Tag Archives: this generation

Strange Epiphanies

I have had countless epiphanies in my life.  Most of them were of great importance, but others were just strange.  I was thinking about some of the strange ones this week and thought I might share them.  Let me know if you have similar ones.

An Epiphany – Any moment of great or sudden revelation.

1)  One of my favorite cereals growing up was those sugar encrusted colorful rings of fruit flavors.  Not Trix, the round balls, but the ones shaped liked Cheerios.  Despite having seen the boxes and read them over and over as a child, I was serving them to my own children when I was in my early thirties when I realized they are not Fruit Loops – but instead are Froot Loops.

For some reason I found it deeply disturbing at an intellectual level to have deliberately misspelled breakfast cereal and to not have noticed for two decades.  I kept holding the box in my hands in disbelief.  I looked them up online.  I quizzed others if this was a recent change.  I even stared at aisles of cereal in the supermarket for weeks in silent despair.  Why such a revelation was so unsettling I don’t know.  It was quite an epiphany though to know that I, spelling bee champion so many times over, could not even notice my second favorite cereal was misspelled.  Yes, I did check my favorite, Lucky Charms, to confirm its spelling immediately… Whew…

untitled (4)

2) Peppermint Patty from Peanuts was Lesbian.  “It’s safe to say that Peppermint Patty’s relationship with “best friend” Marcy is more than a little Sapphic. Nether girl embraced the softer side of the feminine, but Marcy leaves no doubt about their assumed roles by referring to Patty as “Sir.” Couple that with Patty’s tomboy fashion choices and strong athletic ability and you have a girl who definitely lets you know which way she swings.” [SheWired]

I always liked Peppermint Patty, but I never got the Marcy thing or why she called her “Sir.”  As an adult, it now all makes sense.  There are many cartoon characters which were obviously intended to be lesbian, gay, or other sexual preferences.  It doesn’t really bother me at all.  As a kid, you just want to know the show is fun.  Some point to Velma on Scooby Doo as well, or other characters.  The one I can’t take seriously is He-Man from Masters of the Universe.  I watched that show with my kids and thought it was silly.  Now that I see He-Man I can’t believe I missed the obvious portrayal.  Still, those who worry about tele-tubbies and such things are worried about the wrong things.

untitled (5)

3) I lost a bet on this in high school to my friend Mark Tunnell.  Those sweetened candy cherries we all call “Mara-sheeno” cherries are actually pronounced “Mara-skeeno”.  I have found many words since that are pronounced incorrectly, but if you pronounce them the right way people look at you strange.  This is one of them.  If you are good at something, they often say it is your “for-tay” when in reality it is your “fort”, spelled forte.  If you have an entryway, they say it is your “foy-er” but in this case it is your “foy-ay”, spelled foyer.

untitled (6)

At first, met with these revelations, I pronounced things correctly, only to find that people looked at me strangely.  When I explained I was correct, I looked like a smart-ass.  Now I try to avoid the words, or simply pronounce them wrong.  I still have words I read wrong.  For a long time I read “misled” as “mize-uld” instead of “mis-led”, though I have no idea why.

4)  Growing up poor white trash with a family from the South led me to a very strange vocabulary.  A syringe was a “shot giver”, a stream was a “crick” and if someone was fatigued, they were “tarred.”  They used to say strange things.  I still think of all carbonated beverages as Coke.  Even though we drank RC Cola with Moon Pies or Grape Nehi, we were always drinking a Coke.

It took me the better part of forty years to cleanse my vocabulary of words that do not exist in most parts of the United States.  Unfortunately, growing up in California then living in Hawaii, I developed a nasal surfer accent that even at 50 makes me sound like a teenage valley boy about to go boarding.  To some extent, I passed this accent on to my son as well.  So, you can take the vocabulary out of the man, but not the accent.  As a result, I avoid phone calls and have all my message machines recorded by others.  Almost as bad as seeing my own picture is hearing my own voice on a recording.

5)  Back to Scooby Doo – Ok, Preppy guy and gal having sex, Velma of unknown proclivities, and Shaggy stoned all the time giving his dog snacks.  Those meddlesome kids indeed.  Always finding some monster with a mask on and yet I was surprised every time as a kid.  I did wonder why college age kids always seemed to have time to roam around in a van.  Now I realize you had at least one trust fund kid and their fellow bohemians roaming around doing whatever and trespassing everywhere they went.

untitled (7)

6)  HR Puffinstuff.  Loved this show with the Bananamobile, etc.  Even made a model of the vehicle.  How could I, even as a kid, not get that this was a psychedelic hippy drug show?  More obvious than Cheech and Chong, your main character has big dialated eyes, weird colors and calls himself puffing stuff.  The Banana mobile is where they got high on mellow yellow and then had their “adventures.”  I was crushed when it was cancelled and now wonder how they ever got on the air at all.

imagesCALRVGQV

7)  All those shows we thought were great in the 60s and 70s and so much better than todays, really suck.  The wonder of Netflix is that you can watch an entire season in one day if properly fixed for coffee and you care nothing for your own health.  The downside is they have all those old “great shows” when writers really cared and acting was great.  OMG!  I started watching some old Mission Impossible, Adam-12, Kolchak the Night Stalker, X-Files, etc.  Ok, I remember them being MUCH better.  Watching them now…not so much.

Is it nostalgia that made us think they were so good?  Is it just because I was younger and had a less developed mind?  Who knows, but watching old TV shows really does show you that today’s shows like Walking Dead, Breaking Bad, Game of Thrones, Sherlock, etc. are really much better.  Will we look back with reverie at these shows now only to watch them twenty years later and grown?  Who knows?

8)  This generation.  Most were not old enough to remember Jimmy Carter or Ronald Reagan as President.  Most do not remember the Cold War or the explosion of growth and technology in the 1980s.  I grew up freezing water and using an ice pick to get ice for a drink.  We had no cell phones, no pagers, no ATMs, no computers, leaded gasoline for 23 cents a gallon called Ethyl, no microwaves, etc.  The mall was the big invention.  MTV came out when I was in high school and played music videos.  Only the cool kids could stay up to watch Saturday Night Live which was considered evil.

I try to think of how people under thirty view the world.  I keep up on the latest, but their generation lives on the latest.  A recent survey showed that twelve year olds were unable to figure out what a Sony Walkman did.  We laughed at eight track cassettes, but now cassettes, floppy disks, VHS, Beta, records, record stores, everything we knew is gone.  My kids never had to go to the bank with a passbook before 3pm when it closed, and have a teller write their balance in ink, knowing if they lost the book they could not prove they had money in the bank.

untitled (9) untitled (8) generations

As technology accelerates, one generation has a greater gap than ever from the prior one.  For thousands of years, the next generation could learn lessons and live their lives much as the last.  Now, my early life is like a caveman compared to a Victorian era industrialist.  I don’t think that despite this epiphany, I still REALLY understand just how different this generation is.  I can’t even imagine how different the next will be from the current one.  We are really moving fast in the most rapidly changing culture ever in the history of mankind.

9)  Listening to Jeopardy, I found out that Jackie Gleason considered suing The Flintstones.  Apparently, the cartoon was a total rip-off of the Honeymooners, including plot lines and even copying the voice of Jackie Gleason’s character for Fred.  Wow.  Totally makes sense now, but I had no idea…  In the end, he decided not to sue the cartoon, which went on to be the longest lasting cartoon in history and the first successful one in prime time until The Simpsons.  I wonder whether The Simpsons’ characters are as original as we think…

Those are just some of my revealing thought moments.  What about you?

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations, Uncategorized

Confident Idiots

I want to preface the story below with some caveats and my own thoughts.  The jist of the story is this – American students believe they are the smartest, best, generation ever in this country.  This is despite the fact that their actual scores and abilities are among the lowest of any American generation, and about 32nd among industrialized nations.  We have an entire generation who think they walk on water but can barely read, write, or do basic math.  There are many exceptions, including most of my young friends and my own kids.  My son is studying biochemical engineering and has passed me in Calculus, physics, chemistry and genetics, which is no small feat given I have three science degrees and nearly 25 years more of life experience.

Not all American kids are stupid narcissists, just a growing and large portion.  It is too many years of not keeping score in sports, graduating people for seat time and not achievement.  Worst of all, is the incessant focus on self-esteem instead of accomplishment.  We used to have to earn self-esteem by being good people and actually succeeding at something.

The impact of an entire generation that expects to be rich and famous that will in fact probably be the first to see a decline in overall standard of living will not be pretty.

How college students think they are more special than EVER: Study reveals rocketing sense of entitlement on U.S. campuses

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

PUBLISHED: 15:30 EST, 5 January 2013 | UPDATED: 14:29 EST, 7 January 2013

Books aside, if you asked a college freshman today who the Greatest Generation is, they might respond by pointing in a mirror.

Young people’s unprecedented level of self-infatuation was revealed in a new analysis of the American Freshman Survey, which has been asking students to rate themselves compared to their peers since 1966.

Roughly 9 million young people have taken the survey over the last 47 years.

American Self-love: New data suggests students today are convinced of their own greatness regardless of whether they’ve accomplished anything

Up, up and away! Over the past 50 years American students have increasingly grown confident not only socially but also about their own writing and intellect skills and their confidence in leadership abilityUp, up and away! Over the past 50 years American students have increasingly grown confident not only socially but also about their own writing and intellect skills and their confidence in leadership ability

Psychologist Jean Twenge and her colleagues compiled the data and found that over the last four decades there’s been a dramatic rise in the number of students who describe themselves as being ‘above average’ in the areas of academic ability, drive to achieve, mathematical ability, and self-confidence.

But in appraising the traits that are considered less invidualistic – co-operativeness, understanding others, and spirituality – the numbers either stayed at slightly decreased over the same period.

Researchers also found a disconnect between the student’s opinions of themselves and actual ability.

While students are much more likely to call themselves gifted in writing abilities, objective test scores actually show that their writing abilities are far less than those of their 1960s counterparts.

Also on the decline is the amount of time spent studying, with little more than a third of students saying they study for six or more hours a week compared to almost half of all students claiming the same in the late 1980s.

American Important online: Trends like social media, celebrity culture, and easy credit contribute to students feeling as if they’re more successful than they really are

Though they may work less, the number that said they had a drive to succeed rose sharply.

These young egotists can grow up to be depressed adults.

A 2006 study found that students suffer from ‘ambition inflation’ as their increased ambitions accompany increasingly unrealistic expectations.

‘Since the 1960s and 1970s, when those expectations started to grow, there’s been an increase in anxiety and depression,’ Twenge said. ‘There’s going to be a lot more people who don’t reach their goals.’

Twenge is the author of a separate study showing a 30 per cent increase towards narcissism in students since 1979.

American Look out for No. 1: Narcissists often reach middle age and find their past full of failed relationships

‘Our culture used to encourage modesty and humility and not bragging about yourself,’ Twenge told BBC News. ‘It was considered a bad thing to be seen as conceited or full of yourself.’

Just because someone has high self-esteem doesn’t mean they’re a narcissist. Positive self-assessments can not only be harmless but completely true.

However, one in four recent students responded to a questionnaire called the Narcissistic Personality Inventory with results pointing towards narcissistic self-assessments.

Narcissism is defined as excessive self-love or vanity; self-admiration, or being self-centered.

Twenge said that’s a trait that is often negative and destructive, and blames its boom on several trends – including parenting styles, celebrity culture, social media, and easy credit – for allowing people to seem more successful than they really are.

American Obsessed: Despite legions of self-help books advising belief in yourself, there’s no evidence self-esteem causes success

‘What’s really become prevalent over the last two decades is the idea that being highly self-confident – loving yourself, believing in yourself – is the key to success,’ Twenge said. ‘Now the interesting thing about that belief is it’s widely held, it’s very deeply held, and it’s also untrue.’

Despite a library’s worth of self-help books promoting the idea we can achieve anything if we believe we can, there’s very little evidence that raising self-esteem produces positive, real-world outcomes.

‘If there is any effect at all, it is quite small,’ said Roy Baumeister of Florida State University, who authored a 2003 paper on self-esteem studies.

Baumeister found that while successful people did have high-self esteem in many cases, it was unclear what actual caused their success if the first place.

Both self-esteem and success were often influenced by another factor.

‘Coming from a good family might lead to both high self-esteem and personal success.’ Baumeister said. ‘Self-control is much more powerful and well-supported as a cause of personal success. Despite my years invested in research on self-esteem, I reluctantly advise people to forget about it.’

Twenge compared it to a swimmer trying to learn a turn who needs to believe that learning the skill is possible but who won’t actually be aided in  acquiring that skill by their belief.

American 1 in a million: Roughly 9 million freshman have rated themselves in the American Freshman Survey since 1966

‘You need to believe that you can go out and do something but that’s not the same as thinking that you’re great,’ Twenge said.

Studies suggest weaker students actually perform worse if given encouragement at boosting their self-esteem.

‘An intervention that encourages [students] to feel good about themselves, regardless of work, may remove the reason to work hard,’ Baumeister found.

But if you found yourself bothered by a person always talking about how wonderful they are, remember that their future may not be bright.

‘In the long-term, what tends to happen is that narcissistic people mess up their relationships, at home and at work,’ Twenge said. Though narcissists may be charming at first, their selfish actions eventually damage relationships.

It’s not until middle-age they may realize their lives have had a number of failed relationships.

And even if they recognize something is wrong they may have a hard time changing.

‘It’s a personality trait,’ says Twenge. ‘It’s by definition very difficult to change. It’s rooted in genetics and early environment and culture and things that aren’t all that malleable.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2257715/Study-shows-college-students-think-theyre-special–read-write-barely-study.html#ixzz2HLN0DMTZ
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations