Recently, someone near and dear to my heart was
complaining about the unfairness between my generation and her own; the millennials.
She felt that it had been much easier for my generation to succeed in our world
than it would be for her and her friends in theirs. She thought that all of the
challenges my friends and I faced such as getting an education, student debt,
raising a family, buying our first house and saving for retirement was a cake
walk compared to what her generation now has to face. She questioned whether she
and her friends would be able to enjoy all the amenities they’d come to expect
in American life.
I had to smile because it seemed like Deja-vu all
over again. I’d heard the exact same comments from my aunts and uncles, factory
bosses and other older adults complaining about the very same thing years ago. Their
generation had it tough while we were just coasting along. They knew hardship
and the depression and hunger and world wars. We were fat and happy and
unmotivated.
Really! I’m guessing that dialogue has been repeated
for decades from one generation to the next and will probably continue to be
bantered back and forth well into our foreseeable future. It truly is a
generational thing. Everything has changed and yet nothing has changed. One
generation after the next keeps pontificating the same old tired rhetoric and
current jargon.
Yet even as these echo-boomers and members of
generation Y grouse and complain as we did about the older generation and how
things are tougher for them now, I’d like to believe there is a subtle
difference. As parents of the millennial generation, we’re still there
supporting them, helping out with their kids and listening to their complaints
with a smile and answer ‘Yeah I know, every generation says the same thing.’
I’ll be the first to admit that some things have
changed since I was in my twenties and thirties and its happening in my own
backyard. Growing up home ownership was always presented as a great prize of
adulthood. But that attitude toward owning property has changed. More than a quarter of the people who are new to the
Twin Cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul are between the ages of 20 and 34. The
percentage of Americans under the age of 35 to own a home fell to 36 per cent
last year, the lowest level on record. Studies also seem to indicate a very
non-committal non-traditional attitude among millennials toward everything from
jobs to marriage to home ownership.
Yet for all the differences there are startling
similarities beneath the surface.
We had Vietnam. They had Iraq and Afghanistan. We
had marijuana and cocaine. They have meth, molly and other designer drugs.
The Triangle Bar - West Bank - Minneapolis, MN circa 1970 |
We had the Triangle Bar and classical music of the
fifties and sixties. We had Hippie peace and love and the ghost of Bob Dylan
past and wonderful echoes of the Beatles. They have multiple downloads of
current trends in music.
We had our neighborhood bar. They have craft beer,
food trucks, rooftop restaurants and their own version of the neighborhood
gathering spot.
We didn’t harbor the absurd idea that we had to lose
our virginity by thirteen just to fit in or find true love by age twenty-one
and every other cliché pontificated by Cosmopolitan and Seventeen magazine.
Somehow for us it was more pure, a bit naive and less pressured.
Of course, we didn’t have the intrusion of the
internet or the scare of AIDs either.
We had telephones on a cord and phone booths and
Western Union. They grew up with the Mac, laptops, the IPhone and the internet.
We had the occasional bad weather. They’ve got to
deal with climate change, disappearing pensions and higher prices for
everything.
After high school, I couldn’t wait to get out of the
city. These new millennials are embracing city life, the warehouse district and
urban villages. Where have all the Hippies Gone.
Yet for all the surface differences, little has really
changed over the decades. What goes along; comes along…just give it enough
time. Below the surface, there really isn’t a whole lot of difference. So many of
the circumstances facing millennials as young adults have faced us too.
Yes, housing is more expensive. The price of goods
is more expensive. But salaries are higher and so it the value of many items. Attitudes
about social mores and standards are constantly changing and evolving.
Now, as back then, the only constant seems to be
change.
So what is the answer here? Maybe it is to wait
another twenty or thirty years until it all comes around once again. At some
point in the future, the millennials' children will probably be lamenting the
same concerns that they are piling up on us now. Especially my three granddaughters
who intend to make this world their own…on their terms and their conditions. I
hope I’m around to hear the comments from my own two kids when their children
are in that position. I’ll try to remain calm and not roll my eyes in
wonderment and suppressed joy at the irony displayed.
Yet in the end, even as things go in and out of
favor, the bottom line is still the same.
If you work hard, you can succeed…no matter what
generation you are a part of. The basic tenants of success never go out of
style.
I tried to press hard on that point in my novel Love in the A Shau. My female protagonist, Colleen, says about her old boyfriend:
“Daniel was born hungry. I had to learn to be hungry.”
The same theme runs through my (still under pen)
trilogy called “Debris.” In it, my protagonist Robert must face numerous
obstacles toward success. Hard work, determination and perseverance are his
only tools in that quest.
Napoleon Hill said it best in his book: “Think and Grow
Rich.” The principles of success haven’t changed over the decades, only the
width of ties and length of skirts. Work hard and eventually you’ll reach your
goal.
So that’s my story and I’m sticking with it.
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