I came to learn that women have never had a history or culture of leisure. (Unless you were a nun, one researcher later told me.) That from the dawn of humanity, high status men, removed from the drudge work of life, have enjoyed long, uninterrupted hours of leisure. And in that time, they created art, philosophy, literature, they made scientific discoveries and sank into what psychologists call the peak human experience of flow. Women aren’t expected to flow. I read feminist leisure research (who knew such a thing existed?) and international studies that found women around the globe felt that they didn’t deserve leisure time. It felt too selfish. Instead, they felt they had to earn time to themselves by getting to the end of a very long To Do list. Which, let’s face it, never ends. I began to realise that time is power. That time is a feminist issue.

Brigid Schulte: Why time is a feminist issue (via librarianbyday)

*immediately books holiday*

(via hermionejg)

The whole article is pretty great

(via get-yr-social-work-rage-on)

Sometimes I feel like the cruelest bitch in the world even mentioning that I only work 4-day weeks (I mean I make like no money but um, ittttttt ruuuuuulessssss).  It feels so decadent, but actually it’s so humane.

(via haventreadthat)

time is a feminist issue! reporting from the field on my own contributions to a culture of leisure.

(via karaj)