I
am a psychologist, speaker and business coach making
a living teaching women how to own their ambition
in a society that has a double standard. Let’s
face it, there’s still just one word that our
culture bestows on that supremely ambitious woman
who unrepentantly values her career every bit as much
as her personal priorities: bitch.
It’s
our prevailing cultural paradigm: ambitious
men are go-getters, but ambitious women are the b-word,
bad wives, bad mothers, and brazenly arrogant businesswomen.
Don’t
put your ambition at the bottom of your priorities.
Our culture encourages women to derive our sense of
self from being selfless, by giving to everyone else
first and foremost, and to put our ambitious goals
at the bottom of our priority pile. Could there be
a more confusing, contradictory recipe for self-satisfaction?
No wonder so many women simultaneously crave and fear
our ambitious goals. No wonder we drop-kick our dreams!
I
believe that women don’t have to sacrifice—or
“balance” our ambition to have a great
life; in fact, just the opposite is true. I believe
that the real way to have a great life is to see your
ambition as a virtue—as a part of your value
system that you must give equal attention to, along
with other priorities you hold dear, including your
partner, children, and friends. I define ambition
as that which drives our creative existence, provides
an outlet for our talents and passions, and allows
us to earn our worth without apology. I walk my talk.
But just like you I take hits.
In
a moment of trauma, I too succumbed to those deeply
ingrained cultural beliefs about how women are supposed
to behave. It happened to me when my son almost died.
On
July 14, 2005, two weeks before my book, Ambition
Is Not A Dirty Word, was due to my publisher,
I was awakened at 4:30 a.m. by a phone call. My seventeen-year-old
son, Devin, had been hit by a car and was lying in
the trauma unit of a hospital 2,500 miles away from
my New York City home. His condition was unknown.
I numbly threw some clothes into suitcases and barely
managed to catch a 7 a.m. flight to the San Francisco
Bay Area to get to him.
In
between hourly calls from the airplane phone to Devin’s
father at the hospital, I ticked off the items on
the guilty mother’s checklist. Dumped my child
in daycare more than I’d have liked? Check.
Dragged him through a difficult divorce? Check. Denied
him the fancy bicycle and fancier private school while
I earned my degree? Check. Remarried? Check.
But
all that paled next to my biggest sin: For the last
several months, I’d consistently put work ahead
of family. The kicker: I’d bailed on the family
vacation to finish my book.
Who
cared that I’d logged a lifetime of being a
good, sometimes great mom? Who cared that I loved
my work with a passion, that I’d helped thousands
of women realize their lifelong dreams? Clearly, the
gods were punishing me for being too ambitious, and
Devin was paying the ultimate price. Of course this
was crazy, irrational thinking—but that’s
what we women do, isn’t it? Isn’t a good
mother one who has the grace to feel guilty about
any choice beyond putting family first?
Like
you, I understand on a deep, visceral level—one
that can’t be duplicated by intellectual reasoning
or academic polemics—what it means to live daily
with the dialectical tension of loving your work every
bit as much as your children and family, of trying
to nurture mutually exclusive yet equally sacrosanct
priorities.
I’ve
lived a complex and non-formulaic life as a deeply
devoted (and deeply flawed) divorced, single mother,
as well as a determined, ambitious professional woman.
Your story is doubtless no less complex.
What
we share as high-achieving women is the challenge
of valuing our pure ambition in a culture that tells
us that doing so is going to bring us down hard, sometime,
somehow. We absorb the message that there will be
hell to pay for loving our work with a grand passion.
For
the first month after Devin’s accident, I did
little but replay in my mind the details of his accident.
He’d been standing on a quiet neighborhood sidewalk
when a speeding, out-of-control truck hit him, throwing
him twenty-five feet. His friends looked for him under
the vehicle and then between it and the metal pole
that it crashed into. Knocked unconscious, when he
awoke his first thought was, “I’m going
to die.” He’d suffered a concussion, multiple
pelvic fractures, and a separated sacroiliac joint.
We didn’t know initially whether he’d
be brain-injured or paralyzed. I stayed by his side
almost constantly in that initial recuperative phase.
At
last the doctors offered a guardedly optimistic prognosis—Devin
faced an uphill climb through healing and long-term
rehabilitation, but they believed that he’d
come through fine.
I
forced myself to get back to my writing (obviously,
my editor had extended my deadline and advised me
to take my time getting back to the book). As soon
as I sat myself down, booted up my computer, and began
to work, I felt myself take a deep, refreshing breath.
I felt myself letting go by focusing on my work.
Getting
back in touch with my ambition gave me a sense that
our lives could get back on track. My ambition was
what soothed me at a time when I was deeply traumatized.
Of
course I welcomed the love and support of my friends
and family. But I had needed something more. Something
more than any prescription drug or running or yoga.
Something even more than caring for my son 24/7 for
six weeks during his acute healing process. And what
I needed was to get back to my ambitious work, even
as I was sitting in the same room with my son and
his friends, on my computer, doing my own thing while
they did theirs.
I
want to be clear here: My work here wasn’t merely
a soothing routine, a distraction or escape that took
my mind off my worries about my son, or a task that
could restore my shaky illusion of control. It did
serve those roles, but my work—and, more specifically,
my love and passion for my work—did and does
so much more. It brought me back home to myself.
Still
feeling traumatized and guilty, I confessed to a friend
that I was feeling good about getting back to work.
“Still,” I rushed to assure her, lest
the gods punish me again for daring to think about
my career, “I’d chuck it all—my
work, my business, everything—to have prevented
this from happening to my son.”
But
then it hit me, and I said to her, “But you
know what? That’s a false choice; I don’t
have to choose between my child’s well-being
and my ambition. And that’s precisely what I’m
writing about!”
I
believe deep in my soul that returning to our sacrosanct
ambition is what grounds us and stabilizes us when
we’re rocked, personally or professionally.
And we should feel unapologetic about having that
guidepost and touchstone in our lives; we should resist
feelings of guilt, self-recrimination, blame, and
instead feel strengthened and sustained by our inner
professional passion and drive to do the work and
make the contribution we were born to make.
Your
life, like mine, will throw you an infinite number
of curveballs.
Your child gets hurt. You get promoted to a dream
job that brings with it a steep learning curve plus
a new team of high-maintenance talent to manage. Your
husband has an affair. You get married. You get sick.
Things outside of your control may let you down and
frighten you, but the anchor of your ambition will
help reground and center you. You will always have
access to your inner belief in your business smarts
and brain power and creativity and professional problem
solving; you will always have that to come home to.
When
things in my life are going my way, my ambition keeps
me happy, fired up, and feeling young, vibrant, and
fully engaged in every part of my life. Perhaps even
more importantly, it is also the one thing that I
can count on and come back to when I’m in over
my head, when life disappoints or scares me or dares
me to be stronger than I thought myself capable of.
Ambition
is my anchor because it comes from within me, rather
than from some external source—be it colleagues,
promotion, friends, partner, boss, fat paycheck, mentor,
or some mercurial other. As supportive and caring
as others can be—partners, friends, children--I
know I can’t necessarily count on them; I have
only myself at the end of the day.
We
cannot look to others to live out our dreams for us.
We have to nurture the ambition in our own DNA. If
we can’t find it in ourselves, we’ll have
to pile up some kindling and nurture the first tiny
flickers into a consuming fire in our bellies.
A
good mother and a woman with big goals
From this day forward, let’s imagine that we
live in a parallel universe where women treat and
protect our ambition as we would a lover or beloved.
In this universe, you can be a loyal friend and a
great co-worker. Without guilt from within or judgment
from without, you could be both a good mother and
a woman with big goals, nurturing both your child
and your ambition dreams.
In
this universe, a woman’s ambition is not just
a job. It embodies a conscious, deliberate, and mindful
search for truth and meaning in her life, a return
to her natural wellspring of passion and purpose—even
when she is lost or off course, a letting go of the
fears and doubts that block her path. In this universe
she sees clearly for the first time how to free herself
from the shackles that have, in the past, hobbled
her ambition.
Visualize
yourself in that world now. You are there—you
are ambitious. Believe it: your ambition is a virtue.
Hold the choices you make to fulfill your ambition
precious, sacrosanct. Sometimes you’ll have
to make tough sacrifices or compromises. Each of those
decisions represents an acceptance and honoring of
the fire within you. Regard them as gifts you give
to yourself to protect and cherish your dreams—for
your career, for your one life.
You
owe it to yourself—and the world—to make
the contribution you were put here to make. Take the
leap. Strive to be the best in your field, your industry,
your niche. Promise yourself you will always earn
your worth.
The
life I dare you to lead is a life filled with hope,
dreams, aspirations—and the expectation of having
them fulfilled. When you make the choice
to lead that kind of life, who knows how many others
you’ll inspire?
One
day when he was fifteen, Devin told me, “I don’t
want to be one of those people who get up every day
and go to a boring job they hate just to get a paycheck.
I think that’s sad. I want to be like you, Mom.
You have an interesting life. You work for yourself,
you travel, you decide what you want to do and how
you want to work.” It was deeply validating
to realize that I’d given my son a powerful
role model for prizing ambition and intention, for
creating a life based on passion. That memory sustained
me as I sat by Devin’s hospital bed, tapping
away on my keyboard.
You
deserve to love your work, to be as ambitious
as you wish, to earn your worth, and to find fulfillment.
Give yourself permission to be true to your ambition,
to make the choices you deem appropriate without second-guessing
yourself.
When
you build your life’s work from that place of
sanctuary, you’ll be richly rewarded with lifelong
intellectual and creative curiosity, evolving opportunities,
and healthier, happier relationships with loved ones.
What
we don’t hear from the cultural messages telling
us what we ought to value as women in this society
is that ambition is a part of living our best and
greatest life. There is no societal clarion call ringing
with the message that our ambition is a vital, irreplaceable
component of our lives. Our pact is to change that.
Let’s each of us agree to be an ambitious woman—and
to be her now.
As
the ambitious women you know you are—and now
know you are entitled to be, I encourage you to answer
for yourself, every day, a question posed in Mary
Oliver’s poem “The Summer Day”:
Tell
me,
What is it you plan to do with your one
Wild and precious life?
Debra
Condren, Ph.D.
is a psychologist, speaker, business and executive
coach and career adviser, and is the Founder and the
Executive Director of the Women's Business Alliance.
She
received a U.S. Small Business Administration's "Women
In Business Advocate of the Year" award in 2000.
Ambition
Is Not a Dirty Word: A Woman's Guide
to Earning Her Worth and Achieving Her Dreams