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Why do women find work-life balance so hard? Can women "have it
all?" Authors Detjen, Waters, and Watson probe these questions and
more in The Orange Line - A Woman's Guide to Integrating Career,
Family and Life. Through interviews with 118 college-educated
women, they document the ongoing work-life struggle and how women
hold themselves back with outdated ideals and rigid behavioral
rules. The authors provide tools for women to take a new career
path that includes work, family, and themselves, and to look inward
to claim their power."
Why do women find work-life balance so hard? Why is "having it all"
such an elusive quest? Why haven't women yet reached equality in
the leadership ranks? Authors Jodi Ecker Detjen, Michelle A.
Waters, and Kelly Watson probe these questions and more in their
highly anticipated new book: The Orange Line - A Woman's Guide to
Integrating Career, Family and Life. Through interviews with 118
college-educated women, they document real-world career stories and
daily life anecdotes about women's experiences in the work-life
struggle. In their research they uncovered how women trap
themselves with outdated but pervasive ideals and rigid behavioral
rules that define the "ideal woman." The authors named this
limiting belief system the Feminine Filter . Not surprisingly the
Filter contains the rules "Do it all," "Look good," and "Be nice,"
but nowhere on the list is the rule, "Be smart." Accordingly, the
authors call on women to turn their belief system around, not only
by starting to think and work smarter, but also to reframe their
assumptions and shed their guilt. The authors trace the
professional path women follow on their pursuit of career success,
starting with what they call the Green Line. This is when women,
mostly in their twenties and thirties, identify themselves through
their work, abandoning their own needs and exhausting themselves in
the process. The Green Line career, despite the external rewards it
may garner, often leads to a self-perpetuating and unfulfilling
life story. After time spent on the exhausting Green Line path,
many women begin to seriously consider the prospect of opting out
of their career. This might be to spend more time with their
children, or because of a job loss, burnout or a health issue. In
doing so they head off onto what the authors term the "Red Line"
path. Now they make their career secondary in importance or even
walk away from it completely, to focus fully on life and/or family.
In this book the authors describe a new career track opportunity:
The Orange Line. Women on The Orange Line do not need to choose
between work and life; they choose both and live both fully. Women
can use The Orange Line as a launching pad to create a robust,
whole life that integrates work, family, and self. Orange Liners
learn to consciously pace themselves and design a career path that
accommodates their own needs. They also take care not to "do it
all," but rather to assure themselves sufficient support in their
home lives to preserve and enable their creative energy. The Orange
Line is the most radical call to arms for women in decades. It does
not look to governments, corporations and other organizations to
change. Instead, the authors inspire women to look inward. That is
where women will find - and claim - their power.
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