I am one of the seventy-six million
babies born in the United States between 1946 and 1964, a Baby Boomer, the
generation once called the pig in the python, the bulge in the snake, not the
first generation to be tagged as a generation, as the “Lost Generation” and the
“Silent Generation” preceded us, but perhaps the first generation to be aware
of ourselves as a generation.
We are also the “Me Generation”,
privileged as other generations had not been, raised in post-war affluence with
a sense of our generational superiority to the sleepy repressed stiffs
littering the world and workplace, keenly aware of ourselves as the new
generation. Thus, the “generation gap” emerging at the end of the 1960’s as we
believed ourselves the champions of social awareness and humanitarian progress
battling the useless vestiges of antequated, social conventions and
convictions.
We had a moment, somewhere between Watts and Detroit and
Newark and Nixon’s resignation, when we might have made a difference. For all
of our pride in our highly evolved sensibilities and sensitivities, we became a
lost generation ourselves, a hedonistic, self-serving bulge, taking up space,
distracted by pleasure.
We became the generation that did not recognize itself.
What happened, we wonder? Weren’t we the generation that would change the
world?
Look around. I’m afraid we did.
We
believed in progress, that every subsequent age would continue to flourish as
ours had done, but we did not hold the opportunities given to us in trust for those who came next. We
liked the idea of an increasingly comfortable world so much that we wallowed in
it without securing the future. We knew the environment was fragile. We knew
natural resources were limited. We knew that cities built in the desert would
need water. We knew garbage had to end up somewhere. We knew people lived in
poverty and violence. We knew the rich got richer and the poor got poorer. We
knew we were
distracting ourselves with mindless pleasures. We knew
that schools had become warehouses. We knew that children went to bed hungry.
We made a lot of noise in the 1960’s, but what remains?
John Steinbeck wrote of the dignity shown by hard-working people of good will;
the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. broke the silence of the Silent Generation
with words that took us to the mountain. Where is our voice now? We once heard Dylan, but now, perhaps hear
Stephen King spinning dark tales of fun house world and stalking killer clowns.
We are perched now on a thin branch at the top of a tall
tree. The eldest of us are now seniors, seventy years old, retired, hoping that
in these “golden” days, seventy-five is the new fifty.
I’m pretty sure it isn’t, but life isn’t over yet for
many of us. Maybe there’s time enough to circle back and put a few things
right, plant a few trees to provide shade for children we will never know.
We’re outnumbered now, finally; Millennial’s are the current bulge, and our
python is looking flatter with every passing year.
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