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America fails at Raising Adults

 
 
Reply Mon 30 May, 2011 11:07 pm
It’s Not About You
By DAVID BROOKS
Published: May 30, 2011
Quote:
Over the past few weeks, America’s colleges have sent another class of graduates off into the world. These graduates possess something of inestimable value. Nearly every sensible middle-aged person would give away all their money to be able to go back to age 22 and begin adulthood anew.
But, especially this year, one is conscious of the many ways in which this year’s graduating class has been ill served by their elders. They enter a bad job market, the hangover from decades of excessive borrowing. They inherit a ruinous federal debt.

More important, their lives have been perversely structured. This year’s graduates are members of the most supervised generation in American history. Through their childhoods and teenage years, they have been monitored, tutored, coached and honed to an unprecedented degree.

Yet upon graduation they will enter a world that is unprecedentedly wide open and unstructured. Most of them will not quickly get married, buy a home and have kids, as previous generations did. Instead, they will confront amazingly diverse job markets, social landscapes and lifestyle niches. Most will spend a decade wandering from job to job and clique to clique, searching for a role.

No one would design a system of extreme supervision to prepare people for a decade of extreme openness. But this is exactly what has emerged in modern America. College students are raised in an environment that demands one set of navigational skills, and they are then cast out into a different environment requiring a different set of skills, which they have to figure out on their own.

Worst of all, they are sent off into this world with the whole baby-boomer theology ringing in their ears. If you sample some of the commencement addresses being broadcast on C-Span these days, you see that many graduates are told to: Follow your passion, chart your own course, march to the beat of your own drummer, follow your dreams and find yourself. This is the litany of expressive individualism, which is still the dominant note in American culture.

But, of course, this mantra misleads on nearly every front.

College grads are often sent out into the world amid rapturous talk of limitless possibilities. But this talk is of no help to the central business of adulthood, finding serious things to tie yourself down to. The successful young adult is beginning to make sacred commitments — to a spouse, a community and calling — yet mostly hears about freedom and autonomy.

Today’s graduates are also told to find their passion and then pursue their dreams. The implication is that they should find themselves first and then go off and live their quest. But, of course, very few people at age 22 or 24 can take an inward journey and come out having discovered a developed self.

Most successful young people don’t look inside and then plan a life. They look outside and find a problem, which summons their life. A relative suffers from Alzheimer’s and a young woman feels called to help cure that disease. A young man works under a miserable boss and must develop management skills so his department can function. Another young woman finds herself confronted by an opportunity she never thought of in a job category she never imagined. This wasn’t in her plans, but this is where she can make her contribution.

Most people don’t form a self and then lead a life. They are called by a problem, and the self is constructed gradually by their calling.

The graduates are also told to pursue happiness and joy. But, of course, when you read a biography of someone you admire, it’s rarely the things that made them happy that compel your admiration. It’s the things they did to court unhappiness — the things they did that were arduous and miserable, which sometimes cost them friends and aroused hatred. It’s excellence, not happiness, that we admire most.

Finally, graduates are told to be independent-minded and to express their inner spirit. But, of course, doing your job well often means suppressing yourself. As Atul Gawande mentioned during his countercultural address last week at Harvard Medical School, being a good doctor often means being part of a team, following the rules of an institution, going down a regimented checklist.

Today’s grads enter a cultural climate that preaches the self as the center of a life. But, of course, as they age, they’ll discover that the tasks of a life are at the center. Fulfillment is a byproduct of how people engage their tasks, and can’t be pursued directly. Most of us are egotistical and most are self-concerned most of the time, but it’s nonetheless true that life comes to a point only in those moments when the self dissolves into some task. The purpose in life is not to find yourself. It’s to lose yourself.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/31/opinion/31brooks.html?_r=1&hp

Has there ever been a American generation so ill prepared for life as is the class of 2011?? I doubt it.
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boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2011 08:29 am
@hawkeye10,
Very interesting, thanks for posting this.

I don't know if they're the most unprepared but I do think that their unpreparedness shows a lot more.

There is another forum that I visit that is divided into hundreds of sub-forums, many of which are populated by much younger people than I think A2K is. One thing I notice is that these young people seem terrified of everything. They are afraid of making mistakes, even small mistakes. They're afraid on confrontation. They expect strangers to plot out their life.

There might have been a lot of people like that when I was younger but I didn't know them. I didn't have the internet to read what they were thinking. I suppose it's possible that I thought everyone was more like me while they really weren't.
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Eva
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2011 09:05 am
@hawkeye10,
Quote:

...Most successful young people don’t look inside and then plan a life. They look outside and find a problem, which summons their life. A relative suffers from Alzheimer’s and a young woman feels called to help cure that disease. A young man works under a miserable boss and must develop management skills so his department can function. Another young woman finds herself confronted by an opportunity she never thought of in a job category she never imagined. This wasn’t in her plans, but this is where she can make her contribution.

Most people don’t form a self and then lead a life. They are called by a problem, and the self is constructed gradually by their calling....


I love this. It is so true.
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hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2011 12:24 pm
I am beginning to see in the collective conversation the idea that children have become a fetish, and this sounds right. Raising kids has become all about the adults, not about what is best for the kids. And these adults are twisted.

Boomer, think for a second how many interests push their agenda with fear.....and think about how insecure the adults are as we experince our way of life crumbling (and remember that I claim that this civilization is ending).....of course kids brought up in this environment are going to have have fear. The bigger problem is that the fragmentation of self that we see in their parents has been amplified as the parents passed it down. It gets to be very difficult to build a new civilization when large numbers of the individuals are unformed, when there is no there there.
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2011 02:29 pm
@hawkeye10,
I get accused of being a "helicopter parent" on here a lot because I ask a lot of parenting questions.

In the real world I'm seen as a loosy-goosey-hippiesque-anything goes parent.

I'm constantly amazed at how fearful parents are and how if you don't join in the fear-fest that you are looked at as if you are a bad parent. I think you have to give kids freedom to goof up while the stakes are low, that way they learn it's not the end of the world to make a mistake. What I see a lot on the other forum is young adults who never learned to dust themselves off and keep on going.

I'm determined to not let Mo be afraid of the world. I think that will take him a lot further than an A in math.
hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2011 03:20 pm
@boomerang,
Your experience is consistant with mine. I then notice this weakness being constantly exploited for political and economic profit, and I wonder how we developed this weakness and how we are to be rid of it.
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2011 05:40 pm
@hawkeye10,
I think we got here by having the "if it bleeds, it leads" news mentality + 24 hour news stations that have lots of time to fill. Now you hear about every crime, every where; it's easy to extrapolate that you're in danger or that your kid is in danger.

The O.J. Simpson trial seemed to be the turning point in filling media time and inches with the most lurid stuff they could find.

These kids have grown up with 9-11 and endless war.

Most states (all states?) now have exit exams to receive a diploma. You could have been a straight A student through your entire career but if you flub this one exam you get no diploma. That is kind of terrifying.

They are told that if they don't get into an ivy league college and graduate with honors they are destined to wash dishes at I-HOP for the rest of their life.

Plus, if they don't have 500 facebook friends and a phone stuck permanently in their hand they feel like social failures.

I really feel sorry for young adults these days.

It's really the fault of old adults who think if the kids aren't competing then they aren't winning.

hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2011 05:53 pm
@boomerang,
Which is a derivative of "the sqeaky wheel gets the grease".....I think we have lost the ability the measure and lost the willingness to say no. Whine and ye shall get what ye wants is the modern motto, which works about as well to advance civilization as the spoiling children does to produce adults.
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