By Sandy Lender
I’m not pretending to be a victim. Instead, I’ll tell you I’ve experienced the surreal anxiety of fighting for my place in many scenarios while being told I’ve been handed my successes. Even now, fellow content creators will roll their eyes and call me a privileged white woman. On one hand, okay, that’s fair. I recognize I’ve received benefits in the past based on the color of my skin. Let me give you a blatant example.
In 2006, I was privileged to be driving a Saturn I’d paid off about a year or so prior, to a salaried job I was privileged to have at a university where my Catholic boss was looking for reasons to fire a Southern Baptist, so I was hurrying to get there early. I was not only speeding, but I whipped out to go around a slow truck in a no-passing zone. As I sped in front of the truck, I passed a police officer parked in someone’s driveway.
Being aware of what was coming, I pulled over before the officer caught up to me. When he approached my window, I apologized. I knew I was in the wrong. I told him, “I’m sorry officer. I know I’m in too big of a hurry. I know better. Here’s my stuff.” I handed him my license and registration without him asking for it.
He came back to my window a few minutes later telling me to slow down, to obey the law, and telling me he appreciated me pulling over quickly in a safe place. He let me go with a warning. And I'm aware that is predicated on not only the fact I owned up to what I did wrong, but on my race, as well. It’s the climate we live in.
I did get fired from that job. I wasn’t the right flavor of Christian and my husband at the time was moving, thus my boss assumed (without asking me) that I knew he was moving and was moving with him. I’ve had people tell me being fired from a Catholic university for being Southern Baptist isn’t a violation of my rights. Having that university’s HR department talk to the husband I’d filed to divorce about my benefits, severance package, and potential continued health coverage behind my back wasn’t a violation of my rights. And so on. It’s a bit much to go into in this essay. The point is I was told to let it go and lose my house because it would be “easier” than to fight that battle while going through cancer treatment.
I fought my way back from the illness (twice) and the hit to my career and financial life.
I currently have a great job I enjoy, an old house I’m working hard to pay off, an older-model car that hasn’t killed me yet, a struggling side-hustle to which I give every ounce of energy I can spare, and a lowering tolerance for the dichotomy happening in marketing these days. The dichotomy exists when responses teeter between “you don’t deserve to succeed because you don’t have enough victimhood as a white woman” and “you don’t deserve to succeed because women have been handed all the success already.”
I beg your finest pardon?
At what point is it okay to tell anyone they can’t be allowed to succeed because other members of their class have been handed success before them?
Anyone telling me I don’t get to excel because some other woman (no matter her level of melanin) excelled in the past can pucker up and kiss my fair ass.
I will keep fighting for the side hustle I’ve dreamt of since I was an eight-year-old girl. Since I was a teen with parents who told me, “No, you can’t be a writer because you have to pursue math or science instead.” Since I was a college student and an advisor told me, “Really, Sandy, what do children’s books have to do with creative writing?” Since I was graduating from college and an older man in a group interview snickered at my resume, tossed it onto the boardroom table in front of him, and asked, “You have an English degree? Are you planning to write the next great American novel?” Since I was a fledgling author and a New York literary agent ten years my junior sat across a table from me and sneered about a detail I mis-spoke in my pitch, saying, “You don’t cure a virus with antibiotics.” Since I was launching a BookTube channel, and the platform moved the goalpost for monetization.
I’m gonna keep fighting for this side hustle I’ve dreamt of my whole life. No matter what anyone thinks of anyone else’s victimhood status, I’m not one. As Helen Reddy sang during my childhood: “I am woman.”
If this kind of storytelling helps with your motivation, I encourage you to check out my motivational business book “Capture Your Dream,” available now. It includes anecdotes from colleagues and me, as well as inspiration and exercises to help your work-life balance while you stack your goals and go for your side-hustle dreams.