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posts about #haroldandmaude more →
Merry Widows, Sad Guys: Do Women Finally Have It Better?
Chemistry Lessons
| posts about #haroldandmaude more → |
Merry Widows, Sad Guys: Do Women Finally Have It Better? |
Chemistry Lessons |
07/13/09
Because I can only feel so much sorrow on any given day, and I prefer to reserve it for parties who were involuntarily disenfranchised in their own homes, not expend it on men who never learned to cook because they sneeringly dismissed it as "women's work." It's not like men feel sympathy for women who lack traditional "male" skills such as automotive repair. Men will loudly tell us we're blithering idiots if we don't know how to change a tire.
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My dad's the one that cooks, and so my mom subsists on Trader Joe's tabouli and digiorno pizza. That's of course that's the one night a week she'll eat at home if my dad's gone, because when he leaves I can set my watch by the fact my mom will call by 6 and pick me up to go to dinner.
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One thing that made that work was that essentially after living together for 60+ years they were roommates. They loved each other, but both led separate lives. They both managed to live well together, but his death didn't limit her options in life, and I am sure being with her prolonged his.
My other grandfather, who was a cranky old single son of a bitch, divorced young, died early, and nobody missed him much when he left.
There is no moral here.
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07/13/09
Is this true for others? I know that many woman handle home finances, but aren't long term investments usually the domain of men? What do widows do in the long run when they have to keep their funds alive during retirement? I think this could be one (of many) reasons you see that an unfair portion of elderly women are dependent almost solely on social security, because they don't know enough about investing to keep their private funds going. There's probably a lot going into that issue, but that seems reasonable to think it could be part of it.
So, in the end, gender roles hurt everyone, at every age. No poetic justice about that.
07/13/09
I really do think this is more generational, as I said below. I don't see this being a huge issue with couples my age in 50 years.
07/13/09
I sure hope so. I can barely handle my own finances, and I've spent entire semesters on retirement planning and social security. If I have to plan two people's retirements, I'll probably burst into flames from frustration. I need to find me an hombre who will share all duties fairly, because I ain't organizing his IRA, that's for f''ing sure.
07/13/09
Because of all this, my mom realizes her own financial vulnerability, and has been on me nonstop for some years to invest for myself. She nagged me until I started a retirement account at 25, and now at 29 she is my cheerleader as I buy a house in my own name, with no cosigner. She says she is so very proud of me just for being a self-sufficient woman who pays all her own bills and manages her own money. And heck, I'm kind of proud of me too. I just don't want to find myself in my late 50s realizing I don't have any assets for retirement in my own name.
07/13/09
Haha, that's so true. Honestly, saving for retirement is the greatest gift you can give yourself, because we're all reluctant to do it until it's too late. I plan on starting a retirement account as soon as I get a real (read: first out of college) job. My parents are wonderful people, but they told me that saving for their retirement is important to them, and that if I went to a fancy school, I would have to pay some of it, because you can take out loans for school, but you can't take loans out for retirement.
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07/13/09
Because, in short, we have a hard enough time getting people to recognize that the rigidity of these roles DOES hurt women that we lack time or resources to move on to men.
I'm not sure I think that's so bad.
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07/13/09
Besides that, though, the idea of losing my spouse, aside from the grief of losing him, makes me worry about being untethered in a bad way. I'm not the world's most social person, so I don't envision this social life they describe. I think I'd be alone a lot. One of the things I like best about being married is being able to have a family life that is less subject to the vagaries of friendship. But I really don't know.
I think Mr. JB would move back in with his parents immediately if I died. He hated dating.
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I think that what I've learned is that I have to be a bit of a pest about maintaining non-familial personal relationships, because nothing is taken for granted in them, but it's been completely worth it to build this network. And I don't think it's been made more difficult by technology; I think it's been made easier.
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I think this is a generational thing. When I think about the people in my life who are my parents age and older, I can see the married women dealing better on their own than the married men. I mean, my mom was away last week and my dad survived on canned soup and Hostess Snowballs.