What ever happened to those granola-crunching hippie
chicks in their long flowing dresses? The ones with a flower behind each ear
and a naked baby wrapped around their waist. Whatever happened to the
back-to-the earth movement and all those folks embracing mother nature? I think
I found them and in a place you’d hardly expect.
Back in October of 1967, that psychedelic generation,
of my generation, disappeared with the ‘Death of the Hippie’ ceremony in San
Francisco. By then, time and politics and media saturation had hastened the
gradual demise of their tribe as a cultural icon for peace and love and living
the simple life.
Now they’re back in plain sight and unabashed
contentment. If you look carefully, they’re all around us and it does make
perfect sense after all. They’ve been reborn in the children of those cultural
pioneers of women’s rights, women’s sexual freedom, political activism, social-involvement
and community-caring.
But
these new hippies aren’t into paisley prints, flowery skirts and a flower in
their hair. They’re back living in the city instead of a commune in the
country. They’ve spearheaded the movement back to the city and found their own
community of like-mind souls in the rubble of those old vestiges of their
parent’s city. These women are smart, intuitive, vested in their community and
still carry subtle hints of the flower children of their mother’s era.
Instead of being college drop-outs, they’ve got
advanced degrees and aren’t afraid to show their gifts of intelligence and
grounded observations of the world around them. I know of one young woman who
got her law degree (on a full scholarship), worked at a law firm and then at
the capitol. She’s now a stay-at-home mom, raising her
children yet still finding time to run three miles a day and do triathlons all
the while staying involved in her community and local politics. This is not a
local phenomenon. It crosses both city and state boundaries. I know of a Florida
transplant in another community doing much the same thing.
It’s the new woman of today who sees her children as
precious uncut gems, her home as her sanctuary and the community as her
extended family. She can grow vegetables in her backyard and still find great
Two Buck Chuck deals at Traders Joes. She wants her kids in sports but says: “hold
off on the trophies if it’s just for showing up.” She values education above
all else and places expectations on her children’s teachers as she would on
herself.
These new hippies are raising kids and managing
households without being encumbered by the old axioms of the’ little woman at
home.’ In many instances, they own the real estate themselves or have negotiated
the deal alongside their husbands. They’ve
come a long way, baby…but don’t ever call them baby!
They’ve traveled far beyond the homestead and have
seen and done things only early female pioneers could imagine. They’re as
comfortable behind a podium as they are on a glider nursing their infant.
They see experience as food for the brain and the
soul. It’s much the same for their children. Summers are no longer for hanging
around the playground or being glued in front the boob tube. Now there are
camps for every activity imaginable and then some.
Back
in my day, hippies had the Oracle in
San Francisco and local mimeographed rag sheets to get the latest news of
community events. Most large cities had their own version of the Oracle. It was
probably the precursor to today’s ‘Reader’ rag sheets.
Now
in the Twin Cities, they’ve got MN Post
and the Line and other internet
message boards and news sites. If they want to communicate in person from a
distance, they can do Face time or Skype or use other face-to-face mobile
devices.
Back
in the day, there were communes to raise the kids. Now these women have ECFE,
Park and Rec. programs, play dates and the old, reliable but newly energized resource
on the horizon, grandparents.
Community
gardens are still community gardens. But now there are direct farm-to-table
supply lines of fresh produce. And of course, Whole Foods and Trader Joes, are
available for organic fare. To save money, they’ve got Savers and Good-Will and
the old standard, garage sales.
Many
of these women handle the household finances and know more about the globe
economy than a lot of the newly minted sprouts on Wall Street.
Stimulants
have changed from pot to fine wines and craft beers.
They’re
forging new trails in women’s rights and equality. They’ve come a long way but
they’ll all tell you, there’s still a long way to go. Many seem to have taken a
line from the New Frugality in which ‘living within one’s means’ is the new
norm instead of the exception. And living a simpler, sustainable lifestyle is
the way to true wealth in mind and soul.
The New Frugality
is a new book that espouses these values and virtues.
Maybe
those hippies of my generation were on to something after all.
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