Roads Taken podcast

Free Spirit: Mariya Rosberg on listening to the call of the wild and applying it closer to home

11/22/2021
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Guest Mariya Rosberg felt as though she had lived a somewhat sheltered beginning of life. At college, she leaned into everything that could expand her world, from languages to travel and found herself particularly drawn to ideas around gender equity. She married classwork in gender studies with real-world applications both on campus and abroad. She always felt the pull to adventure and believed she would just follow her free spirit into the life of a wanderer.

After a little independent travel, she landed in the only spot that made sense to that free spirit: Manhattan’s West Village. She steeped herself in the city’s history and the romantic notions of having a shared lived experience with countless other free spirits. Yet she also felt she needed to “get serious.” She answered an ad in the newspaper and began a life in management consulting. Interestingly, she was able to feed her wanderlust through her international clients and started putting some sort of structure to her life. Adding motherhood to the mix allowed her to confront the gender issues that had long interested her. Eventually she was able to marry this with her business life and mentor others who were trying to do it all.

In this episode, find out from Mariya how sometimes listening to that which calls you to venture out and applying it closer to home can do a world of good…on ROADS TAKEN...with Leslie Jennings Rowley.

 

About This Episode's Guest

Mariya Rosberg has over 20 years of experience serving leading investment and universal banks in the US, Europe, and Latin America. She is currently a partner at Oliver Wyman, where she is head of Americas Corporate and Institutional Banking and also helps drive crucial decisions for the future of the firm, particularly mentoring colleagues navigating parenthood and consulting. For these and other Herculean efforts she was named a Working Mother of the Year by Working Mother magazine. She lives in Westchester County with her husband and their twins.

 

Mentioned in This Episode

"Research Shows People Become Increasingly Unhappy Until Age 47.2. Here's How to Minimize the Negative Effect of the 'Happiness Curve'" by Jeff Haden in Inc.com based on research by Dartmouth's David Blanchflower, published by National Bureau of Economic Research as a working paper entitled "Is Happiness U-Shaped Everywhere? Age and Subjective Happiness in 132 Countries."

 

Executive Producer/Host: Leslie Jennings Rowley

Music: Brian Burrows

 

Find more episodes at https://roadstakenshow.com

Email the show at [email protected]

 

 

Find more episodes at https://roadstakenshow.com

Executive Producer/Host: Leslie Jennings Rowley

Music: Brian Burrows

Email the show at [email protected]

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