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LizzieMaine said:My mother married a lazy shiftless bum in 1959, and after six years of it she told him where to get off, in no uncertain terms. She married a *violent creep* in 1971, and seven months later he found himself on the pavement. Ma didn't need anyone to give her a way out -- she made herself one.
During the 1940s, my great aunt worked as a longshoreman. She was stronger, rougher, and tougher than many of the men she worked with -- and nobody dared to give her any lip.
My grandmother co-ran a business for nearly forty years, while raising two kids and then helping to raise three grandchildren.
Not all pre-1980s women were passive pushovers. It's never a good idea to generalize.
You aren't kidding. People who think women back in the day were wilting flowers never met my grandparents either. My grandmother on my mother's side was as tough as any woman today. She farmed and ranched with my grandfather for many years. In fact, her business ability outpaced his. She ran the business side of farming.
My father's mother worked in the canneries here for over fifty years. She only quit because she broke her ankle in the 1970s. Cannery work was no joke. It was tough and hard work. She was not alone either as many women here worked in the canneries. Not in management?! She was head forelady at the Oakland Gerbers for decades until she retired.
Women in those days never had problems with men because they always knew that getting to point A might mean going around the back way or using guile to a greater degree.
I think the problem today is that most women do not understand how much they lost. They used to manage the households. That meant they controlled the money. They controlled their schedules. They had a greater influence on the next generation and they actually ruled the world through the influence they had with their husbands and children.
Now they work just as hard as men, die from diseases they never thought of having 50 years ago like heart disease and lung cancer, don't have half the time they used to and their children are near strangers to them because daycare raises them while they are killing themselves at work. By the time they get home, there is nothing left to give. Yeah, we really have progressed for women.
The better question is to ask your grandparents if they would rather have raised a family in today's society instead of their's fifty to sixty years ago. The time machine is open for them too. One way. To the present from their past.
Mark both sides of my family. NO.
Regards,
J