{"id":8065,"date":"2009-11-19T22:26:07","date_gmt":"2009-11-20T03:26:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/law.marquette.edu\/facultyblog\/?p=8065"},"modified":"2009-11-19T22:26:07","modified_gmt":"2009-11-20T03:26:07","slug":"lessons-from-my-grandmother","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/law.marquette.edu\/facultyblog\/2009\/11\/lessons-from-my-grandmother\/","title":{"rendered":"Lessons from my Grandmother"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>It has been\u00a0ten days\u00a0since my grandmother\u2019s funeral and I have been, if not enjoying this past week, definitely enjoying telling stories about her life and her influence on her grandchildren.\u00a0 She died at age 99, laying down to take a rest because she did not feel well \u2014 the Torah writes that those who die in their sleep are Tzadek, truly righteous, and I know she belongs in that category.\u00a0 I popped in last week to talk to my dean briefly and proceeded to tell him the following:\u00a0 I made it all the way through law school before I believed at all that perhaps, <em>perhaps<\/em>, women were not quite as assertive as men in negotiations when I found, in the year that I taught negotiation at Stanford, more of the women needed some work on being more assertive and more of the men needed some work on listening.\u00a0\u00a0 Now, that has not been the case in every class that I have taught over the years and it was a pretty simplistic view of each student\u2019s skill sets at the time but . . . the point was that it did not even occur to me that there were gender differences in levels of assertiveness because I never saw any in my family. (Just ask my brother, husband, or brothers-in-law!)\u00a0 \u00a0I had read about these so-called gender differences in my negotiation class.\u00a0 \u00a0I just did not buy it \u2014 no one I knew would ever have been subject to that description.\u00a0 And, with Mama\u2019s passing, I realize how indebted I am to her for my understanding of negotiation.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Over the past 15 years in particular, as I have led an \u201cadult\u201d life \u2014 marriage, kids, career \u2014 I also started to view my grandmother as a three-dimensional adult and not just the relatively limited view that grandchildren tend to have of their grandparents, particularly when we are children.\u00a0 <!--more--><\/p>\n<p>This is not to say that she failed in any classic grandmother category \u2014 her unwavering support of all of us was amazing \u2014 and my brother rather hilariously eulogized my grandmother last week by noting that she was convinced that each job he ever had was filled after a nationwide search for the smartest and most talented person in which he was selected above all others.\u00a0 But she also had a life beyond us \u2014 at least before us \u2014 and the stories of her life were lessons for me.\u00a0 She was a high school accounting teacher \u2014 yes, she excelled at math \u2014 facing a law which stated that all teachers had to quit the moment they got pregnant but had to return to work immediately \u2014 the kind of law that was clearly not drafted by anyone who had ever been pregnant.\u00a0 I loved the story of how when she got pregnant with my uncle she lied about when she got pregnant so that she could work longer\u2014she had two \u201cseventh month babies\u201d in fact.\u00a0 And then, after he was born, she connived with the doctor to write a note that the baby was sickly so that she could stay home to nurse him.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Of course, that is only part of the story \u2014 and my grandmother made sure that I knew all of the stories of strong women in my family.\u00a0 The doctor in this case was my great, great Aunt Rayah \u2014 who had been a doctor with the White Army in the Russian Revolution before coming to this country and restarting her medical practice.\u00a0 Another set of stories focused on my namesake, my great-grandmother Anna, who had come to the U.S. in 1904 at the age of 17 all by herself.\u00a0 She later sent for her parents, brothers, sisters, cousins, etc. as she earned enough money to send passage for each of them.\u00a0\u00a0 And, although she never attended college, she made sure that all four of her children, including my grandmother and my aunt, went to college and had professions.\u00a0 One last story about Anna \u2013 when my grandmother and grandfather were married, in 1933 at the height of the Depression, they bought a new bedroom set at a furniture store that went bankrupt in between payment and delivery.\u00a0 My great-grandmother apparently went to the store and physically sat on the furniture until they delivered it.\u00a0 She had a rather persuasive negotiation approach.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>So, Mama, thank you for all of your stories.\u00a0 I hope <em>not<\/em> to have to negotiate by sitting on my purchased goods until they are delivered \u2014 but because of you, I know that I would be more than capable of doing so if the situation warranted.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>It has been\u00a0ten days\u00a0since my grandmother\u2019s funeral and I have been, if not enjoying this past week, definitely enjoying telling stories about her life and her influence on her grandchildren.\u00a0 She died at age 99, laying down to take a rest because she did not feel well \u2014 the Torah writes that those who die 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