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Parents of generation Y have no one to blame but themselves

Issue date: 2/21/07 Section: Viewpoints
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I'm giving the apology for peace a rest this week, since researching it takes time and there would be no point in spouting obvious generalities -- a practice I call "Ann Coulter-ing."

I've had occasion to think about another subject I think is pertinent to people our age. Those of us on our way out of Northern Illinois University are getting to the point in our lives when we start looking for spouses and thinking about kids.

My advice today is not to have them. At least, not yet.

If there's one thing I need no citation or research to prove, it's that our parents have done a pretty horrendous job bringing us up. I mean this as a whole, and not necessarily every single parent individually. And though I need no citation, I'll do it anyway, just to rub it in to those readers who disagree. According to a Jan. 16 New York Times article, 51 percent of U.S. women now live without a spouse. The Census Bureau's 2005 American Community Survey also found that married couples have become the minority in our country.

Since the Baby Boomer generation has gotten so much fun out of naming us hurtful and insensitive things like "Generation Me," "Generation Why," "Generation A.D.D." or the "Entitlement Generation," we should perhaps return the favor and start calling them "Generation Divorce."

What does this mean for the children we're going to have -- and that we're going to subject to our messy divorces? I have experienced divorce myself from the child's point of view, and it isn't anything I'd care to inflict on anybody else.

My prediction of the outcome for our age group and our children is not a happy one, if we repeat the misbehavior of our parents. I foresee a lot of broken, unhappy households that ultimately end in separation, with another generation of kids that are going to look at us spitefully for being dysfunctional and petty people who refuse to work things out because we can just call up a lawyer and have divorce papers served.

Our parents were so repulsed by the idea of the scrubbed-clean "Pleasantville" 1950s nuclear family that they have divorced in record numbers, and the lesson I see they've taught us is that compromise and fidelity are no longer in vogue. We're seeing it with more women marrying older, couples staying in long-term relationships without committing to marriage, crippling divorce rates and the ideal family now becoming a minority in our country.

I realize I paint a bleak picture, but I'm only doing it with statistics, which don't always tell the whole story. I earlier said not to have kids -- not yet at least. That's because I believe that while we can't fix what's wrong with marriage -- an institution historically based on financial gain for the families and surefire misery for the betrothed -- we can change how we view the definition of family. Politicians are foaming at the mouth with rage over gay people asking for marriage rights. Let them foam. They're all past childbearing age and you and I and our whole age bracket can fix this by ourselves while they're still talking nonsense at each other.

Marry late, and marry once, and don't have kids until you can love them, nurture them, pay for them and teach them there is such a thing in life as two people who cannot be severed. Don't feel pressure from your friends or your parents, and try to ignore it from yourself. We're young and strong and college-educated -- we can all wait for the right person, and I think we might even have the good sense once we find them to make sure we don't have a reason to put an end to a good thing and leave our kids listening to us shouting in the other room.



Kenneth Lowe
Northern Star
Northern Illinois University
U-Wire

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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 23

Parson Jim

posted 2/22/07 @ 12:52 AM EST

Good luck convincing people to go back to marriage.

Women's groups fought hard to undermine marriage, and fought harder for child custody laws that help ensure 40% of American children go to bed each night in a household without a father. (Continued…)

(5 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

Colleen O'Connell

posted 2/26/07 @ 3:42 PM EST

Quit blaming feminists for other individual's failings! Children that go to bed without a father or second parent do so because of the individual failings in their parent's relationships. (Continued…)

John

posted 3/01/07 @ 3:52 AM EST

Um, you know, Ken, something strange. That whole last paragraph of yours, that is exactly what our parents said. And all of your other paragraphs attempt of prove that our parents didn't get it right. (Continued…)

RD Thompson

Ryan Thompson

posted 3/01/07 @ 10:19 AM EST

Kenneth,
It is with a psuedo-prophetic voice that you speak. Generations from now our children and their children will look back at these our generations and ask, "What were they thinking?" Not that we don't do that now to generations prior but as you have said, separations are simply too easy and there has been NO TIME IN HISTORY when the dissolution of marriage was at a higher rate than it is now. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

David Borreson

posted 3/01/07 @ 10:59 AM EST

Now I can't say that I agree with every point you make here, but as a whole I would say good job. It's about time our genereation heard something like this. (Continued…)

Ed

posted 3/01/07 @ 11:10 AM EST

While I dislike simplistic solutions to complex problems, perhaps there is something to the "traditional" arrangement of marriage after all - especially when both spouses are not putting their own needs and desires first. (Continued…)

Matt

posted 3/01/07 @ 11:17 AM EST

Well, first I think you need to do a little research on your statistics. The man who wrote the artical in the NY times poled women from ages 15 to 19 and also included women who's husband are either dead or in Iraq. (Continued…)

Zeph Greenwell

posted 3/01/07 @ 11:30 AM EST

If you're trying to find the right person you will always fail. If you're looking for someone who will make you happy and you will never disagree with then you might as well stop looking. (Continued…)

MarkB

Mark

posted 3/01/07 @ 1:28 PM EST

That is a very interesting article and one that espouses the hurt and pain you have endured as your parents wnt through divorce.

As a man, husband (of 29 years,) father of two young men in college, I think that perhaps I can shed some light on this. (Continued…)

joseph webb

posted 3/01/07 @ 3:49 PM EST

Joe;
posted 3/01/07 @ 3:40 PM EST
As a nation, we can lay the present day divorce/remarriage problem at the Church's doorstep. Virtually every denomination has abandoned the earliest Church's teaching and replaced them with the teachings of a sixteenth century humanistic rationalist. (Continued…)

(2 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

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