October 30, 2005
What's a Modern Girl to Do?
By MAUREEN DOWD
When
I entered college in 1969, women were bursting out of their 50's chrysalis,
shedding girdles, padded bras and conventions. The Jazz Age spirit flared in
the Age of Aquarius. Women were once again imitating men and acting all
independent: smoking, drinking, wanting to earn money and thinking they had the
right to be sexual, this time protected by the pill. I didn't fit in with the
brazen new world of hard-charging feminists. I was more of a fun-loving (if
chaste) type who would decades later come to life in Sarah Jessica Parker's
Carrie Bradshaw. I hated the grubby, unisex jeans and no-makeup look and drugs
that zoned you out, and I couldn't understand the appeal of dances that didn't
involve touching your partner. In the universe of Eros, I longed for style and
wit. I loved the Art Deco glamour of 30's movies. I wanted to dance the
Continental like Fred and Ginger in white hotel suites; drink martinis like
Myrna Loy and William Powell; live the life of a screwball heroine like
Katharine Hepburn, wearing a gold lamŽ gown cut on the bias, cavorting with
Cary Grant, strolling along Fifth Avenue with my pet leopard.
My
mom would just shake her head and tell me that my idea of the 30's was wildly
romanticized. "We were poor," she'd say. "We didn't dance around
in white hotel suites." I took the idealism and passion of the 60's for
granted, simply assuming we were sailing toward perfect equality with men, a
utopian world at home and at work. I didn't listen to her when she cautioned me
about the chimera of equality.
On my 31st birthday, she sent me a
bankbook with a modest nest egg she had saved for me. "I always felt that
the girls in a family should get a little more than the boys even though all
are equally loved," she wrote in a letter. "They need a little
cushion to fall back on. Women can stand on the Empire State Building and
scream to the heavens that they are equal to men and liberated, but until they
have the same anatomy, it's a lie. It's more of a man's world today than ever.
Men can eat their cake in unlimited bakeries."
I
thought she was just being Old World, like my favorite jade, Dorothy Parker,
when she wrote:
By
the time you swear you're his,
Shivering
and sighing,
And
he vows his passion is
Infinite,
undying -
Lady,
make a note of this:
One
of you is lying.
I
thought the struggle for egalitarianism was a cinch, so I could leave it to my
earnest sisters in black turtlenecks and Birkenstocks. I figured there was
plenty of time for me to get serious later, that America would always be full
of passionate and full-throated debate about the big stuff - social issues,
sexual equality, civil rights. Little did I realize that the feminist
revolution would have the unexpected consequence of intensifying the confusion
between the sexes, leaving women in a tangle of dependence and independence as
they entered the 21st century.
Maybe
we should have known that the story of women's progress would be more of a
zigzag than a superhighway, that the triumph of feminism would last a
nanosecond while the backlash lasted 40 years.
Despite
the best efforts of philosophers, politicians, historians, novelists,
screenwriters, linguists, therapists, anthropologists and facilitators, men and
women are still in a muddle in the boardroom, the bedroom and the Situation
Room.
Courtship
My mom gave me three essential books on
the subject of men. The first, when I was 13, was "On Becoming a
Woman." The second, when I was 21, was "365 Ways to Cook
Hamburger." The third, when I was 25, was "How to Catch and Hold a
Man," by Yvonne Antelle. ("Keep thinking of yourself as a soft,
mysterious cat.. . .Men are fascinated by bright, shiny objects, by lots of
curls, lots of hair on the head . . . by bows, ribbons, ruffles and bright
colors.. . .Sarcasm is dangerous. Avoid it altogether.")
Because
I received "How to Catch and Hold a Man" at a time when we were
entering the Age of Equality, I put it aside as an anachronism. After all,
sometime in the 1960's flirting went out of fashion, as did ironing boards,
makeup and the idea that men needed to be "trapped" or
"landed." The way to approach men, we reasoned, was forthrightly and
without games, artifice or frills. Unfortunately, history has shown this to be
a misguided notion.
I
knew it even before the 1995 publication of "The Rules," a dating
bible that encouraged women to return to prefeminist mind games by playing hard
to get. ("Don't stay on the phone for more than 10 minutes.. . .Even if
you are the head of your own company. . .when you're with a man you like, be
quiet and mysterious, act ladylike, cross your legs and smile.. . .Wear black sheer
pantyhose and hike up your skirt to entice the opposite sex!")
I
knew this before fashion magazines became crowded with crinolines, bows,
ruffles, leopard-skin scarves, 50's party dresses and other sartorial
equivalents of flirting and with articles like "The Return of Hard to
Get." ("I think it behooves us to stop offering each other these
pearls of feminism, to stop saying, 'So, why don't you call him?"' a
writer lectured in Mademoiselle. "Some men must have the thrill of the
chase.")
I
knew things were changing because a succession of my single girlfriends had
called, sounding sheepish, to ask if they could borrow my out-of-print copy of
"How to Catch and Hold a Man."
Decades
after the feminist movement promised equality with men, it was becoming increasingly
apparent that many women would have to brush up on the venerable tricks of the
trade: an absurdly charming little laugh, a pert toss of the head, an air of
saucy triumph, dewy eyes and a full knowledge of music, drawing, elegant note
writing and geography. It would once more be considered captivating to lie on a
chaise longue, pass a lacy handkerchief across the eyelids and complain of a
case of springtime giddiness.
Today,
women have gone back to hunting their quarry - in person and in cyberspace -
with elaborate schemes designed to allow the deluded creatures to think they
are the hunters. "Men like hunting, and we shouldn't deprive them of their
chance to do their hunting and mating rituals," my 26-year-old friend
Julie Bosman, a New York Times reporter, says. "As my mom says, Men don't
like to be chased." Or as the Marvelettes sang, "The hunter gets
captured by the game."
These
days the key to staying cool in the courtship rituals is B. & I., girls say
- Busy and Important. "As much as you're waiting for that little envelope
to appear on your screen," says Carrie Foster, a 29-year-old publicist in
Washington, "you happen to have a lot of stuff to do anyway." If a
guy rejects you or turns out to be the essence of evil, you can ratchet up from
B. & I. to C.B.B., Can't Be Bothered. In the T.M.I. - Too Much Information
- digital age, there can be infinite technological foreplay.
Helen
Fisher, a Rutgers anthropologist, concurs with Julie: "What our
grandmothers told us about playing hard to get is true. The whole point of the
game is to impress and capture. It's not about honesty. Many men and women,
when they're playing the courtship game, deceive so they can win. Novelty,
excitement and danger drive up dopamine in the brain. And both sexes brag."
Women
might dye their hair, apply makeup and spend hours finding a hip-slimming
dress, she said, while men may drive a nice car or wear a fancy suit that makes
them seem richer than they are. In this retro world, a woman must play hard to
get but stay soft as a kitten. And avoid sarcasm. Altogether.
Money
In
those faraway, long-ago days of feminism, there was talk about equal pay for
equal work. Now there's talk about "girl money."
A
friend of mine in her 30's says it is a term she hears bandied about the New
York dating scene. She also notes a shift in the type of gifts given at wedding
showers around town, a reversion to 50's-style offerings: soup ladles and those
frilly little aprons from Anthropologie and vintage stores are being unwrapped
along with see-through nighties and push-up bras.
"What
I find most disturbing about the 1950's-ification and retrogression of women's
lives is that it has seeped into the corporate and social culture, where it can
do real damage," she complains. "Otherwise intelligent men, who know
women still earn less than men as a rule, say things like: 'I'll get the check.
You only have girl money."'
Throughout
the long, dark ages of undisputed patriarchy, women connived to trade beauty
and sex for affluence and status. In the first flush of feminism, women offered
to pay half the check with "woman money" as a way to show that these
crass calculations - that a woman's worth in society was determined by her
looks, that she was an ornament up for sale to the highest bidder - no longer
applied.
Now
dating etiquette has reverted. Young women no longer care about using the check
to assert their equality. They care about using it to assess their sexuality.
Going Dutch is an archaic feminist relic. Young women talk about it with disbelief
and disdain. "It's a scuzzy 70's thing, like platform shoes on men,"
one told me.
"Feminists
in the 70's went overboard," Anne Schroeder, a 26-year-old magazine editor
in Washington, agrees. "Paying is like opening a car door. It's nice. I
appreciate it. But he doesn't have to."
Unless
he wants another date.
Women
in their 20's think old-school feminists looked for equality in all the wrong
places, that instead of fighting battles about whether women should pay for
dinner or wear padded bras they should have focused only on big economic
issues.
After
Googling and Bikramming to get ready for a first dinner date, a modern girl
will end the evening with the Offering, an insincere bid to help pay the check.
"They make like they are heading into their bag after a meal, but it is a
dodge," Marc Santora, a 30-year-old Metro reporter for The Times, says.
"They know you will stop them before a credit card can be drawn. If you
don't, they hold it against you."
One
of my girlfriends, a TV producer in New York, told me much the same thing:
"If you offer, and they accept, then it's over."
Jurassic feminists shudder at the retro
implication of a quid profiterole. But it doesn't matter if the woman is making
as much money as the man, or more, she expects him to pay, both to prove her
desirability and as a way of signaling romance - something that's more
confusing in a dating culture rife with casual hookups and group activities.
(Once beyond the initial testing phase and settled in a relationship, of
course, she can pony up more.)
"There are plenty of ways for me to
find out if he's going to see me as an equal without disturbing the dating
ritual," one young woman says. "Disturbing the dating ritual leads to
chaos. Everybody knows that."
When
I asked a young man at my gym how he and his lawyer girlfriend were going to
divide the costs on a California
vacation, he looked askance. "She never offers," he replied.
"And I like paying for her." It is, as one guy said, "one of the
few remaining ways we can demonstrate our manhood."
Power
Dynamics
At
a party for the Broadway opening of "Sweet Smell of Success," a top
New York producer gave me a lecture on the price of female success that was
anything but sweet. He confessed that he had wanted to ask me out on a date
when he was between marriages but nixed the idea because my job as a Times
columnist made me too intimidating. Men, he explained, prefer women who seem
malleable and awed. He predicted that I would never find a mate because if
there's one thing men fear, it's a woman who uses her critical faculties. Will
she be critical of absolutely everything, even his manhood?
He
had hit on a primal fear of single successful women: that the aroma of male
power is an aphrodisiac for women, but the perfume of female power is a turnoff
for men. It took women a few decades to realize that everything they were doing
to advance themselves in the boardroom could be sabotaging their chances in the
bedroom, that evolution was lagging behind equality.
A
few years ago at a White House correspondents' dinner, I met a very beautiful
and successful actress. Within minutes, she blurted out: "I can't believe
I'm 46 and not married. Men only want to marry their personal assistants or
P.R. women."
I'd
been noticing a trend along these lines, as famous and powerful men took up
with young women whose job it was was to care for them and nurture them in some
way: their secretaries, assistants, nannies, caterers, flight attendants,
researchers and fact-checkers.
John
Schwartz of The New York Times made the trend official in 2004 when he
reported: "Men would rather marry their secretaries than their bosses, and
evolution may be to blame." A study by psychology researchers at the
University of Michigan, using college undergraduates, suggested that men going
for long-term relationships would rather marry women in subordinate jobs than
women who are supervisors. Men think that women with important jobs are more
likely to cheat on them. There it is, right in the DNA: women get penalized by
insecure men for being too independent.
"The
hypothesis," Dr. Stephanie Brown, the lead author of the study, theorized,
"is that there are evolutionary pressures on males to take steps to
minimize the risk of raising offspring that are not their own." Women, by
contrast, did not show a marked difference between their attraction to men who
might work above them and their attraction to men who might work below them.
So
was the feminist movement some sort of cruel hoax? Do women get less desirable
as they get more successful?
After
I first wrote on this subject, a Times reader named Ray Lewis e-mailed me.
While we had assumed that making ourselves more professionally accomplished
would make us more fascinating, it turned out, as Lewis put it, that smart
women were "draining at times."
Or
as Bill Maher more crudely but usefully summed it up to Craig Ferguson on the
"Late Late Show" on CBS: "Women get in relationships because
they want somebody to talk to. Men want women to shut up."
Women
moving up still strive to marry up. Men moving up still tend to marry down. The
two sexes' going in opposite directions has led to an epidemic of professional
women missing out on husbands and kids.
Sylvia
Ann Hewlett, an economist and the author of "Creating a Life: Professional
Women and the Quest for Children," a book published in 2002, conducted a
survey and found that 55 percent of 35-year-old career women were childless.
And among corporate executives who earn $100,000 or more, she said, 49 percent
of the women did not have children, compared with only 19 percent of the men.
Hewlett
quantified, yet again, that men have an unfair advantage. "Nowadays,"
she said, "the rule of thumb seems to be that the more successful the
woman, the less likely it is she will find a husband or bear a child. For men,
the reverse is true."
A
2005 report by researchers at four British universities indicated that a high
I.Q. hampers a woman's chance to marry, while it is a plus for men. The
prospect for marriage increased by 35 percent for guys for each 16-point
increase in I.Q.; for women, there is a 40 percent drop for each 16-point rise.
On
a "60 Minutes" report on the Hewlett book, Lesley Stahl talked to two
young women who went to Harvard Business School. They agreed that while they
were the perfect age to start families, they didn't find it easy to meet the
right mates.
Men,
apparently, learn early to protect their eggshell egos from high-achieving
women. The girls said they hid the fact that they went to Harvard from guys
they met because it was the kiss of death. "The H-bomb," they dubbed
it. "As soon as you say Harvard Business School . . . that's the end of
the conversation," Ani Vartanian said. "As soon as the guys say, 'Oh,
I go to Harvard Business School,' all the girls start falling into them."
Hewlett
thinks that the 2005 American workplace is more macho than ever. "It's
actually much more difficult now than 10 years ago to have a career and raise a
family," she told me. "The trend lines continue that highly educated
women in many countries are increasingly dealing with this creeping nonchoice
and end up on this path of delaying finding a mate and delaying childbearing.
Whether you're looking at Italy,
Russia
or the U.S., all of that is true." Many women continue to fear that the
more they accomplish, the more they may have to sacrifice. They worry that men
still veer away from "challenging" women because of a male atavistic
desire to be the superior force in a relationship.
"With
men and women, it's always all about control issues, isn't it?" says a guy
I know, talking about his bitter divorce.
Or, as Craig Bierko, a musical comedy
star and actor who played one of Carrie's boyfriends on "Sex and the
City," told me, "Deep down, beneath the bluster and machismo, men are
simply afraid to say that what they're truly looking for in a woman is an
intelligent, confident and dependable partner in life whom they can devote
themselves to unconditionally until she's 40."
Ms.
Versus Mrs.
"Ms."
was supposed to neutralize the stature of women, so they weren't publicly
defined by their marital status. When The Times finally agreed to switch to Ms.
in its news pages in 1986, after much hectoring by feminists, Gloria Steinem
sent flowers to the executive editor, Abe Rosenthal. But nowadays most young
brides want to take their husbands' names and brag on the moniker Mrs., a brand
that proclaims you belong to him. T-shirts with "MRS." emblazoned in
sequins or sparkly beads are popular wedding-shower gifts.
A
Harvard economics professor, Claudia Goldin, did a study last year that found
that 44 percent of women in the Harvard class of 1980 who married within 10
years of graduation kept their birth names, while in the class of '90 it was
down to 32 percent. In 1990, 23 percent of college-educated women kept their
own names after marriage, while a decade later the number had fallen to 17
percent.
Time
magazine reported that an informal poll in the spring of 2005 by the Knot, a
wedding Web site, showed similar results: 81 percent of respondents took their
spouse's last name, an increase from 71 percent in 2000. The number of women
with hyphenated surnames fell from 21 percent to 8 percent.
"It's
a return to romance, a desire to make marriage work," Goldin told one
interviewer, adding that young women might feel that by keeping their own names
they were aligning themselves with tedious old-fashioned feminists, and this
might be a turnoff to them.
The
professor, who married in 1979 and kept her name, undertook the study after her
niece, a lawyer, changed hers. "She felt that her generation of women
didn't have to do the same things mine did, because of what we had already
achieved," Goldin told Time.
Many
women now do not think of domestic life as a "comfortable concentration
camp," as Betty Friedan wrote in "The Feminine Mystique," where
they are losing their identities and turning into "anonymous biological
robots in a docile mass." Now they want to be Mrs. Anonymous Biological
Robot in a Docile Mass. They dream of being rescued - to flirt, to shop, to
stay home and be taken care of. They shop for "Stepford Fashions" -
matching shoes and ladylike bags and the 50's-style satin, lace and chiffon
party dresses featured in InStyle layouts - and spend their days at the gym
trying for Wisteria Lane waistlines.
The
Times recently ran a front-page article about young women attending Ivy League
colleges, women who are being groomed to take their places in the professional
and political elite, who are planning to reject careers in favor of playing
traditional roles, staying home and raising children.
"My
mother always told me you can't be the best career woman and the best mother at
the same time," the brainy, accomplished Cynthia Liu told Louise Story,
explaining why she hoped to be a stay-at-home mom a few years after she goes to
law school. "You always have to choose one over the other."
Kate
White, the editor of Cosmopolitan, told me that she sees a distinct shift in
what her readers want these days. "Women now don't want to be in the
grind," she said. "The baby boomers made the grind seem
unappealing."
Cynthia
Russett, a professor of American history at Yale, told Story that women today
are simply more "realistic," having seen the dashed utopia of those
who assumed it wouldn't be so hard to combine full-time work and child rearing.
To
the extent that young women are rejecting the old idea of copying men and
reshaping the world around their desires, it's exhilarating progress. But to
the extent that a pampered class of females is walking away from the problem
and just planning to marry rich enough to cosset themselves in a narrow world
of dependence on men, it's an irritating setback. If the new ethos is "a
woman needs a career like a fish needs a bicycle," it won't be healthy.
Movies
In
all those Tracy-Hepburn movies more than a half-century ago, it was the snap
and crackle of a romance between equals that was so exciting. You still see it
onscreen occasionally - the incendiary chemistry of Brad Pitt and Angelina
Jolie playing married assassins aiming for mutually assured orgasms and
destruction in "Mr. and Mrs. Smith." Interestingly, that movie was
described as retro because of its salty battle of wits between two peppery
lovers. Moviemakers these days are more interested in exploring what Steve
Martin, in his novel "Shopgirl," calls the "calm cushion"
of romances between unequals.
In
James Brooks's movie "Spanglish," Adam Sandler, playing a sensitive
Los Angeles chef, falls for his hot Mexican maid, just as in "Maid in
Manhattan," Ralph Fiennes, playing a sensitive New York pol, falls for the
hot Latino maid at his hotel, played by Jennifer Lopez. Sandler's maid, who
cleans up for him without being able to speak English, is presented as the
ideal woman, in looks and character. His wife, played by TŽa Leoni, is
repellent: a jangly, yakking, overachieving, overexercised, unfaithful, shallow
she-monster who has just lost her job with a commercial design firm and fears
she has lost her identity.
In
2003, we had "Girl With a Pearl Earring," in which Colin Firth's
Vermeer erotically paints Scarlett Johansson's Dutch maid, and Richard Curtis's
"Love Actually," about the attraction of unequals. The witty and
sophisticated British prime minister, played by Hugh Grant, falls for the
chubby girl who wheels the tea and scones into his office. A businessman
married to the substantial Emma Thompson, the sister of the prime minister,
falls for his sultry secretary. A novelist played by Colin Firth falls for his
maid, who speaks only Portuguese.
Art
is imitating life, turning women who seek equality into selfish narcissists and
objects of rejection rather than of affection.
It's
funny. I come from a family of Irish domestics - statuesque, 6-foot-tall women
who cooked, kept house and acted as nannies for some of America's first
families. I was always so proud of achieving more - succeeding in a
high-powered career that would have been closed to my great-aunts. How odd, then,
to find out now that being a maid would have enhanced my chances with men.
An
upstairs maid, of course.
Women's
Magazines
Cosmo is still the best-selling magazine
on college campuses, as it was when I was in college, and the best-selling
monthly magazine on the newsstand. The June 2005 issue, with Jessica Simpson on
the cover, her cleavage spilling out of an orange crocheted halter dress, could
have been June 1970. The headlines are familiar: "How to turn him on in 10
words or less," "Do You Make Men M-E-L-T? Take our quiz,"
"Bridal Special," Cosmo's stud search and "Cosmo's Most Famous
Sex Tips; the Legendary Tricks That Have Brought Countless Guys to Their
Knees." (Sex Trick 4: "Place a glazed doughnut around your man's
member, then gently nibble the pastry and lick the icing . . . as well as his
manhood." Another favorite Cosmo trick is to yell out during sex which of
your girlfriends thinks your man is hot.)
At
any newsstand, you'll see the original Cosmo girl's man-crazy, sex-obsessed
image endlessly, tiresomely replicated, even for the teen set. On the cover of
Elle Girl: "267 Ways to Look Hot."
"There
has been lots of copying - look at Glamour," Helen Gurley Brown, Cosmo's
founding editor told me and sighed. "I used to have all the sex to myself."
Before
it curdled into a collection of stereotypes, feminism had fleetingly held out a
promise that there would be some precincts of womanly life that were not all
about men. But it never quite materialized.
It
took only a few decades to create a brazen new world where the highest ideal is
to acknowledge your inner slut. I am woman; see me strip. Instead of peaceful
havens of girl things and boy things, we have a society where women of all ages
are striving to become self-actualized sex kittens. Hollywood actresses now
work out by taking pole-dancing classes.
Female
sexuality has been a confusing corkscrew path, not a serene progressive arc. We
had decades of Victorian prudery, when women were not supposed to like sex.
Then we had the pill and zipless encounters, when women were supposed to have
the same animalistic drive as men. Then it was discovered - shock, horror! -
that men and women are not alike in their desires. But zipless morphed into
hookups, and the more one-night stands the girls on "Sex and the
City" had, the grumpier they got.
Oddly
enough, Felix Dennis, who created the top-selling Maxim, said he stole his
"us against the world" lad-magazine attitude from women's magazines
like Cosmo. Just as women didn't mind losing Cosmo's prestigious fiction as the
magazine got raunchier, plenty of guys were happy to lose the literary
pretensions of venerable men's magazines and embrace simple-minded gender
stereotypes, like the Maxim manifesto instructing women, "If we see you in
the morning and night, why call us at work?"
Jessica
Simpson and Eva Longoria move seamlessly from showing their curves on the
covers of Cosmo and Glamour to Maxim, which dubbed Simpson "America's
favorite ball and chain!" In the summer of 2005, both British GQ and FHM
featured Pamela Anderson busting out of their covers. ("I think of my
breasts as props," she told FHM.)
A
lot of women now want to be Maxim babes as much as men want Maxim babes. So
women have moved from fighting objectification to seeking it. "I have been
surprised," Maxim's editor, Ed Needham, confessed to me, "to find
that a lot of women would want to be somehow validated as a Maxim girl type,
that they'd like to be thought of as hot and would like their boyfriends to
take pictures of them or make comments about them that mirror the Maxim
representation of a woman, the Pamela Anderson sort of brand. That, to me, is
kind of extraordinary."
The
luscious babes on the cover of Maxim were supposed to be men's fantasy guilty
pleasures, after all, not their real life-affirming girlfriends.
Beauty
While
I never related to the unstyled look of the early feminists and I tangled with
boyfriends who did not want me to wear makeup and heels, I always assumed that
one positive result of the feminist movement would be a more flexible and
capacious notion of female beauty, a release from the tyranny of the girdled,
primped ideal of the 50's.
I
was wrong. Forty years after the dawn of feminism, the ideal of feminine beauty
is more rigid and unnatural than ever.
When
Gloria Steinem wrote that "all women are Bunnies," she did not mean
it as a compliment; it was a feminist call to arms. Decades later, it's just an
aesthetic fact, as more and more women embrace Botox and implants and stretch
and protrude to extreme proportions to satisfy male desires. Now that
technology is biology, all women can look like inflatable dolls. It's clear
that American narcissism has trumped American feminism.
It
was na•ve and misguided for the early feminists to tendentiously demonize
Barbie and Cosmo girl, to disdain such female proclivities as shopping,
applying makeup and hunting for sexy shoes and cute boyfriends and to
prognosticate a world where men and women dressed alike and worked alike in
navy suits and were equal in every way.
But
it is equally na•ve and misguided for young women now to fritter away all their
time shopping for boudoirish clothes and text-messaging about guys while they
disdainfully ignore gender politics and the seismic shifts on the Supreme Court
that will affect women's rights for a generation.
What I didn't like at the start of the
feminist movement was that young women were dressing alike, looking alike and
thinking alike. They were supposed to be liberated, but it just seemed like
stifling conformity.
What
I don't like now is that the young women rejecting the feminist movement are
dressing alike, looking alike and thinking alike. The plumage is more colorful,
the shapes are more curvy, the look is more plastic, the message is
diametrically opposite - before it was don't be a sex object; now it's be a sex
object - but the conformity is just as stifling.
And
the Future . . .
Having
boomeranged once, will women do it again in a couple of decades? If we flash
forward to 2030, will we see all those young women who thought trying to Have
It All was a pointless slog, now middle-aged and stranded in suburbia, popping
Ativan, struggling with rebellious teenagers, deserted by husbands for younger
babes, unable to get back into a work force they never tried to be part of?
It's easy to picture a surreally
familiar scene when women realize they bought into a raw deal and old trap.
With no power or money or independence, they'll be mere domestic robots,
lasering their legs and waxing their floors - or vice versa - and desperately
seeking a new Betty Friedan.
Maureen
Dowd is a columnist for The New York Times. This essay is adapted from
"Are Men Necessary: When Sexes Collide," to be published next month
by G.P. Putnam's Sons.