@dccz2408: que horror #parati #notodos #siguiendo

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Wednesday 27 September 2023 02:19:18 GMT
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The paycheck was the goal. For a generation of women, it was everything. Get the education. Get the job. Negotiate the raise. Prove the equal. We did. And most women I know — smart, earning, educated — are one job loss away from a financial crisis. Not because they can't earn. Because nobody taught them what to do after the money arrived. The feminist movement fought for the income gap. Nobody fought hard enough for the wealth gap — which is larger, quieter, and more consequential. The specific thing nobody told us: Earning is a skill. Keeping and building is a completely different skill. The same woman who negotiates aggressively in every professional setting feels uncomfortable looking at her investment portfolio. Or doesn't have one. Or believes she doesn't have enough yet to start. Compound interest doesn't care about your salary. It cares about what you put to work — and when. At 45, the gap between two women who made the same salary at 30 — one who invested, one who didn't — is not a rounding error. It's not a rounding error. It's a life. The income battle was the right battle. It was won. The wealth conversation is the one we're still not having loudly enough. … Financial anxiety has a body. The chronic stress of knowing you're earning but not building runs on the same cortisol system as any other unresolved threat. The nervous system doesn't distinguish between a predator and a bank account you're afraid to look at. The security that comes from knowing your money works while you sleep changes the baseline. Not the salary. The asset. Start there.
The paycheck was the goal. For a generation of women, it was everything. Get the education. Get the job. Negotiate the raise. Prove the equal. We did. And most women I know — smart, earning, educated — are one job loss away from a financial crisis. Not because they can't earn. Because nobody taught them what to do after the money arrived. The feminist movement fought for the income gap. Nobody fought hard enough for the wealth gap — which is larger, quieter, and more consequential. The specific thing nobody told us: Earning is a skill. Keeping and building is a completely different skill. The same woman who negotiates aggressively in every professional setting feels uncomfortable looking at her investment portfolio. Or doesn't have one. Or believes she doesn't have enough yet to start. Compound interest doesn't care about your salary. It cares about what you put to work — and when. At 45, the gap between two women who made the same salary at 30 — one who invested, one who didn't — is not a rounding error. It's not a rounding error. It's a life. The income battle was the right battle. It was won. The wealth conversation is the one we're still not having loudly enough. … Financial anxiety has a body. The chronic stress of knowing you're earning but not building runs on the same cortisol system as any other unresolved threat. The nervous system doesn't distinguish between a predator and a bank account you're afraid to look at. The security that comes from knowing your money works while you sleep changes the baseline. Not the salary. The asset. Start there.

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