--- In [email protected], "Robert Gimbel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  <snip>
> > > > The current younger generation in college now is not
> > > > only career minded- but also service minded, as in
> > > > volunteering and "doing good deeds."  Much more so
> > > > than the Boomers, who wanted to do good by meditating,
> > > > getting doped up, refusing to go to war.

I wrote the above.  I had just been to an orientation seminar for parents of 
children who 
are college freshman,and the slide show was based on research done on today's 
new 
college students.  I suspect that the idea that this young generation does so 
much 
volunteering comes from the fact that many seniors and juniors in high school 
DO 
volunteer a great deal more than we Boomers did. One reason for this is that in 
getting 
ready to apply for college, students are told by guidance counselors that doing 
lots of 
volunteer work helps to get you in - so it is not entirely selfless.  Some 
travel in the 
summer with church groups to poor nations or Appalachia, many many work 
regularly 
with local Habitat for Humanity projects, help in soup kitchens nearby, and 
some even go 
on expensive summer trips to poor areas of the world to help out (there is a 
howleindustry 
offering these trips).  Regular volunteering is now fairly standard activity 
for middle and 
upper middle class kids. It is a big part of the college resume. Of course, 
their parents 
(Boomers) are the ones who have arranged all this and encouraged their children 
to 
participate and drove them around to do it all! Many of these opportunites just 
weren't 
available to us when we were young. And we looked at grades and things like 
being in the 
French Club as the things that get you into college.
> 
> Believe me, if there were a draft now;
> You would see them refusing to go to war.
> You have a whole culture of dopers and rappers now; nothings changed..
> Many of the 'Boomers' became career minded; yuppies, I think they are 
> called.

Yes, but the Boomer/yuppies are the ones doing some good stuff, too.  The move 
to take 
care of the environment is mostly Boomer/yuppie driven, isn't it? The same 
group that 
protested Vietnam is protesting Iraq.
> 
> The current generation are just not interested in sittin' still.
> They have been over-whelmed with video games, ritalin, Godless 
> education, heroes like Paris Hilton, brain-washed by corporate greed, 
> this generation is completely lost.
> They haven't got a clue; they live in a world driven by chaos...
> Everything about the art and music expresses this.

This sounds like what was said about Elvis and the Beatles and the Rolling 
STones, 
marijuana and TV watching habits when we were young.

> High prices for TM, just reflects their lack of interest.
> If it were offered for free,
> These younger people haven't got the time;
> For such nebulous things, like meditation...
> R.G.
>
Yes, they are very focused on getting jobs and making a living. I think one of 
their 
priorities is to have work that they enjoy and that makes a good income. 
Nothing wrong 
with that, it is just missing the inner life component. Don't give up. Things 
go in cycles, 
and at some point, this generation or their children will really really need 
some silence. 
Meditation may seem intriguing, especially if future brain research has some 
good things 
to say.







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