What do you think?
Rate this book
322 pages, ebook
First published October 1, 2012
Our foster parents, Guy and Ruby Smith, had no experience of child-raising and seemed to be as taken aback as we were by the gulf between our cultures.Typical of small children, she quickly learnt English, adapted and ultimately developed a fond relationship with both her foster parents whom she called Auntie and Uncle. They sounded like salt of the earth types who taught her old fashioned values such as the importance of doing one's duty.
What shocked me now was the discovery that, the more I became recognised as a serious young woman who was aiming high - whose long-term aspirations went beyond a mere subservient role - the more violently I was resented and the more implacably I was kept in my place.Shortly after getting married to a fellow researcher, she decided to pack in the chauvinistic male dominated work environment and at the age of 29 embarked on a vision of creating a small company of freelance programmers that would employ women who worked from home. Yes, dear readers, this is "working from home" decades ago, already in the 1960s...
...a large number of good-natured strangers took it upon themselves to save my life. It took me some years to digest this fact and its implications. But, once I had, a simple resolution took root deep in my heart: I had to make sure that mine was a life that had been worth saving.And then at the end:
We waste too much time being afraid, when what we should really fear is wasting time.Cannot understand why this woman isn't better known?