Jonathots Daily Blog
(2175)
Well, actually, because it’s 1946, one is not allowed to say “pregnant.” Preferable is with child, in the family way or on the nest.
You are about to be born. While you are still in your mother’s gentle jail, two atomic bombs are exploded, with tens of thousands of casualties.
You, too, are going to be part of a “boom”–yes, an explosion of births due to men returning from war, seeking the comfort of family and the pleasure of their wives’ company. By the time you are three years old, China has joined the Soviet Union, becoming Communist.
By age four, the world is back at war, in Korea.
When you are six years old, the Supreme Court makes a decision on Brown vs. Board of Education, decrying segregation in the South. It would take thirteen years of bloody confirmation.
When you’re eight years old, you suddenly are confronted with a Cold War, which threatens to heat up periodically, causing your local village to build a bomb shelter near the school.
In like manner, when you’re sixteen, you feel the anxiety of global annihilation during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
And then comes the roller coaster:
- At seventeen years of age John Kennedy is shot.
- At eighteen the Beatles arrive, disrupting the social consciousness of a society already reeling from the death of a President.
- At twenty-two, you stand by and watch as both Martin Luther King, Jr., and Bobby Kennedy are gunned down by no-name nothings.
- Also in the same year you watch the Vietnam war escalate as thousands of young men your age are dying in the jungle.
- At twenty-three they put a man on the moon.
- And when you’re twenty-four, National Guardsmen gun down four students at Kent State.
- On your twenty-eighth birthday, Richard Nixon resigns as President of the United States, acknowledging a conspiracy to defraud the American people.
The fear of your youth and the anger of your adolescence culminates into an adult cynicism.
Yes, the Baby Boomers became the adult Gloomers–and they passed onto their offspring a sense of mistrust, causing their children to constantly seek ways to escape reality.
It is rather doubtful if we can get out of the bland and bizarre depression that the country is experiencing without understanding how we got here.
We’re all too cynical.
We are too engrossed in ways to escape our lives instead of embracing them. And it is causing us to selfishly close up possibilities which just might make us better people.
Now you know how you got here.
Why don’t you go out today and do your best to reject the cynicism … and inhale some sort of new breath of life?
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