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Rebecca Sarwate

Rebecca Sarwate
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Chicago, Illinois, USA
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December 31
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Head Writer
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I about as liberal as they come, and please don't expect to change me, though I do sometimes sneak up on you with a surprise (pro-death penalty, for instance). Although now gainfully employed as a full-time web writer and social media strategist, I keep my toes in the pool as a freelance theater critic, blogger and board member of the Illinois Woman's Press Association. To read my work on this page is to find vignettes about Chicago, Hollywood, my own turbulent life, and of course, my number one passion: local and national politics.

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
JULY 20, 2010 11:16AM

A Generation X Bedtime Story

Rate: 25 Flag

Once upon a time, there were three high school girlfriends who planned to grow up and cut impressive business figures. All were students in a prestigious International Baccalaureate (IB) program at a respected Chicago Public School (that didn’t used to be an oxymoronic statement in the mid 1990s). Each had their own field of study where they planned to make their bones. 

Ally, a lover of history and politics, attended the University of Chicago, and graduated in 200o with honors before entering the consulting field with a renowned Windy City firm. She worked long hours but traveled to many places and amassed a solid wad of cash that she hoped would prove to her conservative, immigrant parents that she had, in fact, made it. Meanwhile, she attempted to quash the persistent voice that periodically yelped, uninvited, “but I am not making a difference!” 

Becky attended a respected Big 10 University, earning a Bachelor’s in English Literature, followed several years later by a Master’s. In the interim, she told herself that writing was just a hobby, certainly not lucrative enough, and that degree collection was just something to check off her “bucket list.” By way of distraction, she tried to content herself with climbing up the corporate ladder, having reached middle management at a giant non-profit, and the security that comes with it (high salary, 401k, and 5 weeks vacation time). 

Carol also attended the University of Chicago, and stuck around after earning her B.A. to take up a law degree. Carol married young and started a family but balanced these demands with those of a well compensated, high power corporate attorney. Like Ally, Carol’s parents were also conservative, hard working immigrants, who looked at their daughter’s full plate and satisfactory income with a strong sensation of pride. But Carol lay awake at nights wondering if her young daughters would ever feel the same about all the time she spent away from home. 

Ally, Becky and Carol, as close as friends could be, inevitably drifted a bit in their 20s. Marriages were celebrated, babies born, and relocations carried out. Through the time honored tradition of the 10-year high school reunion, aided by the social bonds of Facebook, the three women reconnected. On a Saturday night in July of this year, the ladies met at Carol’s place for a dinner party. Husbands and children (one of them the unborn baby that Ally is expecting in December) completed the former threesome. 

But for these new family members and the obvious passage of time, Ally, Becky and Carol found that their dynamic was relatively intact. Conversation, laughs and intimacies came as easily as ever. However, when the inevitable question presented itself -  “So, what are you up to?” – it was apparent for the first time that evening that in fact, a whole lot more than anyone suspected had changed.  

Ally relayed the news that several years back, she had left consulting to return to school, earning her education certificate. She now lives in the Jefferson Park neighborhood of Chicago, teaching math and science to middle school kids. She earns considerably less than she once did, but owned that if she had been honest with herself as an undergrad, this is the career she always wanted. The happy smile that set her face aglow, as she held hands with her husband and discussed the impending birth of their first child, served as testament that Ally had found what she was looking for.  

Becky mentioned that she had toiled in a variety of corporate operations positions, with a number of successful outfits that granted her incremental increases in title and salary. Becky would begin each role, flush with enthusiasm, only to find herself curiously bored and burnt out in two years or less. One could, in fact, set their clock by this pattern. In May 2009, after the death of a very close friend, she indulged the long haranguing voice that told her life was too short to let this cycle continue. She left corporate America to strike out as a freelance writer by night, publishing in a number of circles, then took a huge pay decrease to manage communications and social media for a human service coalition by day.  

Carol just returned to Chicago from Boston, where she moved with her family to accept a lucrative law firm position. She had lived on a property she co-owned with her parents, and could never understand why she wasn’t happier. A few months ago, Carol and her husband finally figured out that Beantown was a dead end. Carol resigned, sold her share of the property and returned to the Midwest. Her hubby accepted a full-time position which covered the family’s immediate financial needs, and Carol was able to tell her daughters that she’d never miss another minute of their lives.  

Meet Ally, Becky and Carol – the anti-hippies. Whereas the flower children of the 1960s have been castigated for fomenting the freewheeling, idealistic social revolution of the time, before promptly “selling out” and morphing into the very institutions they once decried, it would seem that certain members of Generation X are playing out this drama in reverse. Raised in the 1980s “Me Decade,” they went through their formal education with tunnel vision, like good little disciples of Gordon Gekko. “Make money, earn awards, plan for retirement,” was the mantra, and they sure did their best to stay on the train to financial and professional glory. 

But at some point, independently, and often in separate parts of the nation, these three woman took a good look inside and realized that unhampered ambition may have been good for the bank account, and great for the bragging rights of their folks, but awful for their souls and life satisfaction.   

For years now, the death of idealism has been mostly accepted as fact. But the conversation which exposed these changes in destiny gives pause, followed very closely by excitement. Is this idealism in its new form? Not the college-aged anarchistic and rootless version, which is destined to burn bright before blowing out. What we find instead is a slower, more methodical, but eventually, more certain feeling that we must do more for our communities, our families and ourselves? 

It seems there is hope yet - hope for more than a predetermined greedy, lazy, shortsighted, and selfish path through life. Lives are changing one mid-30s crisis at a time. 

Sleep well.

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my gen-xer is on a sailboat in Tahiti. After amassing funds over a 6-7 year period she quit a job that she loved in order to do something she had planned from childhood. I agree with you and am proud of her. I'd actually get off the selfish path myself if I could afford to.
Very cool. Thanks for sharing this excellent story. I'd like to see more anti-greed in the world.
For every Becky Boop there are 10 Gekko wanna be clones.
there might be a reason for the trend to work this way instead of the reverse...

generations x and y are starting life with far more debt than previous generations because of the high costs of educational loans, the lack of medical insurance, being hooked on gadgets etc.

sometimes it takes time to figure out how to both financially survive, and contribute something to society as well...but I think this is what me and all of my friends want from our careers.....
As a fellow gen-xer, I liked this a lot. Liked the writing too. Seems like your story had a fairy tale ending! I think Im still working on mine ;). Thanks for posting though as I know many of us mid to late 30-somethings struggling with this kinda stuff.
As a fellow gen-xer, I liked this a lot. Liked the writing too. Seems like your story had a fairy tale ending! I think Im still working on mine ;). Thanks for posting though as I know many of us mid to late 30-somethings struggling with this kinda stuff.
Awesome and delightful. Thank you.
Well written and en pointe for the times. Sometimes children grow into thoughtful adults. Hope is alive and well.
"took a good look inside and realized that unhampered ambition may have been good for the bank account, and great for the bragging rights of their folks, but awful for their souls and life satisfaction." - that part hit me.
I'm afraid I'm getting stuck in the "bragging rights of their folks" bit though I'm running up that hill every other day as I have to defend my job to my own immigrant mother because it's not what I went to college for. I'm broke but I'm happy, mostly.
This post gives me a little spark of hope, thanks for that.
That long haranguing voice usually gets her way. Listen, very carefully. R
It took me to my 50s to figure this out. But I also wonder if this anti-greed is a result of a poor economy with few decent jobs available. If the job market expands, will these people stay happy with their downsized lives or will they begin to reach for the brass ring again?
My nickname in the eighties, in high-school, was flower-child. I didn't earn money and stayed at home with the kids. When we are in our thirties or forties, we realize that life is half over, which means that we better make the expected latter half count. I always hated the term Generation X. Drives me bonkers. Why didn't the media pundits call us something else? I enjoyed your writing.
Geez, it's about time! We people of the 60's wondered if you were ever gonna get off your arses!!! : )
It is time to blow my horn here.
I'm older thqan these "gen x" ones and quit HS in my soph year.
I'm a C&S former druggie who did evvvvvvvvvvverything that usually prohibits living a good life.
I've had my own business for approx 30 years, a house, a Jag, a truck, a couple of boats and am preparing to pack it all in as. after looking for a good 6 months, I think I've finally found my new home.
I've made an initial contact to see about moving to live aboard

HERE

No lawn to mow. No snow to shovel and no close noisy neighbors.
I hope to get this done by winter.
Congrats! As a Gen X'r, myself, my corporate ladder climbing in the nineties threatened to steal my soul. I'm much happier now! Great writing. I really enjoyed this one!
You can tell that this a bedtime story because none of the women are unemployed. In the real world, 2 of them lost their jobs and the 3rd one is working insane hours in fear of losing hers.

Sleep well.
Aimlow Joe was here.
http://www.aimlow.com
Sorry to nitpick - ! You're talking about Generation Y here if they're graduating undergrad in 2000! Gen Y had their 10 year reunions on Facebook and were born in the late 70's early 80's. Gen X is 1965-75 and had our 20th on Facebook! : )
I am so glad you are addressing this issue. I find that people are getting more involved in their communities and maybe even taking a chance on pursuing what they love. I wish I would've known then what I know now... I would've planned for my husband and I to have been able to pursue our real dreams before we got locked into the "American Dream."