The stereotypes are powerful, and many high-achieving women have created similar strategies. Both of them are lying - she to diminish her status, and he to inflate it. Miranda, the high-powered lawyer, tells a man she meets at a speed-dating event that she's a flight attendant. This stunt became popular enough to inspire a Sex and the City episode. They want someone who is going to be at home." "There's the idea that high-achieving men don't like the competition, that they find us a little bit frightening, and get enough of that in the office. When she was 35 and single, Julia, a lawyer in New York City, would play a game when she went to bars: "I told some guys I was an attorney and they ran away from me, and then other guys that I was a secretary at a law firm and at least for the short term they seemed more interested," she said. They instinctually "dumb it down" or pretend to be someone they're not.
"I didn't really know how to respond," Anne recalled of her colleague's character assessment, but other women have a strategy in place. He said, 'Oh, I get it, you're one of those super-smart superachievers that scare the men off.'"
"I was out with two friends from residency recently and I asked one of the married guys if he had any single friends to set me up with. Some 66 percent of SWANS disagree with the statement "My career or educational success increases my chances of getting married."Īnne, a 30-year-old chief resident at a Boston hospital, said she doesn't think of herself as intimidating or uber-intelligent, but men seem to get that impression. Put another way, many high-achieving women think their success is not helping them find love.
Nearly half of single women believe their professional success is intimidating to the men they meet. "I've been told by well-meaning relatives: 'Don't talk about work on a date, dumb it down, and it's bad to earn so much money because guys will be scared of you.' And I got the word 'intimidating' a lot," said Alexis, a 35-year-old lawyer in San Francisco. If you attended a good school, have an impressive job, have career aspirations or dream of future success, men will find you less attractive. Conservative and liberal pundits alike mythologized the failure of feminism and the "waste" of these talented women who were searching for soul mates.įor a generation of SWANS - Strong Women Achievers, No Spouse - these myths have become conventional wisdom. And if a woman makes a lot of money, men will be intimidated. Successful men are romantically interested only in their secretaries. The purported "news" was never good: Smart women are less likely to marry. Any hint of bad news about the successful or talented has always made headlines, but media pessimism about the happiness and life balance of millions of young, career-oriented women has struck a chord nationwide. Imagine, as newspapers and magazines recently have, the "plight of the high-status woman." She is a well-educated young woman in her 30s, earns a good salary, and has a great social life - but she is single and is worried that her success might be the reason she has not met a man to marry. Read an excerpt from "Why Smart Men Marry Smart Women" below: With sound research and sage advice, Whelan tells intelligent women why they have the upper hand in the marriage market - and in every other arena of life. She proves that smart, successful women marry at the same rates as other women, assuring millions of American SWANS (Strong Women Achievers, No Spouse) that they have no reason to doubt themselves. Whelan shatters that myth in her new book, "Why Smart Men Marry Smart Women."