A colleague over a 15-20 year period has therefore been around my workplace quite a bit over the years in a number of capacities. The other day she asked me a question that I actually hadn't thought about for many years.
Why don't you ever have photos of your family around your offices?
She went on to say that in all the years she's known me and been in and out of my office many times, she's never seen a sign of photos of my family.
As a consultant also, she reminded me that she is in and out of many offices with her work and like me, sees many family photos prominently displayed around men's offices.
It was a very deliberate action on my part, many years ago when I set up my own business, not to have family photos around my work. I'm not sure that much has changed 20 years later, but certainly back in 1989 there was the attitude that women with children were a questionable item in some ways. It was not voiced publicly. That would have been politically incorrect even back then.
It was assumed that we would put our family first before our work. That would then demonstrate that we were not committed, did not have the drive and commitment to succeed. That would then demonstrate that we probably couldn't make the hard decisions that needed to be made in business. In fact, there were a whole range of assumptions that followed on from all of that.
Assumptions have a unique ability to become beliefs and beliefs to become facts. These "facts" then shaped women's potential to advance their careers.