I don’t know, I find this distinction by gender curious. Although considering that my sisters are very much into doing things their own way, it’s not much of a surprise.
EDIT: a more precise description of what my sisters do and one of my sister’s job.
Is your sister a Level 36 Bureaucrat or still struggling along at level 35?
All my sisters went into healthcare. The men all went into IT. I suppose the women care and the men are into constantly fixing things? IDK.
Maybe there’s a feedback loop. “Based on my experience with how this hospital manages IT, my household won’t make the same mistake!”
Perhaps culture and/or upbringing have something to do with it.
My mother has always prioritized her economic and work independence, something she taught my sisters. My brothers and I, on the other hand, were always stressed the importance of having a stable job.
My mom was a teacher. She wanted to be an astronomer. When she was growing up, she was told to be a teacher, a nurse, or a nun, because she’s a woman.
It was definitely more blatant manipulation when she was growing up in the 60s. But that influence did not simply vanish. It’s ingrained in our teachers so it’s ingrained in our students, even if only subconsciously.
Restaurant work is not typically salaried unless you’re the manager. I’d say that one might be an outlier. This is the first time I’ve heard anyone refer to hourly wages as independent work.
My brother works in the kitchen as a cook, I don’t know if that makes a difference, I admit I assume he works for a salary just because he has a Boss and is working for someone else.
And, well, maybe “self-employed” was the correct term? Although it didn’t fit well with what I wanted to say, but since English is not my mother language, I kinda get confuse sometimes.