A Quote by Anne Wojcicki

I was really raised in a gender-neutral household. I always knew I was a girl, but it never occurred to me that there was a limitation. — © Anne Wojcicki
I was really raised in a gender-neutral household. I always knew I was a girl, but it never occurred to me that there was a limitation.
I didn't know there were options like gender neutral or gender fluid. I later realized you could be a girl and dress like a guy.
The news is not gender-neutral, but it's usually reported as though it's gender-neutral.
A lot of brands are saying they're going to make 'gender neutral' clothing. But clothing is gender neutral.
I used the marriage as a filter. If the guy was conservative, didn't believe in gender-neutral marriage or thought what I did was wrong, then I immediately knew they weren't for me. That was actually very helpful.
I realized I was a girl playing with all of these great musicians, but race and gender never did cross my mind, really, until other people started talking about them. They weren't really an issue for me.
I have always firmly believed that every director should be judged solely by their work, and not by their work based on their gender. Hollywood is supposedly a community of forward thinking and progressive people yet this horrific situation for women directors persists. Gender discrimination stigmatizes our entire industry. Change is essential. Gender neutral hiring is essential.
I was very lucky. My parents raised me in such a way that it never occurred to me that I wasn't equal
I was very lucky. My parents raised me in such a way that it never occurred to me that I wasn't equal.
Being raised, I think, in a household where your parents really taught you never to let people see you sweatin' - that's the motto I live by.
It had never once occurred to me that the paper I wanted to work for would not want me. Certainly I never expected to be rejected solely because I was a girl!
I've always seen the world as very gender-neutral.
I am very gender-fluid and feel more like I wake up every day sort of gender neutral.
My parents divorced when I was eight; I never really knew my dad, and my mom raised my older sister and brother and me alone. It was challenging.
In the household in which I was raised, the themes were pretty simple. 'Work hard. Don't quit. Be appreciative, be thankful, be grateful, be respectful. Also, never whine, never complain. And always, for crying out loud, keep a sense of humor.'
I was raised Catholic. But if someone says I was raised in some religion, that's insufficient information to actually know what was going on. The real question is Was the religion in the household? The answer is no. Important decisions in the household were executed rationally and secularly. So as a result, the foundations of my reasoning derive not from religion but from the rational analysis of circumstances.
Knowledge is gender neutral, and hence the 21st century offers a great opportunity to level the gender inequity of the last thousand years in India.
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