Today is the launch of the 2013 CultureTech Festival: 1pm in the Craft Village and everyone's welcome. We’ve been told to expect “music, grub and tons of old school printed programmes”- inside of which will feature this:
http://culturetech.co/event/2013-09-14/inheritance
My first solo piece since 2007, and my first ever self-penned piece. Still in its experimental primary phase as a project, self-belief is the only thing to calm my nerves. I know for a fact that everything will fall into place because there is no other option but to ensure it does.
The best thing about the primary phase of a project like this is without a doubt the research and the revelations it brings. Being a piece which addresses and questions the role of the current young generation and its consequences for the future my sources for research are all around: Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Blackberrys, iPods. What better generation to study for a festival that runs off technology than the one who live through it.
His article begins with statistics set to stun mode; “The National Institutes of Health found that for people in their 20s, Narcissistic Personality Disorder is three times as high than the generation that’s 65 or older.” People in their 20’s care more about their looks than those in their 60’s who have passed their prime? What an enlightening piece of research, eh? What Stein also fails to consider is that this is a study which was never undertaken with any other generation while they were in their 20’s; this is a study based one group without a control. This is not science. In fact, it is little more than propaganda and a perfect example of Generation X’s stereotype of twisting information to meet their agenda.
What baffles me is his criticism of the new wave of boomerangers- adults returning to live back at home. He attributes this solely to our laziness. It is, of course, completely unconnected to the failing economy which his generation is responsible for. . . . Furthermore, we don’t work the same hours his generation did in regular jobs, deeming ourselves ‘too good’. It is too easy to write us off as thinking of ourselves as ‘too good’- perhaps instead we’re too smart to let ourselves fall into the same pitfalls that our elders did before us leaving us with no room for self-improvement or a focused path. We see what Generation X-ers chose to experience and we want alternatives.
Perhaps we should consider that one of the key issues restricting the growth
of Millennials is the current culture where they are regularly patronized and
dismissed; their identities are often referred as being the products of baby
boomers, not as individuals within their own right.
Stein does however, make some excellent points. Points which should be recognised as words of warning. At our best, we are pioneers, at our worst- self-centred egomaniacs. And I have seen it in action on both sides of the coin. It is to be expected that the first generation of the internet will be more self-involved- we are the first to have our face plastered over the web with social media- however many of this generation are happily sitting back as this becomes their only legacy to claim.
Stein does however, make some excellent points. Points which should be recognised as words of warning. At our best, we are pioneers, at our worst- self-centred egomaniacs. And I have seen it in action on both sides of the coin. It is to be expected that the first generation of the internet will be more self-involved- we are the first to have our face plastered over the web with social media- however many of this generation are happily sitting back as this becomes their only legacy to claim.
It has never been so important as now for a generation to decide their legacy and donation to the world. Never has determination and clarity been so vital. This is a generation who are at risk of becoming more familiar with Facebooking their problems than facing them. Our culture has picked up new and annoying bad habits- exercise a habit enough and it becomes who you are. And what are we becoming? In an unfortunately high number of cases, little more than YOLO-hashtag caricatures who document our life in a myriad of duckfaced selfies and before and after dinner plates.
So what does this actually mean?
In our first formative years our brain undergoes a hugely significant growth spurt, producing more neurons than it will ever be able to use. In a short space of time we learn to walk, talk, read, speak and eat amongst a million other incredible but everyday tasks. The brain has prepared for such a high and sudden level of demand with this growth spurt but is then left with an overly crowded network which leads to cognitive inefficiency- which explains why these remarkable toddlers can then also forget simple things, the brain is simply holding too much. To remedy this the brain then goes through a pruning process, throwing away the connections which never went to use.
As recently as the 90’s the National Institute for Mental Health discovered that this process repeats itself at a second critical period in life and this growth-pruning pattern happens once again, starting in our adolescent years and ending during our twenties. Once again the brain does the preparatory work to allow us the face new challenges, take up new skills, and develop in new ways- we have entered an area described by neurologist J. Giedd as a time of ‘great risk and great opportunity’. This isn’t to say that the human potential for growth does not continue throughout life but never again will it be so easy to learn new things or make important changes in our character. To quote directly from Dr. Meg Jay, “In a use-it-or-lose-it fashion, the frontal lobe connections we use are preserved and quickened; those we don’t use just waste away through pruning. We become what we hear and see and do every day. . . . . In Neuroscience, this is known as “survival of the busiest”.
It is our duty to make use of the key position we currently find ourselves in; in fact, it is vital. Unaware of the potential we are currently riding on a wave of and we are at risk of waking up wondering why no-one’s impressed by our home-made meme anymore. People no longer care, everyone else saw the clock ticking and took ownership for their legacy. Millennials are a generation who hold great power in their hands, greater power than they may realise. We have become empowered in our ability to be entrepreneurs in a failing economy, we have stepped away from succumbing to the pressure of getting any job at all no matter how much unhappiness it breeds, we are optimistic and confident. Not all of us are on the positive side, but seemingly unknown to Time Magazine, not all of us are on the negative side. Especially not if we take control today.


Really good post. I've actually had a discussion about some of this with my (also mid-thirties) girlfriends and we're unanimously agreed that not having ANY internet, never mind social networking, when we were teens and early 20s is something we are eternally grateful for. Not least because mistakes made on the internet hang around forever and are incredibly public - in the way our lapses of judgement and good sense at that age never were. The thought of my having had access to a medium like Facebook in my 20s gives me cold sweats. Looking forward to your performance! Do I need to book?
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for your feedback and thoughts. No booking necessary; the show will be pre-recorded and I'll be sharing the links to download the podcast. X x x
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