LAUREN CARSE:
I love how confident and self-assured she is, because I think it was quite unusual for a woman to be that way in the FIFTIES.
I know many of my readers were young in the fifties as was I. In 1958, I graduated from high school and went off to college. Sadly, I had wrecked my friend's car in July, hit a car that pulled out in front of me, and fractured vertebrae in my back. My mother insisted I see her doctor, a surgeon, who decided to have me wear a metal back brace from my chest to my lower back. I know now that it was the worst mistake we could have made. I entered college in September wearing this brace and wearing clothes made by Mother from patterns that had no waist line. The blouses were straight from shoulders to hem line, about mid hip.
I had no confidence in myself. I felt I looked like some weird person who could not bend at the waist. In fact, I could not bend at the waist. I felt ugly.
But, I met girls in my dorm who were very confident and self-assured. One of them was my suite-mate, Peggy D. She said she was from Washington, DC and was the daughter of a high ranking officer in the military. She had grown up moving from one city to another and from one school to another. She was a pretty girl with long black hair. She had a nice shape, rounded but not over weight. In fact, Peggy was as tall as I was, physically strong and extremely intelligent. I often wondered how she ended up in an all-girl school in Milledgeville, GA. She talked very little about her family, and I realize now that I don't know anything about them.
Our first year at Georgia State College for Women, I wanted to be independent and break rules, feel free to do things I had never done at home, but I lacked the courage to rebel. Peggy bought cigarettes, and at night she persuaded me to sit in our open windows and smoke. My sweet roommate, Catherine, a preacher's daughter, thought we were going to hell in a hand basket, I'm sure. Catherine was a very good girl who followed authority without question.
Peggy and I became best friends and signed up to share a room our sophomore year. While we were freshmen, she introduced me to a friend of her boyfriend. I was still in my back brace, but this young man, Richard, wanted to meet me. For the next two years, he and I were a couple. Both Richard and Peggy's boyfriend were officers at the military school. My life was good. I made many friends at GSCW, and I should have stayed there until I graduated.
Peggy did not lack confidence in herself. She planned to go to medical school, and I believe she did become a doctor and lived out west. We lost contact after I transferred to the University of Georgia.
I
knew other girls who went on to good careers, but many simply found a husband
and settled down as they were expected to do. Sadly, some left college to get married and later were divorced with children and it was not possible to get their education. I am happy to find some of my
college friends now, in retirement, have the chance to follow their dreams, to
become artists, writers and work in other fields.
I
became an elementary school teacher and taught in one school in Albany, GA for
five years. It soon became obvious to me that this career was not my cup of
tea. I was too empathetic and the children who had home problems or reading
difficulties I could not help them with, kept me awake at night. My husband
wanted me to quit because he worried about my mental state. Teaching at the
public school depressed me. That was also the time when my mother needed me
most.
I
did continue teaching, but as a partner in a private kindergarten (Humpty-Dumpty)
where I chose what I taught, and my five-year old kids brought me joy. I have
come to know that owning my own business and being in charge of what I do is
what brings me joy. I had that opportunity in the mid-seventies and again when
I opened my writing studio in 2010.
Young
women in the past several decades are offered many and various opportunities to
pursue. Some of those careers are more difficult for women. I have been told
that women in medical schools face a tough uphill battle. The men students
often ridicule them; try to make them feel they have no right to be there.
I
make a big effort to see women doctors. They usually understand my needs and my
concerns better than men. Some of the women docs, especially the younger ones,
are defensive, and I think it is because of the struggles they face proving
themselves in medical school. Women have been considered caregivers, nurturers
and subservient to men, so when a woman proves she can and wants to take the
responsibility of being the doctor or lawyer or take a position in leadership,
she faces hurdles men do not face. Some husbands do not cooperate when their
wives want a career. I have seen the hurt that causes.
I
often wonder if, when I was young, I had the self-confidence I now have, what
might I have done with my life. I just have to make up for those years by doing
what I am doing today.
How was your self-confidence when you were young?
Please
send me your thoughts and let's have a conversation. It is easy to leave a
comment. If you have an email address, you can leave a comment, or you can
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every day I check the comments to see what you have said.