Rethinking Success: How Adolescent Girls in Aceh Redefine Career Aspirations Through Family and Faith

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Behind the scenes of a study exploring how young women navigate poverty, cultural expectations, and moral responsibility in shaping their futures.

“Success is when I no longer burden my parents.”

She said it quietly, almost as if it were obvious. But in that moment, it completely changed how I understood the meaning of success.

As researchers, we are often trained to think of success in terms of independence, personal achievement, and self-fulfillment. Yet during my fieldwork in Aceh, Indonesia, I encountered a very different reality one where success is not about becoming independent from the family, but becoming responsible for it.

This study began with a simple question: how do adolescent girls in Aceh imagine their future careers? What I found, however, was not just about careers—it was about morality, dignity, and survival.

 

Living under social visibility

In Aceh, a region shaped by strong Islamic values and deeply rooted cultural norms, unmarried young women locally referred to as anak gadis live within a space of constant social visibility. Their behavior, mobility, and even aspirations are closely observed, not only by their families but by the broader community.

At the same time, many of these young women grow up in economically constrained environments. For them, thinking about the future is never abstract. It is immediate, urgent, and often limited by what is realistically possible.

This creates a powerful tension: how do you aspire to something bigger when both economic hardship and social expectations define the boundaries of your world?

 

When success becomes a moral obligation

One of the most striking findings of this study is how participants define success. Unlike dominant global narratives that associate success with personal achievement, these young women consistently framed success as the ability to relieve the burden on their parents.

Earning an income was not about consumption or lifestyle. It was about responsibility.

Over time, I came to conceptualize this as interdependent autonomy. These girls do aspire to financial independence but not as a means of separation from their families. Instead, independence is reframed as a moral and even spiritual responsibility, closely tied to the value of birrul walidain (filial piety).

In this context, work becomes more than an economic activity. It becomes a form of devotion.

Success, then, is not measured by what one gains, but by what one gives back.

 

Not resistance, but negotiation

In much of the global literature on gender, agency is often framed as resistance challenging norms and breaking boundaries. However, what I observed in Aceh tells a different story.

These young women are not openly resisting cultural expectations. Instead, they are negotiating with them.

Many participants expressed aspirations to become teachers or civil servants. At first glance, these may appear as limited choices. But through a phenomenological lens, they reveal something more strategic.

These are what I describe as “safe zones” career paths that allow women to earn an income while maintaining social acceptance. They align with expectations of femininity, caregiving, and moral propriety.

Choosing these paths is not simply about preference. It is about managing risk.

In this sense, career aspirations are not only shaped by what young women want to become, but also by what they can become without jeopardizing their social legitimacy.

 

The invisible psychological ceiling

Perhaps the most subtle yet powerful constraint these young women face is what I term a psychological ceiling.

This ceiling is not imposed through explicit prohibition. No one directly tells them, “you cannot do this.” Instead, it is constructed through repeated social messages about what is appropriate, respectable, and “too ambitious” for women.

Over time, these messages are internalized.

One participant shared her desire to continue her education, only to conclude that it was “impossible” given her family’s financial situation. What was most striking was not the limitation itself, but how naturally it was accepted.

This is how structural inequality becomes personal reality not through force, but through belief.

 

Aspirations as survival strategies

This study ultimately reveals that career aspirations in Aceh are not simply expressions of personal dreams. They are survival strategies.

These young women continuously balance; economic necessity (supporting their families), cultural expectations (maintaining dignity and moral standing), and personal desires (hoping for a better future).

Their choices may appear cautious, but they are deeply rational.

Rather than viewing them as constrained, we might begin to see them as strategic actors individuals who navigate complex social realities with awareness, care, and resilience.

 

Rethinking empowerment

This research also raises an important question: what does empowerment mean in contexts like Aceh?

If empowerment is framed purely as individual freedom, it may conflict with values that prioritize family and community. However, if it is understood as the ability to improve one’s life while maintaining those values, a more culturally grounded approach emerges.

For policymakers and practitioners, this means that supporting young women requires more than expanding access to education. It requires aligning opportunities with the moral and social frameworks that shape their lives.

 

Learning to listen differently

Writing this paper was not just an academic exercise. It was an opportunity to listen—deeply and differently.

The voices of these young women challenge dominant assumptions about ambition, success, and agency. They remind us that aspiration is not universal. It is shaped by context, by relationships, and by deeply held values.

And sometimes, success is not about becoming someone.

Sometimes, it is about making sure that the people you love no longer have to struggle.

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