What’s wrong with millennials? NOTHING! That’s what I think
anyway.
The topic is on my mind because I was raised to paroxysms of
anger recently when I read an article, presumably not written by a millennial,
which took the line of how could they possibly turn out okay if older
generations didn’t pass on their values and faith. Now, I have nothing against
passing on faith and values, if they’re good ones. As a baby boomer myself, I
know I exhibit certain baby boomer characteristics, like being confident in the
rightness of my own opinions, so I tend think I have a lot of good ideas to
share with people both older and younger than myself. What I really disliked
about the tone of this article was the way it suggested that people of the
writer’s generation had been entrusted with some blueprint of faith and
morality and that all the rest of us would be lacking if they didn’t brainwash
us into being exactly the same. It was millennials who came in for the full
force her concern, but baby boomers and generation X-ers were also implicitly found
wanting.
In response, I would like to say this: I work with a
millennial who is one of the most sensitive, caring women I know. She and her
generation-X parents seem to have managed quite well. I live next door to a
college composed of nearly 2,000 millennials. I never cease to wonder at their
sense of social justice, their concern for those who are marginalized by
society and the stream of volunteer projects they undertake to make a difference.
I recently read about a 15-year-old Muslim girl who has started to fast for
peace and now has a whole group of people fasting with her.
This is what I think. Age has nothing to do with goodness.
There are wonderful seniors, baby boomers, generation X-ers and millennials,
and there are nasty ones, too, in all those groups. Instead of trying to prove
that whatever age group we are in is somehow better than the others, I believe
people who want to live in a world that rates justice and integrity highly should
seek one another out, regardless of age, because together we can make a better
world for all generations and the generations to come.
Karen Rose, OSB April 26, 2019
Karen Rose, OSB April 26, 2019
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