Home > Blogs > vijayanin029 > I m 30 years old, living in the Chennai region. I m interested in meeting a woman aged between 18 and 39. > Blog Post

Draft Tuesday, May 10, 2022 11:47 PM

7:25 pm Tuesday, 10th May, 2022

If u ins check me for traveling and enjoyment in Chennai i like to chat with an unknown person for relation ship if anyone int pings me for any conversation about the treatment of women in the workplace has reached a crescendo of late, and senior leaders—men as well as women—are increasingly vocal about a commitment to gender parity. That’s all well and good, but there’s an important catch. The discussions and many of the initiatives companies have undertaken, too often reflect a faulty belief: that men and women are fundamentally different, by virtue of their genes or their upbringing or both. Of course, there are biological differences. But those are not the differences people are usually talking about. Instead, the rhetoric focuses on the idea that women are inherently unlike men in terms of disposition, attitudes, and behaviors. (Think headlines that tout “Why women do X at the office” or “Working women don’t Y.”)One set of assumed differences is marshaled to explain women’s failure to achieve parity with men: Women negotiate poorly, lack confidence, are too risk-averse, or don’t put in the requisite hours at work because they value more than their careers. Simultaneously, other assumed differences—that women are more caring, cooperative, or mission-driven—are used as a rationale for companies to invest in women’s success. But whether framed as a barrier or a benefit, these beliefs hold women back. We will not level the playing field so long as the bedrock on which it rests is our conviction about how the sexes are different



Blog Introduction

I'm 30 years old, living in the Chennai region. I'm interested in meeting a woman aged between 18 and 39.


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