Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau for October 05, 1980
Transcript:
Joanie: It's hopeless. There's not a chance I'll have this ready by tomorrow. Maybe a snack and a quick nap would help. I can't do it. I'll never finish this brief in time. I've been reading the law for six years now and I'm still no good at it. I swear, J.J, sometimes I think I'd go back to being a homemaker if I weren't even more incompetent at that. J.J: Sure you would, Mother. Joanie: You're right, I wouldn't. But it's become such a no-win situation. If a woman tries to make it outside the home, she feels pressured and guilty. But if she stays home she feels inadequate and resentful. Sometimes I think life was easier back in the old days. The one thing women don't have anymore is their sense of fatalism, their acceptance of a certain lot in life, even if that lot was pure drudgery. In a way, that was comforting. You know what I mean, honey? J.J: Not really. Guess you had to have been there. Joanie: Good. J.J: I just can't relate to it. It's like when Grandma talks about the Depression.
Solomon J. Behala Premium Member 20 days ago
Sure, bring back the good old days when everybody was miserable.