You do what? Give me an example…

by Carol on April 27, 2008

When people ask me what I do, I have to pause and consider how much time we have to talk about it. Typically, after I give them the short answer - I consult with women who are in relationships with high achievers - their eyes widen and they lean forward, staring intently as if my face had just broken out in stripes or polka dots. “Really?” they ask incredulously. “Give me an example…”

Everyone seems fascinated by how “the other half lives” but it’s not that simple. This work is a little niche subset of relationship coaching, but it’s specific to the dynamics at play between two people when ambition, wealth, power, and all that comes with success, are in the mix. The profile of the woman I work with is usually a high achiever herself, but she’s found that the chaotic, brilliant energy that comes from her significant other has become more than she can handle.

She struggles to hang on to her identity at yet another dinner where she’s become marginalized because everyone there wants something from her husband and they only look at him when they talk. She needs to discuss things with him at the end of the day, but he’s just come from ten hours of intense engagement with his career, and before she gets through her first sentence, she gets that sinking feeling that he isn’t listening again. She’d secretly like to start her own business or return to school to finish her master’s but she knows that it would make things so difficult in an already chaotic life.

She walks on egg shells when he’s putting everything at risk for another “big deal.” She spends a ridiculous amount of money on a pair of shoes and feels guilty that her lifestyle doesn’t make her feel as happy or grateful as she thinks she should be. And unless she has a trusted friend who is either in the same boat or can handle the context without thinking she’s spoiled beyond belief, most of this never gets shared because everyone thinks she “has it made.” How could she possibly complain about anything?

I don’t go into that kind of detail in cocktail party discussions.  Unless you’ve lived it, it does sound like a manufactured set of issues. I mean honestly, who would call those real problems?

I would. Because I’ve lived them.  Until a woman and her partner really look at the enormous and sometimes toxic energy of money and power, until they can stay grounded when everyone around them is manipulating them with flattery, and until they find their way in the midst of an unbelievable number of choices, it can be overwhelming to live a normal life or enjoy a great relationship.

But when it’s handled with grace and clarity, a woman can utilize these privileges to create some real momentum in her own vision of what life can be.  She doesn’t have to follow anyone else’s idea of what she should do to change the world.  Good fortune can be carefully considered and enjoyed in a way that leaves a legacy of style and purpose that is uniquely her own.  That’s where I come in.  I walk with her until she can find her own path.

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