Welcome to the February edition of "MSH Shits On The Baby Boomers During Insomnia". Today's commentary was provoked by
redditors.
I'm as disgusted as the rest of you, I know.
Here's my thing with all the Millennial hate.
1.) I could be wrong, but I believe that at one point, Baby Boomers were referred to in the media as "Generation Me," or something along those lines.
2.) Adults criticizing youth is a very old tendency. Blah blah Sophocles, blah. But here's the thing: usually, that kind of thing involves criticising youth.
Teens and college kids. People under 25, young and idealistic. I mean, heck, I think that in the late '60s, some counterculture people had the attitude of "don't trust anyone over 30."
Here's the thing: I'm a millennial. I was born in 1989. I am squarely in that generational cohort. I am not on some kind of cusp, like my SO born in '79 or my brother born in 2001, where there's any ambiguity about which generation I belong to.
I am like, peak Millennial.
I am 28 years old.
I know I'm not old per se, but I don't think I'm particularly young, either. I'm a working adult, not some 19 year old who's in college and hasn't formally entered the "working world" yet.
I feel like in at least some ways, there's this weird thing going on in the general zeitgeist or whatever, where Millennials, as a generation, are continually conceptualized and discussed as if they're rebellious adolescents.
But we're not.
It's like the whole narrative around us is stuck in 2009. It's kind of bizarre.
This hits something I talked about during my
personal War on Christmas, and that EnigmaticHat identified as well: Cultural freeze.
See, there was always something I didn't quite understand growing up, particularly when I became a teenager. There was this bizarre
expectation that I would adopt a reckless partyboy lifestyle at like, age 14. Both of my parents and particularly my father made quite a few wry comments of the kind that expected me to be staggering home drunk every other weekend, and that they weren't going to make a big deal out of it. "Enjoy being young. Let me know if you need a ride."
You might have an idea where this is going. I didn't adopt this lifestyle. Not only was I not particularly interested in wiping out constantly, there was no way that I could. Even rested (by my horrid standards) and sober, I could barely fit but a couple hours of free time between sleep, school, homework, and self-maintenance (as seen by a
teenager). If I wanted to party down, it'd eat up all of my remaining time and then some. It would have had to be my top priority, and it didn't fit with my admittedly strangled social environment at all. The weirdest element of all of this is that it was
distressing to my Xer parents when this didn't happen, and the distress became more pronounced as I grew older. I got a learner's permit I ended up not using literally even once, because "your friends might want to drive around with you, you know". Useful experience overall? Sure. But the rationale was way off base.
The funny thing is that there was a presumption that I wouldn't try to focus on school, that I'd be constantly distracted by socializing...but the reverse ended up being true for me, and I think it was true for quite a few people. Judging by the ham-fisted prodding to "go out and illegally drink with your friends please" and in one particular case later on (quote verbatim) "maybe you should make some mistakes anyway" (preparing for college instead of a summer roadtrip), I think there was a level of realization that I had been steered towards a professional and academic focus with the presumption I'd shirk it...and then I
did as told. The reason why and why it was disturbing to them, I'll get to in a bit. But it gets weirder.
Because, of course, there
were teenagers who liked the party down lifestyle. And I'm more and more convinced as I gather more stories and experiences that even
they didn't do it the way their parents expected. A normal millennial party is a circle of 5-15, who all know each other well enough or by one degree separation. There will probably be drinking and there might be smoking. There will definitely be some kind of entertainment, movies, video games, drinking games, something. A decent way to burn a weekend or a holiday. I thought that was what this kind of lifestyle that I don't love and don't hate generally was. But then I got old enough that my parents started telling me about
their teenage lifestyles. And it's fucking shocking, frankly.
This is my generational thesis: We're culturally stuck at least one level "off" for each age group, possibly reaching two now. The common ideas of adult culture are
still on the baby boomers, and relevant to the above, the common ideas of youth culture are fucking
still centered right on the Xers and their habits. Child culture is to a degree stuck on the millennials (90's nostalgia), though as promised I'm shitting on the baby boomers and suggesting that's mostly because they've got an iron death grip on being the culture of adults and not the elderly. Nobody can be perceived as moving into later age brackets, at least culturally, and this creates two malignant ideas: Every generation goes through a repeating cycle that's exactly the same, and every generation has the same values in the end. Differences are purely because of age and will inexorably follow a predetermined path...you guessed it, the path of the baby boomers.
See, the things my parents and other Xers have described about their youth years, are just insane and way too intense. I'm not jealous of it either. The most wild millennial frat party comes off a
lot like the
average Xer party. My father has
scars from the shit he got up to, and quite a bit of it sounds like no fun at all. It has only further confirmed in my mind the idea that Xers writ large are cracked by the stress of their generational conditions, and became rather reckless because of it.
Because the thing I'm writing this to debunk is this: Generations are not all the same, and they don't change the same ways through life. Millennial are way more careful.
Less sex. Less drinking. That one says millennials generally see it as "pathetic or embarrassing" for someone to be drunk, and yeah, growing up with Xer parents might just do that to you. I myself was teetotal for a long time, and I still haven't surpassed "priest breaking sobriety on occasion" nor plan to. Why the fuck would I? Actual millennial youth culture and values are more or less
ignored except by the most demographic focused media, and media for all demographics paints millennials with the stereotypes of the Xers instead. This includes all those hit piece articles, and why the data of less sex can't be squared with the stereotype of casual sex - it's actually an Xer trait hopelessly retrofitted for the minority millennial trends that sort of fit it, like tinder and FWB relationships.
Because of this cultural freeze, when someone like me who has not even a cosmetic resemblance to the path the Xers trod back in the day comes along, it comes off as (and my god, now that I say it the arrogance of the concept comes out full force) culturally incorrect. INNOCENT CHRISTIAN CHILDHOOD. BLACKOUT DRUNK UNTIL COLLEGE ENDS. SUIT HANDSHAKE JOB MAN MARRIAGE. CHILDREN CHURCH REPUBLICAN PARTY. No exceptions or you're a loser. Funny thing is, I don't blame the Xers. As with my other post, I mostly see them as a victimized generation who developed maladaptive habits to deal with it. It was the Baby Boomers who used their influence to hit a cultural pause button. Why, I couldn't say. Perhaps an unwillingness to recognize that death is coming for them, same as their parents and everyone else.
The important takeaway is not to fall for the trap of this "pathway" idea. The most stereotypical versions of this I see are an (honestly, somewhat desperation filled) assumption that millennials and Gen Z are just gonna turn around and be Republican dominant later on in life. It's a really carved in stone thing, a lot of people are unwilling to even consider that it might not happen that way. The "common sense" of the Baby Boomers rearing its head again. "You'll get more conservative as you get older", "They'll come back to Christ and the Church when they have children", "That's just college talking".
But I don't think it is. While some millennials might follow the song and dance, I've got to wonder, how many are just being pressured into a mold that doesn't fit them? And this culture freeze can't last forever. The cracks are already right there in front of us, and when that dam breaks, I get the feeling it might snap forward hard. I'm not sure of what the consequences would be though. Cultural renaissance? Violent panic by whatever fraction of the baby boomers are still alive? Leftist political takeover? Whatever the exact results, I mark this as the coming zeitgeist, if the wind isn't blowing already.