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review 2017-03-25 22:19
Opting Out
Opting Out?: Why Women Really Quit Careers and Head Home - Pamela Stone

I was intrigued with the premise of this work right from the beginning. Well put together and deeply researched, this book goes beyond the simple explanations to get down to the how and why of it all.

I have always hated the term "opting out" and I'm really starting to understand why. I feel like it misunderstands the choice. Opting out makes it sound like women are choosing to disengage from the greater of two goals, when I never believed that to be the case. This book gets into that part of it and even helped me put some better language to my own feelings about it.  

It begins by presenting the reason for the study and then spending some time detailing the reasons why this specific set of women were chosen to be studied for this. Stone exclusively studies married, highly educated, well off, and high achieving white women because they are, theoretically, the women with the least amount of barriers to success in the workplace. None are "opting out" for those reasons we attribute to those who are less off, which are typically attributed to child care costs.

Stone details several reasons why women are not staying at the same workplace they had their kids at and why some appear to be leaving altogether, even when some aren't. They do freelance work or volunteer locally at a professional level. 

The book makes the case that the women are more likely being pushed out of the workplace by policies that make it impossible to be good at mothering or that don't allow women to have a good relationship with their children and then are given permission to give up on their original careers by husbands who aren't under the same pressures to be available for their children and their boss in the same way and at the same time. Mothers and fathers are not looked at in the same light by employers or society at large, so fathers are not typically subject to the double bind that pushes these women out. I thought it was an interesting touch to see their husbands, most of which were similarly qualified at the beginning of their marriages, as a control group. 

The other issues that are discussed in this book alongside the why's and how's are that it's presented as a choice for women to work and therefore a privilege for women to not work. It discusses how it's seen by the women making this choice as an act of feminism rather than a defiance of it. There is also a discussion on identity and whether it is career or parenthood that identifies a person and how these women handle that question too.

Altogether, I found the book interesting and enlightening. It isn't entirely new information for me, but that's mostly on account of countless conversations with women who were also in the double bind and figuring out what to do. It didn't sound like a lot of these women had female peers to talk to about it but I have had plenty of these conversations with women who make significantly less but who are debating whether to continue difficult career paths and several with my husband as we discussed what to do when we were expecting our son. We had the same "one of us will be home with the kids" idea that some of the women in the book had, but ours came to a different conclusion. I was making more, but more important to our decision, I was under a contract that would have been near impossible to get out of. By the time my contract was over, my husband had been home with our son a few years and it would have been ludicrous to try to switch given other life situations.

This is a great book for anyone interested in researching women and the workplace, or simply interested in why women still leave the workplace for family while men still don't do it much. The end gives prescriptions for how workplaces can entice women to stay and reasons it would be good business for them to do so, but even the author has little hope of this happening any time soon.

Its pre-Lean In Movement, in fact, it's referenced in the Lean In book, which was where I first heard about it. It was only used as a reference to the way that women give deference to husband's careers, thus ensuring that husband's will be in better positions to be the one who stays at work after kids are born, but still an important part of the point that Sandberg strives to make as well. Coincidentally, this better position would also give husband's a better standing to bargain from in order to get more time or accomodations for kids, but that's not a typical expectation for them. We still tend to see male careers as important and female careers as options. Workplaces and society both do this and so women's careers suffer, even when the women are committed to them, even when the women don't have the option to opt out. Change needs to happen, but first we need to understand how our problems are created. This book digs in and looks at this one.

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url 2016-03-26 01:59
FREE at Amazon
Cupcakes, Pies, and Hot Guys - Pamela DuMond
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review 2016-01-31 02:16
Seasons of Us
Season of Us - Pamela Sanderson

Title: Season of Us
Author: Pamela Sanderson
Publisher: Independently Publisher
Reviewed By: Arlena Dean
Rating: Four
Review:

"Season of Us" by Pamela Sanderson

My Thoughts...

This was quite a interesting story by this author that featured a younger man [Zack] who was 22 and older woman [Shelly] whose age wasn't given in this story. How these two got together was unique in the sense it was because of a stray dog [Dewey] being found by Shelley that belonged to Zack. Zack was a professional soccer player there in this small town and Shelly was a widow who worked for her in-laws. The author gives the readers a sweet well written story about these two people and the dog along with some very intriguing secondary characters that were well developed, portrayed and believable where you will have no trouble keeping up with all that will be going on. What will happen when Shelly and Zack decide to get to know each other? What problems will that present to them and especially Shelly's in laws.I will say I loved the way the two main characters were able to talk and share with each other their feelings. Be ready for a little bit of humor along with some serious challenges that will deal with some conflict that will come into play in the story and the twist at the end was just perfect. Now, I will stop here and say you will have to pick this read up and see for yourself how well this author brings in all out to the reader. If you are into animals, sports and romance then I would definitely recommend this novel to you.

I received a copy through NOR in exchange for an honest review.

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review 2014-12-27 13:53
The Detox Scam: How to spot it, and how to avoid it
The New Detox Diet: The Complete Guide for Lifelong Vitality with Recipes, Menus, and Detox Plans - Elson M. Haas,Daniella Chace
The Fast Track Detox Diet - Ann Louise Gittleman
Detox for Women: An All New Approach for a Sleek Body and Radiant Health in Four Weeks - Natalia Rose
The Hunger Fix: The Three-Stage Detox and Recovery Plan for Overeating and Food Addiction - Pamela Peeke,Mariska Van Aalst
21 Pounds in 21 Days: The Martha's Vineyard Diet Detox - Roni DeLuz,James Hester

I hate pseudoscience. I hate books that try to sell bullshit and pseudoscience. 

 

So, all the books linked is bullshit. Crap. Shit writers trying to get rich by lying. 

 

Scam.

 

Don't buy it.

 

Detox bullshit is just that, bullshit. 

 

"Detox” is a case of a legitimate medical term being turned into a marketing strategy – all designed to treat a nonexistent condition. In the setting of real medicine, detoxification means treatments for dangerous levels of drugs, alcohol, or poisons, like heavy metals. Detoxification treatments are medical procedures that are not casually selected from a menu of alternative health treatments, or pulled off the shelf in the pharmacy. Real detoxification is provided in hospitals when there are life-threatening circumstances. But then there are the “toxins” that alternative health providers claim to eliminate. This form of detoxification is simply the co-opting of a real term to give legitimacy to useless products and services, while confusing consumers into thinking they’re science-based. Evaluating any detox is simple: We need to understand the science of toxins, the nature of toxicity, and how detox rituals, kits, and programs claim to remove toxins. With this framework, it’s a simple matter to spot the pseudoscience and be a smarter consumer."

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review 2014-04-26 21:11
Review: Hard Evidence by Pamela Clare
Hard Evidence - Pamela Clare

I did not expect to like HARD EVIDENCE half as much as I did. I knew it'll be a nice, fun, quick read to pass time with, as EXTREME EXPOSURE, the first in the series, was. But I never expected it to be be more than that. Imagine my surprise, then, to find out just how much I loved the characters and the story of this book, as well as the writing and the romance. So much so, that I finished it in one sitting! 

Nicely played, Mrs. Clare.

And to think I nearly forgot to review this one! Bless my soul...

This book starts off with a bang - quite literally.
One moment Tessa is buying coffee, the next a girl flies into the small establishment and the third - the girl is dead, and Tessa is left feeling she should've done something.

 

Well, she wasn't able to save the girl, but she would make damned sure her killers are brought to justice - no matter what it takes.
 
She is smartcaringstubbornresourceful and refuses to yield to anything, all of which makes you respect and like her. She's so very...
 
**To read the rest of the review, click the title!**
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