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Young women must learn to prioritize their long-term happiness in order to build a fulfilling life

Julia Roberts: A Lesson in⁢ Planning Ahead

On Dec.​ 12, 2023, Julia Roberts was interviewed on “CBS​ Sunday Morning” with Gayle King, where King played a clip ‌from an interview Roberts gave more ⁣than 30 years ago for her 1988⁢ film, “Mystic ⁤Pizza.” Roberts was 21,‌ and when the ​interviewer asked ⁢about her⁣ future plans,⁢ Roberts ​said, “I ⁤think for now I’m just working really hard until⁣ that day, when it comes, when I’ll be able to ​enjoy a more normal life and‍ distance‌ myself from⁤ the business a little more and not be forgotten about.”

When King pointed ⁤out that Roberts was successful in her goal, Roberts said, “It’s interesting. I’m speaking in such a way ⁣of such‌ kind of … the long game of life at such a young age. Well done,‌ me!”

Julia Roberts‍ is a rare breed, not just for Hollywood but⁣ for American women in​ general. By planning ahead for leaning out of her⁢ career, she got the best of both worlds: ‌a successful career and a successful family. Roberts disappeared from acting for⁤ a‌ long time after having her ⁣three children. Now that they’re older, we’re seeing a bit more of her.

When‍ it comes to ⁣building a happy life,​ the secret⁤ is to‌ play the ⁣long game. Being as ⁣intentional about your ​personal life as you are about your professional life when⁤ you’re ​young ‍offers the best chance at ‍being successful ‌in all areas ⁣of life, ⁤not just your career.

Despite what the ‌culture teaches, our twenties​ aren’t years to squander. “Eighty percent‌ of life’s most ‌defining moments take ‍place by age thirty,” writes Meg Jay in The Defining Decade.

This is true ⁤for ⁣both sexes, but it is especially true for women, who, due⁢ to their biology, have a⁤ foreshortened ​time frame in which to map out their lives. The professional, relational, and financial choices women make in their‌ twenties will⁢ either set them⁤ up⁤ for‌ success or set them up for having fewer choices, and a ‍more difficult time‍ of it, down the⁣ line.

Lean Out Long Before ⁤You Actually⁢ Do

In 2011,⁢ former Facebook (or ⁢Meta) COO Sheryl Sandberg delivered the commencement address at Barnard College, ‌an all-girls ‍school. During her speech, Sandberg assured the graduates that women have a ​long way to go to achieve equality and told⁣ them to “lean in” to their careers until ⁣the ‌last possible moment.

“Do not leave before you leave. Do not lean ‍back; lean in. Put your foot on that ⁣gas⁢ pedal and keep it there until the day ⁣you have ‍to⁤ make a decision.” That ⁢decision is, of course, whether ‍or not to leave the workforce to raise your babies.

This is awful advice and the exact opposite of what ⁢young women should do. Planning in ⁣advance to step‍ out of the workforce is ⁢essential to building⁣ a happy, well-rounded life. Unfortunately, today’s women are groomed ⁢to build lives⁤ with careers‍ at the ‌center and receive‍ zero guidance on how to be successful in the ⁢other, arguably more​ important domain: marriage and family.

To wit, ⁣the only women who ⁤appear to know how to date with purpose and build a life that will‌ allow them to stay home ⁤with their babies are those who had freethinking, countercultural parents. Most parents don’t ‍teach‌ their children to reject what the media and their⁢ mentors teach: that marriage doesn’t‍ matter and that staying home with one’s children for a ⁣season is a⁣ pipe dream because two-income families are a must in today’s world.

Yes, There Is a Better ‌Way

All of this suffering ‍was, and ⁣is, avoidable. There’s a completely ⁤different way for women to do ‍life, and it begins with this premise: Whom you marry, and how that ‍marriage fares, will have more ⁢effect on your happiness and well-being than​ anything else you‍ do. Nothing else​ even comes ​close.

To be ‌sure,⁢ this applies to ⁣both sexes. But it’s especially important for​ women​ since they are the sex that gets ⁤pregnant, ‍the ⁣sex that breastfeeds, and ​the sex that ⁤becomes literally attached⁢ to their ⁢babies ​and, as a ‍result, becomes attuned ​to⁢ their needs in a unique and⁤ primal ​way. This is ⁤something to celebrate, not something to dismiss as irrelevant.

A much ‌smarter and more effective life plan for​ women is to think as early as possible about what kind of life they want to ⁢live. Their early twenties is ideal, but ⁢earlier is even better.

Forget about money and career for a moment. What kind of lifestyle‍ do you envision for yourself 10 ‌or 20 years from now? ‍If you want to be married, you must ⁣date with purpose today. If you date exclusively⁣ for fun, with no direction or end goal in mind, you will likely not find a match. You’ll just become proficient​ in​ ending relationships, which does nothing to help prepare you for building a strong marriage.

Planning ⁢ahead for leaning out of the workforce also ⁢changes the way women date. If you know you plan to do this, it feels⁣ reasonable — ⁣not backward, as⁢ women ‌are told — to pay attention to a ‍man’s career⁤ path. He doesn’t need to be rich, but he does need to be on a solid growth track. He must have found his purpose. Too many women mistakenly‍ assume they’ll always be in the workforce and thus overlook ‌a man’s earning potential. Most come‍ to regret ‍this.

Finally, how many kids ‍do you want, and how do you want⁤ to raise them?⁤ Will ‌you be the ⁣one doing the mothering, or will you outsource⁤ that work to family or hired help? Knowing this in advance will help you ​choose‍ the right career for you.

I ​always advise women who don’t know what they want to err on the side that they⁤ will ​want to stay ​home, not that they won’t.‍ That way they’ll have options when the ​time comes, which is super important since most ⁤mothers find they don’t​ want to leave their babies once they have them.

Aim for Meaning Rather ⁤Than Success

“I⁣ don’t understand for the life of me,”⁢ notes ⁣Ben Shapiro in a 2018 speech, “why we’re telling women that their best and greatest superpower,⁣ creating another human from their own body, ​is somehow less important ‍than ⁣working as an associate law clerk — that working 2,100 billable hours and checking footnotes is somehow more important ​than‌ raising the next generation of human beings that‌ you made with your own body.”

I don’t either.

The starting point for building a ⁤better life or,⁣ if you’re older, for rebuilding it ‍is to shift our priorities and begin with the premise that marriage matters more than career. When you do this, new choices‌ open ⁢up because⁣ now you’re operating with a different‌ set of assumptions. If you’re looking for a ⁤husband,⁤ it will change the⁢ way you⁤ date. If you want​ a family-centered⁤ life, it ⁣will change⁣ the way you think about which career to⁢ pursue.

It is never too late to shift your priorities and change your‍ life. It simply begins with a ‍mindset shift that’s‍ rooted in 4 truths:

  1. Whom you marry is the ‍single greatest decision you’ll ever make.
  2. Career success alone will not make you happy.
  3. The biological differences between men and women are real, and they’re ​hardwired.
  4. You can ⁣“have it all,” just not all at once.

The good news is, no ⁣matter where you are in life’s journey, you can embrace these ‍truths ⁢and do a U-turn. When you do, you will have begun your ‌journey ⁣toward building a better life.


In what ways can women lean out of their ​careers and prioritize their families while still maintaining a successful professional life

Side of caution and assume they‌ will have children and⁣ want⁤ to stay home with them for at least a few‌ years. This doesn’t mean they​ can’t ‍have a career; it just means ⁢they should choose ⁤a career that allows for flexibility and the possibility of stepping‍⁤ out for a time.

By thinking ahead,​ planning, and making intentional choices, women can save themselves⁤ a lot of ⁣heartache and confusion. They can create a ⁣life ⁣that aligns with their values ⁤and ‌priorities, rather than trying⁤ to‌ fit themselves ‍into‌ a ​pre-determined mold of what society tells⁤ them they should want.

Conclusion

Julia ‍Roberts is a prime example of someone who planned ahead and made deliberate choices to create a fulfilling life. By leaning out of her career⁢ when⁣ her children were young, she was able to prioritize her family while still maintaining a successful career.

Women can learn from‍ Roberts’ example‌ and apply the same principles to their own lives.⁣ By⁤ thinking about their long-term goals, being intentional in‌ their decision-making, ‌and prioritizing⁣ what truly matters to them, they can build ‌a life that brings ‍them‍ happiness and fulfillment in all areas, not⁤ just ​their​ career.

It’s time for women to lean out long before they ​actually do, to take control of their‌ lives and design a future that aligns with their values and priorities. By doing ‍so, they can create a ⁣life ‍that is truly their own and⁤ not simply a reflection of societal expectations.

So let’s take‍ a lesson from Julia Roberts and start planning ahead. Let’s build lives that‍ are intentional, purposeful, and filled⁤ with joy. The long game of life is waiting, and it’s up to us to ⁤make ‌the most ⁢of ​it.



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