising
- about the importance of families, will give them bargaining
- power for longer vacations, more generous parental leaves and
- more flexible working conditions.
- </p>
- <p> Employers who listen carefully will hear the shift of
- priorities. Many college students, while nervous about their
- economic prospects, are equally wary of the fast lane. "We have
- a fear of being like the generation before us, which lost
- itself," says Julia Parsons, 24, a second-year law student at
- Georgetown University Law Center. "I don't want to find myself
- at 35 with no family. It's a big fear." Big enough, it seems,
- to account for a marked shift away from 1980s-style workaholism.
- The TIME poll found that 51% put having a long and happy
- marriage and raising well-adjusted children ahead of career
- success (29%).
- </p>
- <p> The men are often just as eager as women to escape the
- pressure of traditional roles. "The women's movement has been
- a positive force," says Scott Mabry, a 22-year-old Kenyon
- College graduate. "Men have a new appreciation of women as
- people, more than just sex objects, wives, mothers." TIME's poll
- found that 86% of young men were looking for a spouse who was
- ambitious and hardworking; an astonishing 48% expressed an
- interest in staying home with their children. "I don't mind
- being the first one to stay home," says Ernesto Fuentes, a high
- school student in Los Angeles' working-class Echo Park
- district. "The girl can succeed. It's cool with me."
- </p>
- <p> For their part, many women fully expect to do their share
- as breadwinners, though not necessarily out of personal choice
- so much as financial need. "Of course we will work," says
- Kimberly Heimert, 21, of Germantown, Tenn., a senior at American
- University. "What are we going to do? Stay at home? When I get
- married, I expect to contribute 50% of my family's income."
- </p>
- <p> When asked how family life will fit into their ambitious
- plans, young people wax creative. Many want to be independent
- contractors, working at home at their own hours. Some talk of
- "sequencing": rather than interrupting a career to stay home
- with children, they plan to marry early, have children quickly
- and think about work later. "I'll get into my career afterward,"
- says Sheri Davis, 21, a senior at the University of Southern
- California. "I'm not willing to have children and put them in
- day care. I've baby-sat for years and taken kids to day-care
- centers. They just hang on my legs and cry. I can't do that."
- Other women claim to be searching for the perfect
- equal-opportunity mate. Melissa Zipnick, 26, a kindergarten
- teacher in Los Angeles, saw her own working mom wear herself out
- "catering" to her father and brother. "I intend to be married
- to someone who will share all the responsibilities," she vows.
- </p>
- <p> But such demands and expectations are accompanied by a
- nagging sense of the obstacles. The fear of divorce, for
- instance, hangs heavily over young men and women. Nearly
- three-quarters of those in the TIME poll said that having a good
- marriage today is difficult or very difficult. More than half
- would not choose a marriage like their parents', and 85% think
- they are even more likely to see their marriages end in divorce
- than did their parents' generation. "A lot of my friends'
- parents are divorced," says Georgetown's Parsons. "In most
- cases it happened when the mother was trying to decide whether
- to stay home or go to work. And the women were left so
- vulnerable." Careers become a form of insurance. "I don't want
- to depend on anybody," says Kellie Moore, 19, a U.S.C. junior
- who plans to get a business degree. "I have friends who have
- already set up their own credit structure because they watched
- their mothers try to set one up after a divorce."
- </p>
- <p> Given this combination of goals and fears, young women would
- appear to be disciples of feminism, embracing the movement as
- a means of sorting out social change. But while the goals are
- applauded by three-quarters of young people, the feminist label
- is viewed with disdain and alarm; the name Gloria Steinem is
- uttered as an epithet. Some young people reject the movement on
- principle: "The whole women's movement is pushing the career
- women," says Kathy Smith, 19, a sophomore at Vanderbilt, "and
- making light of being a homemaker."
- </p>
- <p> Others feel that the battle belonged to a different
- generation, without realizing that the very existence of a
- debate about family leave, abortion, flextime and affirmative
- action is the fruit of an ongoing revolution. Minority women
- seem to be the group least likely to abandon the feminist label,
- perhaps because they are most aware of how many critical battles
- remain to be fought. In fact, argues Stephanie Batiste, 18, a
- black freshman at Princeton, "minority women are almost a
- separate women's movement...You're very alone. You get a lot
- less support."
- </p>
- <p> Here, then, is a goal for the women's movement: the
- education of the next generation of daughters in a better
- understanding of their inheritance, their opportunities and
- their obligations. And there are lessons to learn in return.
- Speaking of the new generation, Leslie Wolfe of the Women Policy
- Studies Center says, "I think they are more savvy than we were,
- about sexism, about discrimination, about balancing work and
- family, about sex." They may be wiser, too, about seizing fresh
- opportunities without losing sight of tradition. Historian Doris
- Kearns Goodwin once wrote of a woman's dream: "The special
- heritage of values and priorities that have been traditionally
- associated with women as wives and mothers can be seen as
- sources of strength to create an enlarged vision of society."
- A society so enlarged and strengthened will make more room for
- everyone's dreams.
- </p>
- <p>WOMEN ON WOMEN
- </p>
- <p> "Whatever women do, they must do twice as well as men to
- be thought half as good. Luckily, this is not difficult."
- </p>
- <p>-- CHARLOTTE WHITTON, FORMER MAYOR OF OTTAWA
- </p>
- <p> "Beware of the man who praises women's liberation; he is
- about to quit his job."
- </p>
- <p>-- ERICA JONG, NOVELIST
- </p>
- <p> "No one should have to dance backward all their lives."
- </p>
- <p>-- JILL RUCKELSHAUS, FORMER OFFICER, U.S. COMMISSION ON
- CIVIL RIGHTS
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-