I haven't read the book in years but seem to recall that many of the MND households were one-income families where the wife raised kids and managed the home so the husband could devote time to his career. My older brother fits the mold - a multi MND whose wife never worked. She raised very well-mannered, intelligent children and kept a beautiful house. Old-fashioned idea I guess.
I am surprised people on this forum liked this book. It is all about labeling people. Heck, the title is a label.
I finished the book this past weekend. It was really, really interesting! I learned so much.
I have the hard copy at home in NJ, but you've piqued my interest in giving it another look over (although the sands of my hourglass for actually becoming a MND is pretty much fizzled out).
So I went on Amazon, and I actually get it for free!
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
www.silententry.wordpress.com
The Republican that does my taxes is highly likely to be a MND. He is a financial adviser. So I am asking him for some advice. Though I think I am so unconventional that his advice either won't apply to a weirdo like me or he will have to dig deep to do a custom job. We'll see how much he charges.
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