Former 2Day FM radio host Mel Greig talks about the hard choices modern women face.
On Wednesday I was involved in the Australian Institute of Management’s International Women’s Day debate team. I was a part of the affirmative team alongside two incredible women, Wendy Tuohy and Sara James. We debated over whether or not “Women needed to make hard choices to get ahead”.
ABSO-FRIGGEN-LUTLEY… Here’s why.
When I first read that headline I hated the words “Get ahead”… To me it felt as though women are one step behind the pack. The title made me feel that we needed to be ruthless to get ahead – like backstabbing other women to get to a higher position or giving up our family life to secure a promotion.
Top Comments
There's a fatal flaw in the question, I would argue. We wouldn't have to make "hard choices" if the status quo generating those choices was to change. It will take the work of all - men and women - to change the status quo Switch your focus to the root of the problem, not the branches, so to speak...
We all need to make choices, sometimes hard choices, but isn't the ability to choose what feminism has fought for? All decisions we make open some doors and close others, having to make a decision and accept the consequences of that decision (both good and bad) is part of life. Finding that some doors have closed to you is part of growing up (the potential to be the school captain disappears once you leave school, you may never have biological children if you do not have them before menopause). We all need to make choices, but the problem is not that we have to make choices, it is that we second guess those choices and grieve for the doors we close when we make particular choices. My hope is not that I will never again have to face hard choices, but that I can commit to these choices once I have made them and not be tormented by the "what if's" and regrets at "what could have been".