Most women are one man away from welfare.
The future depends entirely on what each of us does every day; a movement is only people moving.
We need to remember across generations that there is as much to learn as there is to teach.
We can tell our values by looking at our checkbook stubs.
Some of us are becoming the men we wanted to marry.
Men should think twice before making widow hood woman's only path to power.
God may be in the details, but the goddess is in the questions. Once we begin to ask them, there's no turning back.
Happy or unhappy, families are all mysterious. We have only to imagine how differently we would be described - and will be, after our deaths - by each of the family members who believe they know us.
Hope is a very unruly emotion.
I have yet to hear a man ask for advice on how to combine marriage and a career.
I will no longer be referred to as Miss Steinem of Ms. magazine.
I'd like to be played as a child by Natalie Wood. I'd have some romantic scenes as Audrey Hepburn and have gritty black-and-white scenes as Patricia Neal.
I've yet to be on a campus where most women weren't worrying about some aspect of combining marriage, children, and a career. I've yet to find one where many men were worrying about the same thing.
If women have young children, they are one man away from welfare.
If women are supposed to be less rational and more emotional at the beginning of our menstrual cycle when the female hormone is at its lowest level, then why isn't it logical to say that, in those few days, women behave the most like the way men behave all month long?