Selected Product: | The Breaking Point : How Female Midlife Crisis Is Transforming Today's Women Hardcover Author: Sue Shellenbarger Release Date: April 2005 ISBN-10: B000FTWB1M Average Customer Rating: | | Awakening at Midlife ISBN-10: 1573226327 ISBN-13: 9781573226325 List Price:$16.00 The Next Fifty Years: A Guide for Women at Mid-Life And Beyond ISBN-10: 1571744398 ISBN-13: 9781571744395 List Price:$19.95 Talking from 9 to 5: Women and Men at Work ISBN-10: 0380717832 ISBN-13: 9780380717835 List Price:$13.95 If Not Now when: Reclaiming Ourselves at Midlife ISBN-10: 0446678597 ISBN-13: 9780446678599 List Price:$13.95 |
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In the tradition of The Second Shift, a groundbreaking work that identifies and explains the phenomenon poised to redefine our culture When Sue Shellenbarger wrote about her midlife crises in her award-winning Wall Street Journal Work & Family column, the volume and emotional intensity of the responses from her readers was stunning. As she heard story after story of middle-aged women radically changing course in search of greater fulfillment, a trend began to emerge: an entire generation of women was experiencing the tumultuous transition of midlife in ways not seen before.
To capture this paradigm shift, Shellenbarger combines original research data and interviews with more than fifty women who've navigated their own midlife crisis. Long stereotyped as the province of men, today the midlife crisis is reported with greater frequency by women than men. Emboldened by the financial independence to act upon midlife desires, exhausted by decades of playing supermom and repressing the feminine sides of themselves to succeed at work, women are shedding the age roles of the past in favor of new pursuits in adventure, sports, sex, romance, education, and spirituality. And in the process they are rewriting all the rules.
Beyond defining a new phenomenon, The Breaking Point shows how various options women use to cope with the turmoil of midlife-from playing it safe to dynamiting their lives-have a profound impact on their families, careers, and our culture at large. Provocative, insightful, and resonant, The Breaking Point is sure to be one of the most controversial and talked-about publications of 2005.
What a waste of money | Customer Rating: | | This book was recommended to me and I foolishly bought it without checking the reviews on amazon. That'll teach me! I should have borrowed the book from the library and saved the money for a really useful book. I am a white middle class 53 year old woman with a rollercoaster of a past. I did not feel a connection with any of the (probably) white upper middle to upper class women who had untapped talents and had been personally selected by the author or had referred to her for inclusion in this "study" (and I use the term loosely). I am coping with middle age just fine without breaking a collarbone or having sex with multiple partners. What do I have common with the CEOs or most of the other women in this book? Nada. Well, the lesson I learned from this book was not the one the author intended: check the amazon reviews before I buy a book! | All the stories together.... | Customer Rating: | ...add up to more than any one book can offer.
I've been reading this book, along with several others that, together, help give us the "big picture" of what it means to be a woman in midlife. Our mothers didn't have these stories to share--or didn't believe that they had permission to speak the stories aloud. These books break the silence that so often accompanies stories of aging in our "growing younger" culture.
Also recommended: KISS TOMORROW HELLO: NOTES FROM THE MIDLIFE UNDERGROUND BY 25 WOMEN OVER 40. | a carbon copy? | Customer Rating: | | This book reminds me of another book on the same subject by Martha Beck called Breaking Point: Why Women Fall Apart and How They Can Re-crete their Lives. I was very surprised at this similarity. Beck's book puts the situation into a well articulated social, political, historical and economic context. While Shellenbarger's seems to be more of just the stories. I'd recommend both for people to compare and enhance their understanding of the topic. | Interesting to read about the variety of women's lives | Customer Rating: | This book covers the midlife stories of a large variety of women. It has a number of interesting stories. None of the women really reminded me of myself, but then I'm a biochemist, an ecological economist and a patent attorney, which makes me pretty different from the typical woman. I'm 43 and certainly hope there will be some changes ahead for me in the next ten or so years. This is a great book for getting yourself excited about trying something new.
The author goes into considerable detail about her own midlife crisis. I thought it was rather odd that she describes climbing mountains in an ATV as communing with nature. As a hiker, I have an entirely different opinion of ATVs. I hope that other women do not follow her example on this point.
This book is very optimistic about what the future holds for women. I hope she's right, but I would recommend pairing this book with Howard Kunstler's "The Long Emergency" for a contrary view. | Extremely worthwhile reading! | Customer Rating: | | This is a must read book for any woman approaching mid-life or well into it! Very insightful reading and most women will be able to relate to the information provided. The examples given of other women's experiences through this time of many changes are most helpful. I would very highly recommend this book. |
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