INTRODUCTION

A few years ago, I was playing cards with my gran, who at the time was 93 years old, and she was telling me what it was like to be a woman of the 1940s. She told me about when the war started and most of the men headed to war, and she and her friends starting working in an ammunition factory. It made me think about what an unusual time it must have been — when your life as you know it is turned upside down, your husband leaves you for up to five years and you have to survive by working in a factory. You start to make your own money and start to feel the freedom that this brings, only to be told to get back in your box when the men come home. To think that she was not allowed to work or even have a loan in her name now seems unbelievable.

In her time, women were not the bosses; they did not run businesses. So, in her mind, what man would listen to a woman in the workforce? She constantly told my mother not to ‘get above herself'. For her, a woman had very little to no real power, even in her own home. It took my gran years to understand that at Boost, I — her granddaughter, not her grandson — was running the business. She couldn't get her head around a woman boss, because that was not what girls did in her day. Why would they even listen to Janine? The funny thing is, it took a Herald Sun article for her to believe that I had actually started the business (because clearly everything you read in the paper is true). This wasn't beliefs from 100 years ago; this was ...

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