Monthly Archives: April 2014

Marie Antoinette “Leaned In” and Look What Happened to Her!

I’m skeptical about the book, Lean In, by Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg and its affiliated women’s power movement. Let me explain.

I completely support the concept that girls and women should “lean in” and actively participate in “the conversation.” To be actively engaged in your life and not a passive bystander while others make decisions. To realize your full potential as a person…being as smart as you can be, exploring, developing ideas and initiating action, and so on. I believe in equal rights for all people, I just don’t think the world (not even the supposedly more “progressive” US) allows for fair and equal treatment and opportunities for women.  In fact, my direct experience is that if you are female and “lean in” you’ll have your head chopped off.  In some countries, literally.

In America, only 23 of the Fortune 500 companies have a female CEO; women only make 77 cents for the same job as a man who makes a dollar; and women have always held significantly fewer seats in Congress, and that number is declining.

When the economic crisis of 2008 was in affect, there was not a week when an experienced professional working woman didn’t contact me to say she had been “downsized out” of her company.  I didn’t know one man with similar circumstances.  When a man lost his job it was when the entire company went under.

While I have been fortunate to be a high ranking executive in my current and previous institutions, in both cases I am “training” my (male) boss. In both jobs, the man was placed in his position with the CEO knowing he was not skilled or prepared. I accepted my current job knowing this and taking the chance that my boss was going to become the next CEO and I’d move up into his slot.  (That didn’t happen) In my previous job, however, the CEO actually asked me to train a male “peer” who was later promoted to a level higher than me.

It’s not just me.  I know women all over the world who regardless of profession or age are “moved over or moved out” when they become more visible and more successful in their organizations. A good friend of mine from London, was the international director for an organization based in the US when the CEO began an obvious campaign to “improve the international presence.” She was allowed to save face and resign.  Rather than replace this very successful executive with an internationally experienced professional, the American CEO hired another American, a male with an “exotic sounding” name.

While I continue to hope that all people can have fair and equal treatment based on skills, experience and personal characteristics, I don’t see it happening.

 

This Day, A Collision of Joy

This day, a collision of joy
This day of birthdays and religious contemplation
This day of sunshine and happy smiles
This day I was touched when my teenage son came to take an afternoon nap in the sun with the cats and me as we slept curled up on blankets on the floor
This day I rode my bike which always feels like freedom to me, memories of my childhood when two wheels let me go farther away from my home on a safe explore and return before dark
This day I said several prayers several times for the sherpas on Everest, the teenagers submerged on the ferry and the passengers on the still missing Malaysian plane
This day I live knowing little things can change the world and we can all do them: no plastic bottles, no plastic bags, walk, eat less meat, be kind to all living beings…and all is living
This day I remember joy is a choice

Walking Flatlands To Prep For Mountains

I’m a very healthy and athletic person, but have a “desk job” with a long commute by car so there’s only so much I can do each day to walk.  I walk at lunch and now am adding an evening walk of one to two hours.  All of this is on flatland.  Actually, flat concrete sidewalks.  Not anything near what I’ll experience hiking 6-8 hours a day up and down 4,000+ km.

I bought hiking shoes this week with proper soft wool socks.  They help my feet and legs feel less stiff and tired. The thirty minutes of yoga after each walk is when I feel the real relief from mild aches.  How will I practice the intensity of what I’ll experience four days and three nights on the trail between Cusco and Machu Picchu though?

My husband suggested we go to Colorado this summer and spend several days hiking up and down various mountains. Good idea, but I wonder if that’ll be enough prep?  I think I just have to assume yes and prep my mind for success as much as my body.

Can’t We Just Walk?

Since I don’t speak Spanish or the local Peruvian language, and I don’t really camp, I knew I would need a travel company of some kind to assist me in my desire to reach Machu Picchu on foot. So far though my searches with Backroads, REI, and Intrepid have yielded results that all involve sleeping in hotels. Every night.

This probably is a more realistic option for my urban living, but the dream of this trip is to be outdoors.  Sit by a campfire, stare at the millions of stars, listen to the night noises… Surprisingly, my even more city-living husband agrees.  He wants to walk from site to site, progressing from Cusco to Machu Picchu, not take day hikes from each night’s hotel.

Stunning. My husband doesn’t like yard work or the beach and now he wants to walk and camp for a week in Peru.  I’m beginning to think this trip is more than just a hike in the mountains.