new to you friday–leading women
Here’s a fun one…….something I hate to admit and still don’t completely understand. Ladies, do you agree with me? What can we do about it?
—————————————————————————————————————
So far in my career, I’ve worked for half a dozen men, many of them hard-driving and lacking the warm fuzzy gene. In volunteer and freelance assignments I’ve worked with at least a dozen more. I’ve gotten along famously with all of them.
In that same time span, I’ve worked directly for one woman and alongside a couple others. These relationships are the only serious professional conflicts I’ve experienced.
Sometimes only a member of the group is permitted to generalize about its members or talk honestly about its failures, so I’ll share something a man would be tarred and feathered for saying—women in leadership do not play well together.
I’m not sure why. Does the salary disparity and glass ceiling still experienced by modern career women allow only the most politically-skilled or aggressive to find success—and then inevitably cause conflict when they start managing others?
Is it generational? I’m sure the women before me had more to prove than my friends and I do today. It could be threatening, infuriating, or both to see my generation climbing the ladder without quite as many male feet stomping us back down.
Or is it culturally learned behavior? For millennia women without muscle or means have been taught to find our power more covertly, from the relatively innocuous (“Honey, just let him think it was his idea”) to the more damaging (you remember Delilah, right?). Although the workplace’s job descriptions and more blatant power structure theoretically eliminate the need for such power games, do we still play them instinctively?
Or is it the mothering instinct? My experiences with women in leadership over me were positive as long as they could be framed as adult/child relationships, with these women teaching me or directing my work. When I wanted to relate as adult/adult—still respecting their authority, but with my own strengths and ideas—things took a turn for the worse.
Or maybe it’s just me—I am, after all, the constant among these situations, so perhaps the log in my own eye is divisiveness and insubordination. Except that no one else seems to think so, and a lot of other women I know—when pressed—will admit to having the same experiences.
In fact, when the guys are in another room, my girlfriends and I discuss these issues. In a way, we’re searching for answers to determine our own options. If only the pushy or manipulative woman can succeed in corporate America (or the corporate megachurch), that means we can either achieve our goals or like who we are. It seems an unnecessary choice.
There are wonderful women leading out there, too, several of whom I consider friends as well as colleagues. But it is interesting that my heartburn and headaches can all be traced back to women. Ladies, this is bad branding for all of us. Our mothers and grandmothers worked hard for appreciation and respect in the workplace. We can’t blow it now that we have some corner offices.

As a Christian woman with strong leadership and dominance traits, I really struggle with this how to conduct myself in the workplace without being overly aggressive. I naturally want to walk in a room and take control. While I have to work at staying balanced, I don’t generally have conflicts with men at work (with the exception of men who are in leadership positions who have no leadership skills and display no desire to develop any). But women, on the other hand, are much more difficult for me.
I have no advice on how to conquer this beast, but hope others do.
Remember the ol’ saying “oil and water don’t mix”? Well, you have to decide if you are going to be “oil and water” or “conquer the beast.” A Christian perspective would maintain that anyone with a “servant heart” and “humbly submitted to serve the other person at all times” would not run into these conflictive situations near as often. Women cause ‘sparks’ with one another. We just have the extra radar to become prickly/offended much more easily…men let the words/inflection/body language roll off like water on a ducks’ back. Remember: “An inexhaustible good nature is one of the most precious gifts of heaven, spreading itself like oil over the troubled sea of thought, and keeping the mind smooth and equable in the roughest weather.” ~ Washington Irving. You don’t have to like the women you work with, but you have to respect them. To be like Jesus when your character is tested is where the “rubber meets the road.” Scripture? How about this one: “Where there is jealousy and selfish ambition, there is disorder…and every evil thing.” James 3:16 Hope this tames the “beast” that can be found in every woman.