Women who work in traditionally male roles?
I'm looking for women who work in traditionally male roles. I'm a 35yr old female construction site manager. I spend most of my days in hi-vis clothing, safety boots and a hard hat. I don't put make-up on to go to work and how I dress under my safety gear is irrelevant to fashion but I need to be comfortable. The only problem with this is, when it comes to my free time I struggle to be girly and feminine. I was wondering if there are any ladies out there who have the same issues and what you do to overcome them?
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I was the only female on my Uni degree course (Music Technology and Acoustics Engineering)
I am one of only 2 women within our firm of financial advisers.
I just get on with it :laugh:0 -
When I was in the Army I would just take a shower after work and put on my normal female clothes. I would wear nice undies under my BDU's too, so that helped me feel more girly. On the weekends I would do my make-up in ways that regulations would not allow during the work-week. I did end up getting in trouble for having my nails done a few times...woops.0
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I am an architect, which is still predominantly a male field, but since I work in an office with clients coming in regularly I dress more girly for work than I do when I am out and about.
If you don't have any girly clothes, get some. Wear them until you feel comfortable in them.0 -
I work as a freight stocker in a hardware store... it's not "traditionally" male, really, and there are plenty of females at my store, but the dress code does not allow jewelry, heels, or any hair color that isn't pretty natural-looking. I usually don't wear much makeup at all either because for one, I don't feel like doing it at 4 a.m., and two, the usual clientele early in the morning are male contractors and construction site workers who stare at you funny if you're all dolled up.
When I was attending school in the spring, I used that as my time to be "girly" with makeup and jewelry, and wore dresses and skirts often. Especially now that I am losing weight and feeling more confident, I pretty much use any excuse I can to wear a dress! Even just going to the store, I don't care. It's not like I get all glammed up to get groceries, but wearing a simple day dress makes me feel pretty and fun instead of sticking to my old safe zone of jeans and a t-shirt. Plus I love wearing bright colors, pinks and yellows and reds especially. I found a pair of brand-new pink Target jeans at Goodwill for $5 and I wear them every week!0 -
I'm an electrical engineer, not many women in this field at all. I try to look fairly androgynous at work. I have long, curly hair which is typically viewed as "wild and sexual", so I braid it and put the braid in a low bun. I wear minimal makeup, just enough to feel confident (so eye liner and mascara). My work clothes are suits, and I try to keep clothes that are flattering but not form fitting or tight. Fortunately, I have no breasts, really, so I don't have any issues with my cleavage.
When I'm at home, I wear dresses all the time. I have fancy dresses, and what I consider to be plain-clothes dresses made of cotton which I don't mind cleaning or doing chores in. I wear heels when I go out grocery shopping, and I let my hair down. My only truly girly expense these days is getting soak off gel nails in dark purple, almost black. It make me feel very feminine, even at work.0 -
I'm a geologist and I spend my time with drillers looking at soil borings. I wear the same garb you do! But now I don't own any nice clothes since they get ruined at work. I've been trying to slowly add a few pieces of nice clothing that i'm not allowed to wear at work so they stay nice for when I want to dress up.0
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I have always worked in predominately male jobs and I LOVED it!! I am now in a place where there are mostly women and I have to say, I pretty much hate it!! Back stabbing, drama, whiners!!! I don't dress for other people and I am more about comfort than about being fashionable or girly. I really don't care. I do what I want!! My husband doesn't mind either so that is what counts for us.0
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I worked 15 years in Aviation Electronics, usually the only female. I wore uniforms, and steel toe boots. I didn't worry about it. and I usually only dressed girlie on special occassions otherwise. I am more comfotable in jeans and a t-shirt. :happy: even when I was younger.
Now I work in an office, am only 1 of 6 females out of a program 150 strong. while I have to wear office attire, I am still not overly girlie with it. I never worry about make-up or such. :laugh:
I am married, with boys..... I'm just Mom.... my husband loves me dressed up or down. 1/2 the time I'm not sure he notices....
so overall I wouldn't worry about it..... just go with what works for you!0 -
I have always worked in predominately male jobs and I LOVED it!! I am now in a place where there are mostly women and I have to say, I pretty much hate it!! Back stabbing, drama, whiners!!! I don't dress for other people and I am more about comfort than about being fashionable or girly. I really don't care. I do what I want!! My husband doesn't mind either so that is what counts for us.
Haha I so get that! The only reason I regret choosing to become a dietitian. I love my job though, so it's just a shame that all the drama has to come along with it!0 -
I'm a fisheries biologist so I spend a lot of time doing field work in boots and waders. I think I overcompensate on my free time and wear a lot of skirts. I don't think you should have to wait until you have free time to feel feminine. Just find what makes you feel good about yourself and incorporate it into your life. I bought a pair of pink steel toe work boots to wear out in the field. I feel pretty girly tromping through the mud in those things. :-)0
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I have always worked in predominately male jobs and I LOVED it!! I am now in a place where there are mostly women and I have to say, I pretty much hate it!! Back stabbing, drama, whiners!!! I don't dress for other people and I am more about comfort than about being fashionable or girly. I really don't care. I do what I want!! My husband doesn't mind either so that is what counts for us.
Haha I so get that! The only reason I regret choosing to become a dietitian. I love my job though, so it's just a shame that all the drama has to come along with it!
That is so sad. I wouldn't imagine that being a dietitian would have so much drama....(hugs)0 -
I don't work in construction or anything, but I am an executive in a male-dominated field (finance/accounting). I deal mostly with men. I have to be a ball-buster sometimes because not only am I female, I'm also pretty small in stature, so people don't take me seriously if I play up the "sweet, innocent girl" thing. It can be difficult, mentally, to transition from that to being feminine and girly outside the office.
One thing I would suggest is wear skirts and dresses as often as possible when you're not working. That's pretty much what I wear all the time, whether I'm working or not, because I think it makes me feel, speak, and move more like a woman. If that's not your usual wardrobe, it may take some getting used to, but I think you will also start to see men responding to you differently when you are dressed in a more feminine style.
Also, take care of the personal maintenance stuff ... regular haircuts, pedicures, facials, massages. All of that will make you feel better about yourself and more in-tune with your feminine side.0 -
I'm an electrical engineer, one of two in our office. There are other females with their engineering degrees here but they work in project management.
I'm not super girly. The boys here comment if I wear heels or make up. I'm just too lazy and I keep injuring myself so I don't wear heels. Plus we have raised concrete floors and the npise of heels is obnoxious0 -
I was a professional carpenter for 8 years....I only subcontracted on construction sites a couple times and hated it--tried to avoid it if I could. My hats off to you!
My hair was often dry or damaged due to working conditions, solvents, saw dust, dirt, sun, cold...etc... so was my skin. I would suggest getting a really nice hair cut and hot oil or shine treatment. and if you can, take a day once in a while to soak in the tub/moisturize/exfoliate. I never kept my nails conditioned because my hands were (are still) always beat up, but you could definitely use a very heavy moisturizer and polish nails and trim hang nails and tend to cuts.
Be sure to use a non greasy sunscreen on site!! I swear most of the aging and roughness of my skin was from working jobs in the summer. I stopped working construction last year and did a series of 25% TCA skin peels all winter. I swear I could see all the sun damage, brown spots, and fine lines just peel right off my face.
Good job on keeping up the profession!!0 -
Computer specialist, AND I used to work in a warehouse. (I miss the uniform! Sniff!) It's easy to get comfortable being comfortable, and forget that well, yes, all that beauty-torture garb really does make you look good, that's why people do it.
Weirdly, the thing that's helped me the most is drag-queen tips. You don't want to *look* like a drag queen, but watching them transform from general guy-on-the-street to pageant queen is inspiring. Plus they spend way more time thinking about what "looking like a girl" means than I ever want to. And I figure if they can do it, I don't really have an excuse not to.
Like RuPaul says, "We're born naked, and the rest is drag."0 -
I wear tactical pants and polos everyday, along with black combat boots and my hair pulled back in a bun. I am authorized some makeup and jewelry (must be "natural" looking and not distract from the overall appearance of the uniform). We do, however, have casual Fridays, but then its just jeans and a nice t-shirt and sneakers, again with minimal makeup and hair is usually pulled back in a bun then too b/c I am lazy and want to sleep in rather than dry my hair.
I have also worked construction in the past (as well as a heavy equipment operator in the Army Reserves), so I have also struggled with wanting to be more feminine and girly on my off days.
I have decided that this is the summer of skirts and dresses and have stocked up accordingly! I also feel better (and apparently look better - since people ask if I am ill when I don't) when I wear mascara to work. I have those really ginger blonde eyelashes that totally wash me out if I don't wear anything.
I dab some good BB Cream on daily (for the skin tone evening and the spf), put on some mascara, and a quick swipe of blush and a peachy/pink sheer lipstick - it just gives me color and makes me look alive.
I do recommend taking really good care of your hands; I wish I put sunscreen on them when I worked construction, as I think they look far older than I really am and it bothers me.0 -
I used to be a drywaller and truck driver. I am now a Fisheries Specialist in the Arctic. During my leisure time, I go camping, fishing, hunting, etc. I'm a single mom and I take my 5 yo daughter with me on all of my adventures.
I am not very "girly" or feminine and no one wears makeup where I live and I don't miss it for one moment. I no longer have any interest in taking part in modifying myself for someone else's beauty standards.
However, when I look good, I do like to dress nice while on vacation (no point dressing nice in the Arctic), but that rarely involves a skirt. lol0 -
My field is predominantly men still, but that's changing and it's an office setting so it's not difficult to be girly. However I do have a suggestion.
I used to work in a jewelry store and I had a client who worked in construction or something like that. She obviously couldn't wear huge extravagant jewelry, but she liked to wear rings under her gloves, and she would get custom-made ones made out of the traditionally male metals that looked like they were for girls, but made out of strong metal.0 -
I am a hotel manager who just recently went through a $25million renovation. Took everything down to concrete blocks and started over wtih the exisiting shell. I have never done anything like this before but had to help build my hotel to what it is now. I worked right there with all the male crews from sledge hammers through walls, welding gates, putting up drywall and moving all furniture off the semis and into the rooms. Put alot of the guys to shame and showed them how to really work! I had my nails done all the time, only broke a few here and there but with working in construction I still had to look pretty! I even had my hard hat spray painted pink too0
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I'm one of two women in our building department. I do plan review and am around contractors and inspectors all day. But I find that since they act like a bunch of high school girls, it's really not all that unfamiliar. :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
I have learned to speak with confidence and choose my arguments wisely. I don't dress or do my makeup differently--just appropriately for my profession. I refuse to try to pretend I'm "one of the guys". I'm one of the *professionals* who works there. If they can't get past the fact that I'm a woman, that's their problem to deal with, not mine.0 -
If you don't want to be girly and feminine in your free time, you don't have to be. If it's a "struggle" just be yourself and do what comes naturally.0
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I used to be a hod carrier for my ex husband's masonry company. I was right there with the guys all day getting dirty, mixing mud and carrying bricks and blocks. I felt fantastic and strong and that made me feel sexy. I've never been super feminine or girly and that's okay. You don't have to be girly to be sexy.0
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I wish more girls worked in my field. That'd be awesome.0
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I work for a heavy machinery company and it's all men! I still dress feminine, makeup and all of that but after 8 years I've noticed I've been desensitized. I'm not very "lady like" anymore. :blushing: I could probably give them all a run for their money.0
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If you don't want to be girly and feminine in your free time, you don't have to be. If it's a "struggle" just be yourself and do what comes naturally.
This is a really good point. Do you struggle because you feel you *should* be girly? Or do you *want* to be girly but struggle with the execution?0 -
If you don't want to be girly and feminine in your free time, you don't have to be. If it's a "struggle" just be yourself and do what comes naturally.
Yep, this!0 -
I have always been in industrial sales (selling to construction sites or power plants), I don't dress up or wear makeup. Besides this my hobbies are racing motorcycles/shooting guns/hunting...
Yes I am a tomboy!
I get pedicures twice a month and that's about the only girlie thing I do other than I love my long hair and take care of that. But believe me, I'm all girl and love men! :blushing:0 -
I am in training to be a reactor operator at a nuclear power plant. I wear khakis and a blue polo to work like everyone else. I also wear safety shoes, a hard hat and safety glasses. I've made small adjustments to my uniform to make it more girly - pink shoelaces and a pink lanyard for my security badge, I wear makeup to work everyday, and as previously mentioned girly underwear.0
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I do research in Applied Mathematics. Its a boys club for sure. It is sort of hard to get men to take you seriously in the first place. And I've noticed that the few girls that are in the math department, dress very androgynous. And I have heard other mathy women talk about how they stopped wearing feminine clothes because they got passed over and talked over. But I have never been a very feminine dresser, so I've not had a problem in this regard. Letting my hair grow long is about the only very feminine thing I do and I can tuck that away if I need to.
I totally identify with this original poster. I wonder now if all these years, I wasn't overly-girly because I am over-weight. It is like some sort of defense mechanism? I always felt awkward in girly clothes, like I wasn't good enough for them. But I sort of want to be girly. Maybe weight loss triggers some kind of latent desire to be that person you want to be but have felt awkward with. And having a day job that isn't conducive to this gives you a lot less time to practice. I don't have any answers. But I do identify with the problem.0
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