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Michelle loves her career. She always has. But her husband
doesn't want her to keep the job she loves. He wants her at
home.
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Michelle feels betrayed--after all, she had this career long
before she married, and her husband knew from the day they met
that she had dedicated her life to her work. He knew about the
travel and the demands |
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of the job, as well as its rich material
rewards--rewards which he has enjoyed equally. |
Michelle tried to submit to her husband's demands. She even
gave up her career for a while and tried to be home with her
family. But she wasn't happy. She felt confined and
unfulfilled, as if an important part of her was missing.
Sometimes she felt as if she were losing her identity. Finally
she told her husband that she was unhappy and wanted to go back
to her career. Her husband told her not to. When she returned
anyway, he filed for divorce.
Now
her husband wants full custody of her kids, their home, and at
least half of the money Michelle earned. Michelle knows that she
has little chance of keeping her kids because the family courts
will hold her career against her.
Michelle probably believes that this is unfair and wonders what
she did to deserve this. Except that Michelle doesn't exist.
Michael does. Michael Jordan, that is.
After 12 years of marriage, Jordan's wife Juanita filed for
divorce earlier this month and is seeking permanent custody of
the couple's three children, their 25,000-square-foot home, and
her share of the couple's property. Under Illinois law she may
be awarded up to 90% of their assets.
Michael might be wishing he were Michelle about right now, for
Michelle would have our sympathy. In fact, we'd see ringing op-eds
telling us how selfish and controlling Michelle's husband is,
and bemoaning the way our society punishes independent women for
pursuing their careers.
Michael, however, isn't getting off so easy.
"Most Valuable Jerk" is how Deborah Simmons of the Washington
Times described Jordan in her recent column, where she
criticized Jordan for returning to basketball and pinned
responsibility for the divorce squarely on him. Change "Air
Jordan" to "Err Jordan" writes Barry Cooper of Black
Voices.com, speculating that Jordan caused his divorce
because he "erred in some rather spectacular fashion."
Michael is to blame because he allowed his "Lesser Self...to
make a fool of his Better Self," opines Eric Zorn in Jordan's
hometown newspaper, the Chicago Tribune. In the same
paper Rick Morrissey scolds Jordan, noting that "An ugly
divorce...will be tough on Jordan's three children," but that
Jordan "should have thought about that a long time ago."
In
discussing relationships, American society has taken the immense
complexity and difficulty of marriage and family life and
reduced it to one simple rule--when in doubt, blame the man.
Of
course, it is quite possible that Juanita is right, and that
Michael shouldn't have come back to basketball. Maybe he wasn't
spending enough time with the family. In defense of Michael,
one could argue that at age 38, a comeback was only possible now
or maybe next year--after that the opportunity would be gone for
good. At the same time, Juanita could argue that before you
know it the kids will be grown up and gone for good, too. But
Jordan did try--he gave up basketball for two years. And the man
has been a basketball player all his life. Playing basketball is
what he does.
No
doubt there is more to the breakup than Michael's return to
basketball. There have been rumors of philandering about both
Michael and Juanita--mostly concerning Michael, who was
reportedly followed for four years by a private detective hired
by Juanita.
While it is true that men are more likely to struggle with
monogamy than women, our society falsely assumes that every man
is a potential philanderer but his wife is always a faithful,
loyal doormat. Nancy Marshall, ex-wife of former major league
baseball pitcher Mike Marshall, mocked this idea of female
docility in her book Home Games and reported on the
raucous extra marital sexual escapades of baseball wives as well
as husbands. She wrote:
"Often reporters ask [athletes'] wives how they feel about their
husbands being on the road all alone...it never occurs to anyone
that while the guys are on the road, the wives are at home by
themselves...Just once I would like a reporter ask a ballplayer,
‘Do you worry about what your wife is doing while you're gone?'
If they don't worry, maybe they should."
Even during the allegedly morally pure 1940s and 1950s there
were high rates of female (as well as male) infidelity. In fact,
DNA examinations taken half a century ago showed that that at a
bare minimum 10% of the fathers who signed their babies' birth
certificates were unknowingly claiming paternity of children who
weren't theirs.
Unlike many divorced fathers, Jordan will probably come out of
all of this relatively unscathed. He'll lose a lot of money, but
he'll probably still have plenty left. And Juanita is probably
too good a mother (or would be too embarrassed) to try to block
Jordan's visitation rights.
Still, it doesn't seem quite fair. After all, Michelle (sigh) is
a victim, a soaring eagle held hostage by the constraints of a
cruel society that just never seems to want women to be truly
free.
And
Michael? Oh, he's just another jerk. Good thing she got rid of
him.
Glenn
Sacks' columns on men's and fathers' issues have appeared in dozens of America's
largest newspapers. Glenn can be reached via his website at
www.GlennSacks.com or
via email at Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
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