Against the Structured Generation

One of the unfortunate characteristics of our generation is that we have tended to live highly structured lives.  Those of us born in the 1980s, who spent their twenties in the transitional era of the early 2000s, amidst the violent cacophony of the two Bush Wars, have experienced at least some shared sense of structure to our lives.

The typical life of an upper-middle class son or daughter born in Canada during that generation would go something like this: a childhood spent in public schools, with no lack of activities in which to immerse oneself (soccer, piano, theater, etc.). Then high school hits, with its swirl of hormonal desire combined with the looming pressure of standardized tests. It is generally here that the adolescent learns the rhythms of capitalist work-time: school during the day, nights filled with study and ever more structured activities.

If the student is lucky he or she will have one day a week of rest, but even at this early age the adolescent will learn what it means to work on Sundays to prepare for the coming week. For the most driven students, even one day off a week is too much. They feel nothing but the throbbing pressure to “succeed,” which at their age means to get into the best universities their country has to offer.

Student Image
By Keith Negley, all rights reserved.

If said adolescent buckles down and grits through the stress of exams, they will find themselves in one of Canada’s storied educational institutes, which means entrance into the massive public degree factories known as McGill or the University of Toronto. Once there, they will negotiate dorm life, oversized classes, overworked TAs, dense academic prose, and the sexual freedom of early adulthood.

If the student’s family is wealthy, they may even find themselves in one of the elite universities in the United States, a Harvard, Yale, or Dartmouth, where they will encounter a level of class differentiation that will (one hopes) shock them.

The throbbing pressure of “life itself” hardly abates in college. How many young undergraduates do we see cross the thresholds of our classrooms, filled with fear in their eyes, uncertain of who “they are” and what they want “to become”? How will they make an economic life for themselves upon graduation? For the lucky few, their parents’ wealth will see them to a lifetime of comfort, but the vast majority of our students will have to grapple with the harsh realities of a market driven existence.

It is no wonder, then, that our students are obsessed with the material pressures that confront them. They equate a happy life with a stable job, and thus for the most part pursue majors that have the best employment rates: engineering, science, computer programming, etc.

Graduate school is almost a given, whether that be in the glorified trades such as law or more extensive programs in medicine and the advanced sciences. For the humanistically inclined, graduate school means advanced training in historical, cultural, or literary analysis. Visions of the great intellectuals of an older era- think Foucault and Chomsky debating political power on French television- motivate these doctoral youngsters, who all hope to achieve public prominence through their writing.

ChangSei_ProtectingAnimals
By Sei Chang, Grade 2, Caroway Elementary, Round Rock ISD, Texas

For each young person who enters the workforce, the career-long negotiation with the politics of the workplace begins. One quickly learns that all corporate structures- from the bastions of high finance to the smallest of basement startups- are hierarchical. Decision-making always tumbles downward, no matter how hard the company wraps itself in a discourse of care and empathy for its employees.

Thus our twenty somethings worry almost constantly about pleasing their bosses, groping for that next promotion even as they strive to prevent burn out. I have witnessed numerous friends who were once energized by the prospects of careers in law, marketing, and government reach points of almost physical disgust with their life choices, hollowed out by corporate structures designed to get as much labor power out of them for as small a wage. The lessons of capitalism are learned the hard way, even by our most well-educated and (because of this) most deluded young people.

Thus by the time our peers are nearing the end of the first thirty years of their lives, they face something of an existential crisis: is what I’m doing worthwhile? They have, by and large, lived in a similar manner to the other members of the educated class to which they belong: high school, undergrad, grad school, and work. They share similar dreams with their counterparts as well: finding a career “one loves,” buying a home that is “just perfect,” finding that “special someone,” and of course going out to “see the world,” if only to make them more well-rounded before they settle down to the nine to five routine.

Is there anything more hollow than the post-graduation three-week jaunt to Europe, India, or the Middle East (only the “safe” regions)? Is there anything more predictable than the endless Facebook photo tours of one’s self-actualization in Asia, where pictures of that mountain you climbed intermingle with your own reflections on your fractured childhood or unrequited loves? Our young people try to Otherize themselves for a couple of weeks, safe in the knowledge that they are returning to comfortable, if somewhat deadening, lives “back home” in Toronto, Calgary, Ottawa, or Vancouver.

These are, simply put, lives without gaps, embodied by the U of T graduate, the Queens student president, the corporate lawyer, the would be professor, the future politician, the consultant….lives shuttled from one carefully planned institution to another, from the high school to the university to the corporation to the suburb.

One fears that we are headed for lives that are fundamentally no different from those of our parents: stable jobs, incremental pay, the “miracle” of children, summer cottages, middle age, watching the teenagers grow up, retirement, more travel, and then the long march to the emptiness of death. The most astounding of us, one hopes, will produce some tremendously beautiful fiction, or shoot a socially powerful documentary, or help design just policies for impoverished others.

But we know that the realities of market life mitigate against socially just politics. We also know that it is ever so difficult to make an incursion into popular culture through aesthetic forms (which does not mean, however, that we should stop trying to do so).

KingJoshua_TheZoo
By Joshua King, Grade 1, Age 6, Clayton Elementary, Austin ISD, Texas

The brutal reality is that most of us- the educated elite- will be destined not just for anonymity (which is not a bad thing at all), but conformity, managing our online accounts, trying not to get too squeezed at work, and resigning ourselves to the small pleasures that life can offer: the literary arts, film, real estate, kids, two weeks of vacation, our favorite team winning a championship, avoiding illness for as long as possible before our bodies break down. At best, we can look back on our lives and say “we had seventy great years, we left a family, a few books, a movie or two, made some cash and that was that…” The end.

A life lived in that manner- without any messiness, without any risk- is a minor life, a life that hardly had a chance to begin before it was over.

And yet here is the catch: it is ever so difficult to imagine a life that would be fundamentally different from the bourgeois model we have in front of us. It is, ultimately, a failure of the imagination that keeps us trapped within these conformist rhythms, ones that do nothing but replicate the unjust world that sprawls before us.

In 1986 the novelist Richard Ford properly diagnosed this imaginative failure in his novel The Sportswriter, which can best be understood as an examination of the rhythms of bourgeois depression. The story follows Frank Bascombe, a middle-aged sportswriter whose life has collapsed in on itself in the wake of the death of his son, his groping infidelities, and the failure of his marriage.

Sleep-walking through crisis in what he calls a state of “cloudiness,”  he quietly searches for some kind of revelatory breakthrough. Though disengaged, he is an astute observer of the New Jersey suburbs around him and the upper-class bourgeoise that inhabit it. In describing a club of divorced men he belongs to he may as well be describing the human condition as he sees it:

In a way, I suppose you could say all of us were and are lost, and know it, and we simply try to settle into our lost-ness as comfortably and with as much good manners and little curiosity as we can. And perhaps the only reason we have not quit is that we can’t think of a compelling reason to. When we do think of a good reason we’ll all no doubt quit in an instant. And I may be getting close. (80)

Before his marriage fully dissolves, Bascombe goes to a small-liberal arts college to teach creative writing for a semester. It is in the natty micro-battles of academic careerism that Bascbombe finds the greatest examples of lives lived without imagination, human beings who cannot countenance what genuine “gaps” look like:

The fellows in my department, God knows, couldn’t have been a better bunch. To their way of thinking, I was a “mature writer” trying to get back on my feet after a “promising start” followed by a fallow period devoted to “pursuing other interests,” and they were willing to go to bat for me…I even had some confide wistfully that they wished they’d done what I did, but had never seen where the “gap” was in a young life that let you think about such a thing as being a sportswriter. All of them, of course, had gone right out of college, raced through graduate school, and as far as possible gotten jobs, tenure, and a life set for them. If they’d had any “gaps,” they didn’t acknowledge them, since that might’ve had something to do with a failure of some kind- a bad grade, a low board score or a wishy-washy recommendation by an important professor, something that had scared the bejesus out of them and that they wanted to forget all about now.

I was impressed with my colleagues’ professionalism: that they knew where all “their books” were in the library, knew the acquisitions by heart, never had to waste time at the card catalog. I enjoyed bumping into them down in the lower level stacks, gossiping and elbowing one another about female faculty, tenure, sharing some joke they’d heard or whatever scandal had turned up in TLS that week. What they did, how they conducted life, was every bit as I would’ve done if I was them- treated the world like an irrelevant rib-tickler, and their own comfortable lives like an elite men’s club.

The place was all anti-mystery types right to the core- men and women both- all experts in the arts of explaining, explicating and dissecting, and by these means promoting permanence. For me that made for the worst kind of despairs, and finally I couldn’t stand their grinning, hopeful teacher faces…Real mystery- the very reason to read (and certainly to write) any book- was to them a thing to dismantle, distill and mine out into rubble they could tyrannize into sorry but more permanent explanations; monuments to themselves, in other words. (218-223)

Bascombe here identifies precisely the kind of bourgeois culture that is, I think, at the root of our generation’s limitations: the absence of anger, passion, and activist sacrifice that comes with a comfortable and known life. As Bascombe puts it, the academics he sees around him could never imagine that moment in life where a “gap” opened up where they could do something as irreverent as write about sports for a living, to say nothing of something more sexually or politically daring. They had all “gone right out of college, raced through graduate school, and as far as possible gotten jobs, tenure, and a life set for them.”

So many of us are like the cushy professionals described in Ford’s work. Living safe, comfortable lives, in which the broad extent of our laboring energies are spent striving to get the careerist security that our parents had. We associate “gaps” with failure: the inability to find professional success, a grinding break up, the looming death of a loved one. We don’t talk about our “gaps,” none the less celebrate them, for they scare us with the ferocity with which they can upend the careful track of our lives.

Such careerist longing for safety is a political and moral detriment for our generation. Our notion of the good future has already been spelled out for us- in the plastic happiness of BMO commercials and the hollowed domesticity of a Williams-Sonoma catalogue.

For those who do get their sinecure, be it in corporate, government, or academic life, the rest of the world becomes a searingly unfortunate drama, decidedly outside ourselves, something to read about in the Globe and Mail or The New York Times. We call this looming chaos by a variety of names- “extremism,” “jihad,” “recession,” “ebola,” “socialism,” etc. But those terms all signify the same thing: disruption of the lives of dimmed but comfortable security that we all seek.

If you fear the rest of the world, if you cannot even imagine abandoning your career or your precious familial comforts in order to engage with it, in order to genuinely Otherize yourself in the face of modes of life that are different from your own…then any chance for a politics of genuine emancipation are lost. You might as well kick up on your sofa, check your Netflix account, and admit that this world of violent inequality is one you are comfortable with keeping.

So just what kind of life should we lead? Bascbome has some thoughts on the matter:

In my view all teachers should be required to stop teaching at age thirty-two and not allowed to resume until they’re sixty-five, so that they can live their lives, not teach them away- live lives full of ambiguity and transience and regret and wonder, be asked to explain nothing in public until very near the end when they can’t do anything else.

[The faculty] had all decided they really didn’t have to regret anything ever again! Or be responsible to anything that wasn’t absolutely permanent and consoling. A blameless life. Which is not wise at all, since the very best you can do is try and keep the regret you can’t avoid from ruining your life until you can get a start on whatever’s coming.

Consequently, when these same people are suddenly faced with a real ambiguity or a real regret, say something as simple as telling a sensitive young colleague they probably like and have had dinner with a hundred times, to go and seek employment elsewhere; or as complicated as a full-bore, rollicking infidelity right in their own homes (colleges are lousy with it)- they couldn’t be more bungling, less ready, or more willing to fall to pieces because they can’t explain it to themselves, or wanting to, wont; or worse yet, willing to deny the whole beeswax…Literature’s consolations are always temporary, while life is quick to begin again. (223)

This is, I submit to you, the only way forward for us: to shun entirely the blameless life of the bourgeois professional, with its shuttered view of happiness and obsessive focus on wealth and offspring. What we need to embrace are “lives full of ambiguity and transience and regret and wonder,” lives in which we take real risks to solve terrible, ambiguous questions.

If we want to solve the radical inequality our world presents to us as it is presently organized, only a radical politics will suffice. This will involve putting much of ourselves at risk, speaking truth to power, fighting against the profit motive, and opening up spaces of genuine equality in our daily landscapes. Rarely do such projects result in tenure-track jobs, comfortable corporate board positions, or material stability of any kind.

Genuine risk, and searing political regret, must become part of our life choices…we must be prepared to make the kind of sacrifices that you can’t come back from, the ones that terrify the fickle, un-courageous people who Ford diagnoses in his novel.

By Haley Barr, Grade 6, Johnson Middle School, McKinney ISD, Texas
By Haley Barr, Grade 6, Johnson Middle School, McKinney ISD, Texas

So I tell all of our young people: forget yourself. Give your narcissism up, for your own happiness is illusory and, quite frankly, unimportant. You will be forgotten, ground into dust, by the corporate structures that define your society, no matter how progressive they may seem. Salvation can only be found in finding a cause outside of yourself, a goal worth risking everything for.

Once you have found it, go out and immerse yourself in it. Live a life full of uncertainty and insecurity, and then come back, when you are sixty years old, to tell us all about it.

The next step, surely, is to discuss what kind of causes are worth extinguishing our lives for, so that we may gain a true sense of meaning from our existence on this planet.

I encourage our readers to submit their responses on the topic: what would you give up everything for? What risks would you be willing to take?

What is the maximal future that you can imagine, and how can you push against the structures of power that prevent it from being realized?

Mark McConaghy is a doctoral candidate in the East Asian Studies Department at The University of Toronto. He studies aesthetics, political economy, and the dynamics of historical change in the 20th century.

Student Art Downloaded From: http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/tea/images/studentart/Jun26Jul02.html

157 thoughts on “Against the Structured Generation

  1. In resposes to if I would give up something for everything. One thing is for sure if we as a society don’t take little steps to save our environment such as in California watching our water in take, we will be in trouble. I think that everyone here in at least Southern California need to take whatever steps necessary to save our water resoure. Thanks for this inspiring blog.

  2. Reblogged this on Highlights and commented:
    On battling conformity.

    The things written in this essay is easy to say, but it takes a lot of effort to step out of our comfort zones and talk about our “gaps”. Nonetheless, the risk of living wild and lost is worth taking if for after going through it all, we’ll have a story to share.

  3. Reblogged this on http://jessdrtraveller.com
    Thank you for writing this, you incredible human being. I no longer feel bad about making the decision to leave everything behind to get a holiday working visa in Germany(and every other country I feel so inclined as to inhabit).
    I am constantly scared and afraid of the consequences of leaving jobs behind, because it represents a break from the norm, a shove away from security. My Manager asked me the other day; “What are your aspirations in life, Jess?”
    Oh how I desperately wished to reply; “I want to see the world.” Travel was the first thought that popped into my head. Instead, I shamefully mumbled something along the lines of trying to find an ‘appropriate’ degree to study and/or building a business sometime in the near future.
    Why do we need to lie? I am ashamed everyday to feel what I feel and think what I think. Parental morals and values run deep, outdated as they may be.
    But despite my shame, I do travel. I am going to uproot myself and hopefully, find others who are OK with that outlook on life. I’m tired of pretending that I want what the majority of the populace wants. I am leaving to take a gigantic risk and jump in the deep end. Come join me.

  4. Below I copied from yours :

    “Genuine risk, and searing political regret, must become part of our life choices…we must be prepared to make the kind of sacrifices that you can’t come back from, the ones that terrify the fickle, un-courageous people who Ford diagnoses in his novel.

    Interesting !

  5. I genuinely find these 2 paragraphs as a wake up call more than any.
    “A life lived in that manner- without any messiness, without any risk- is a minor life, a life that hardly had a chance to begin before it was over.”
    “If you fear the rest of the world, if you cannot even imagine abandoning your career or your precious familial comforts………………………. check your Netflix account, and admit that this world of violent inequality is one you are comfortable with keeping.”

    I believe that it’s not entirely the fault of the masses that they fall into running the wheel for big corporations and/or governments. Rather it is the implication of those institutes in “Standardizing” everyone through the “Standardized” education.
    Yes! We need to break through. We need to make the extraordinary be the vibe of our lives. I fancy the bargaining systems in trade from ancient times as a very good foundation. Of course, not the same process. However, the idea that everyone in the society produces something unique and sells it to others. This adds by far more that what a huge corporation buys into a small startup.
    I believe entrepreneurship is and should be the reform of our economy and thus lifestyle.

  6. Really enjoyed the article, I must say that I also am born in the 80s but I don’t live a structured life, my life is quite chaotic and I don’t know of I love it or hate it…. It might be the lack of a jobs in the society I live in that makes myself and my friends so un-structured. We don’t have schedules and we are swimming in a pool of self doubt

  7. I’m in my second semester in Engineering school, and “working for a multinational company” is being presented to us as the ultimate heaven on earth. I want to get out of this with as little capitalist values injected into my head as possible. Thank you for writing this. One of the best pieces I have yet to read online.

  8. Reblogged this on Marvel Quest and commented:
    I’m really glad I ran into such a well-written, descriptive piece of writing. In my second semester as in Engineering student, I see how this “structuring” takes place from the way success is being defined for us all the time: getting a job at a multinational company, earning loads of money, getting married..etc. No mention of being kickass engineers for the sake of, say, empowering people to take control of their lives, making technology more available and less monopolized by the rich, preventing governments from spying on us – no, just get a corporate job.

  9. Oh my god. What a truly astounding read. You sir have earned a follower and my utmost respect for your writing skills. You made me realise the harsh reality that many live in today, and how our lives are almost predestined from the moment we are born to the time we enter our first job.

    Education, education, education; that’s what’s drilled into our minds from such an early age that we all feel that we absolutely MUST attend a tertiary education to feel less of a failure. Especially if, during our years growing up, we neglected to improve our skills of socialisation, arguably the most important asset of a workers toolbox. Great socialisation skills can get us places, and can influence those who are deemed ‘powerful’ in relative scenarios.

  10. This is very true! Thank you for sharing! I created a new blog last month! I really enjoyed yours. Come check out my new post over on the Real Life Natural Wife page and leave me a comment with your thoughts!

  11. Reblogged this on brock adcock and commented:
    My post yesterday was about stepping out of your comfort zone. Here is a post from Mark McConaghy about questioning the status quo and living a worth wild existence. Enjoy

  12. Great read Mark. If we’re honest we can all admit to the feeling of emptiness that comes from following the yellow brick road. I challenge myself to step off the beaten path a little more everyday. It’s easier for me because I have never had the type of “security” you speak of. Even still I find it hard not to make decisions based off profit.

  13. Thank you so much for reminding me that I’m on the right track. I live in the UK, but the situation is similar here. I am a graduate, and it seems everyone expects me to have a ‘proper career’, but I’ve always found that concept limiting. Just living and writing things that I want to write is important to me. Having time to daydream, to wonder. I won’t do what others expect of me, cos that’s what everyone else does, and they’re no happier than I, as far as I can see.

  14. The problem I see with this article is that not all young adults can live a life of risk-taking, no matter how much they want to. For example, I would love to be a creative writer when I grow up, traveling the world for inspiration for my new novel. But my family barely has enough money to put me through college, and my 13-year-old sister has no chance at higher education she desperately if I don’t pitch in after college. So I’m studying Computer Science and Math – fields of study that, as you say in your post, guarantee me a job after college. But I love these majors too. I’m not living my dream, maybe – but it’s very emotionally uplifting to know that I’ll be able to help my sister pursue her dreams.

    I honestly wish I could go out into the world, taking risks left and right. But not all of us young adults are able to do that, and to some of us, this structured generation isn’t so bad.

    Just my two cents. Wonderfully written article, it was a great read.

  15. Amazing post!

    If I had to say a long term goal I had… It would be to raise the level of human consciousness/intelligence, in regards to, our connection with nature, understanding what’s possible for us, how we relate/interact with each other etc. As I feel we will soon reach stagnation or self-extinction if we aren’t wary of our actions (this would be the maximal future example). I won’t go into detail about what I have planned for the future but at the moment, I’ve started a blog writing about the lessons we can take away from a different book, every day. (http://synthe.co for anyone interested)

    As to what I would sacrifice for it: Anything of mine which needs to be, to see this goal achieved. At this point in my life, from what I’ve understood of anyone whose made a valuable significant contribution to our race (Mandela, Jobs, etc. obvious choices, I know) . Is that, whether that be time, freedom, relationships, etc. should be sacrificed when necessary in order to make your vision that much closer to being realised.

    Also, as you’ve stated in the last few paragraphs, telling young people to find a goal worth dying for is much needed. However, at their age, it is much better to show them, and allow them to experience some of these issues plaguing the world first hand. To help them have a better understanding of reality and what they need to do. And although taking them to different countries may help more, this isn’t something that needs to cost a lot. This could be bringing them to a homeless shelter, elderly homes, or any locations of people with a story to tell they can listen to, and also provide assistance (feeding, cleaning, performing, fundraising, etc.).

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