Everyone have
something to deal
I have never written anything about this topic
before. Perhaps it’s because I never thought about it or maybe I didn’t know
that this could be an issue with me. Growing up I didn’t have a father or
brother but five sisters. My mother was a stay at home mom. I watched her cook,
clean and take care of us while running a household. One of my mom’s brothers
helped us financially so mom didn’t have to work and back then it was common
for women to stay home and take care of the kids and house as the men made the
money.
Growing up my focus
was getting good grades, learning how to cook, clean, wash clothes by
hand, sew, and take care of my family’s needs. For example I needed to be very
supportive of my baby sister because I was older than her. By the time I
finished high school I was masterful in all of those things. In the cultural
perspective once you get married your husband will take care of you. Which
means even if you have a college degree you aren’t required to work outside the
house. That’s his job and yours is to take care of him, his families needs and
the kids.
When I got married,
my mother-in-law was also a stay at home woman. Her husband and mine both
worked. This was my first time living with male who was working and taking care
of their families. It was new and different for me. Now looking back I don’t
know if I was enjoying it or not because that’s what I had learned. But I
remember getting bored a lot. In the United
States it was and is common for women to
work. After five months of moving to America,
I asked my ex-husband if after he goes to work I could get a job. Since he was
gone all the time I would get bored, I don’t know anyone besides your family,
and I don’t have any friends. I am thinking about working at Burger King, which
was walking distance because I didn’t have a driver’s license. He said, “Sure,
if that is what you want to do I can take you there tomorrow so you can fill
out the application. At that time my English was weak and I wanted to improve
it. I worked in the kitchen. That was my first job in the United
States. I was very happy and worked there
for almost two years. When I found out I was pregnant with my first child, I
quit working and became a stay home mom for many years. I was one of the lucky
moms who could stay home with their kids and raise them without getting worried
about work.
But you never know
when things can change. When my daughters were 7 and 8 years old I got divorced.
It was very hard but not foreign to me. I had learned how to live with this
kind of situation from my mother. Right away I started taking care of the house
and the girls. I had always wanted to have a college degree so I went back to
school and got my Bachelor’s degree. While I was in school I started applying
for a job but there was a part of me that was very nervous. The culture I was
born in taught me that my focus should be only on children. It was a struggle.
When I saw other women working in big companies and having professional careers
I envied them and wanted to be just like them but I didn’t know how to.
If I have fifty people
at my house I can take care of all of them easily and manage to cook for them
and have a lively time. But if I had a company to run of fifty people I
wouldn’t be able to do it. I always thought that other women have those
skills, not me. Yet I still always wanted to do it, I struggled for many
reasons. One being that I am a homebody, I love being around my family and in
my home. In addition I didn’t have any personal models that had done it before.
I remembered when I
was in college my counselors asked me where I saw myself in five years. I could
never answer that question, I didn’t even know what they were trying to say. I
wonder how many women can answer that question. I have been working for the
last five years but every time I see a higher level job, I don’t dare apply
because I think that I can’t do it or that it isn’t meant for me. This is the
area of my life not many people know about it. I believe that just like we
teach our kids how to go to school, get good grades and keep their rooms clean
this is another area girls should know about when growing up.
There was a time
when women didn’t have to work. Times have changed and it’s not just about
making minimum wage for the rest of your life, it’s about going beyond your
limits and believing that you are capable of doing anything. Don’t take me
wrong. I love my job. I am working in a school as a teacher’s assistant. For
many years I didn’t believe I could make money like a man and raise my girls
because the mentality I grew up with was different. But now looking back
I wasted time for not believing that I
could do more than just clean and cook.
I am sure that as
humans we all have something that holds us back, it doesn’t matter who you are.
It could be related to a childhood trauma, culture, religion, family beliefs or
something else. You may have been struggling with something but aren’t able to
point it out. You feel embarrassed to talk about it or you may be in denial. It
doesn’t matter what the case it, it is there and will be there until you deal
with it. The sooner the better, because then we can look to make our futures
bright.
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