VIEWPOINTS Saturday, July 6, 2019 East Oregonian A5 Finding the season that best suits you I was gathered together with a few of my girlfriends around a table with candles, and pies, and Mason jars filled with ice cubes melting in the kind of beverage that saturates your soul best — water. The sky was 38 shades of beau- tiful and china plates held sweetness in the finest forms. There were slips of brown paper tucked in between the candles and suc- culents. Slips of paper filled with beauti- ful words written in whimsical handwrit- ing with question marks, and discussion points to guide our conversation. We were celebrating friendship, fresh fruit pies, and the season of summer. I came home that evening with my soul and spirit filled to the brim as I thought about those questions — par- ticularly the one about seasons. Sea- sons where we’ve been refined, where we’ve sought after purpose and less of ourselves, and where we’ve grown in ways we never thought possible but don’t always see the growth until the season is long over. The discussion of these peri- ods of time in our lives brought so much emotion with it that I couldn’t get it out of my mind several hours later. Why is it that we often want out of the period of time we’re in, just to get the next? Do we think it’s going to be bet- ter than what we have right now? Are we anticipating something greater instead of seeing what’s beautiful and wonderful about the present? Sadly, I think so. This past spring was one of those sea- sons where I found myself thankful for the fact it was here, but questioned why winter seemed to be hanging on with tiny threads of unbelievable strength. The snow had finally melted, but with the melting came the floods. All of the mois- ture that I knew would help things grow seemed to be overwhelmingly brutal as waters rose, and the sunshine just wasn’t quite strong enough to win. I chose to wear a yellow sweater for days in hopes to bring the light with me that I knew was lacking, but a yellow sweater can only do so much. As I answered the question that eve- ning about what season I liked best, I remember wishing I had been given the question in advance to strategically plan out a really great answer, but in all hon- esty, conversations that work themselves through our lives without a plan often show us what we are really made of. So, rather than complaining about the winter and spring I thought would never end, I shared with my treasured friends around the table that night how I have found con- tentment in each season. I have lived, thrived, and sometimes barely survived the seasons in my life by simply paying attention to the beauty in the places my feet take me each day. It’s not always easy or even right, but instead of wishing for what isn’t and giving up on that which stares me right in the face, I focus on where to look and how to look to find the goodness that has been there all along. During what seemed to be never-end- ing, ridiculously long winter and spring, I watched calves grow and the hay shed empty. I cheered about warm days and soft skies. I savored the green shoots of grass and wheat that lined the road to home. I embraced the quiet and still of our hillside that rolled through like clouds. I splashed in puddles and thanked God for sunshine, while I walked through the barn pens in muck boots. I saw my home from different perspectives and angles, tore out old flower beds and cre- ated new beauty along our fence, and played happy music that kept my spirits alive. I sorted cows and calves, I sifted thousands of rocks from a dirt pile, and prayed that my camera could capture the beauty found when the light was just per- fect. I looked for the good every single day, and although it didn’t make the sea- son perfect, it did keep my eyes focused on that which was longing to be seen. I don’t have any idea what kind of sea- son you’re going through right now, but the next time you find yourself on the answering side of a question about the different times of year and which one might possibly be your favorite, I think you should consider answering like this: This one. L indsay M urdock FROM SUN UP TO SUN DOWN Yes, this season that I’m living right now — it is my favorite. ——— Lindsay Murdock lives and teaches Echo. Will Gen-Z The biggest threat to America is us save the world? T N here is some sort of hard- Everything feels personalized to-define spiritual cri- and miniaturized. The upper reg- sis across the land, which isters of moral life — fighting shows up in rising depression for freedom, struggling to end rates, rising mental health prob- poverty — have been amputated lems. A survey that the Pew for many. The awfulness of the Research Center released late larger society is a given. The best last year captures the mood. you can do is find a small haven Pew asked people to describe in a heartless world. One respon- dent said he found meaning in the the things that bring meaning to tiniest things: “Small-scale nature their lives. A shocking number — individual bugs and plants — of respondents described lives of are quite pleasing. I like to be quiet despair: “I no longer find able to focus on things much of anything mean- that don’t care about me ing, fulfilling or satisfy- or the larger world.” ing. Whatever used to I’ve just finished keep me going has gone. a four-month tour for I am currently struggling my book “The Second to find any motivation to Mountain,” talking with keep going.” thousands of people, “It would be nice to and I certainly encoun- D aviD tered the disillusioned live according to my B rooks America described in the being rather than my COMMENT Pew survey. But the big blackness. I will never thing I encountered was know how a totally the seismic generation gap. Peo- worthwhile life will feel because ple my age rag on the younger of this.” “Drugs and alcohol are the generation for being entitled shining rays of light in my other- and emotionally fragile, etc. But wise unbearable existence.” this generation is also seething “I don’t feel very satisfied with with moral passion and rebelling my life. I’m a stay-at-home mom against the privatization of moral- ity so prevalent in the Boomer and my life is endless monotony and Gen-X generations. and chaos.” The Pew survey reveals a They can be totally insuffer- able about it. In the upscale col- large group of Americans down leges on the coasts, Wokeness is the income and economic ladders a religious revival with its own who are suffering from economic conception of sin (privilege) and scarcity, social scarcity and spiri- tual scarcity all at once. Less edu- its own version of the Salem cated people were less likely to Witch Trials (online shaming). say that friendship was a source But the people in this movement of meaning in their lives. They have a sense of vocation, moral were less likely to say hobbies call and a rage at injustice that is were a source of meaning, nor legitimate rejection of what came was learning, nor good health nor before. stability. I recently met a group of high When people overall described school kids from around the the sources of meaning in their United States and Africa involved lives, they stuck close to home. in the Bezos Scholars program. Nearly 70% identified family as In our conversations they didn’t a source of meaning, followed by define their identity by where career, making money and prac- they were from, or even by their ticing a spirituality or faith. Only ethnicity and race. They defined 11% said learning added meaning themselves by what project they to their lives. Only 7% said help- work on — serving Native Amer- icans, working for clean water. ing others was a meaningful part Similarly, high school students of their life. If you ask philosophers how generally are more likely to people fill their lives with mean- define themselves by their polit- ical stances and their vocations, ing, they usually point to some rather than whether they are jocks version of serving a cause larger or drama kids. than self. William James said that I’ve also found that college meaning was found in tireless students are eager to talk about struggle on behalf of some sacred a moral project entirely absent ideal. Susan Wolf says that mean- ing is found in active engagement from the Pew survey: doing in important projects. inner work, growing in holiness. But the meaning of meaning Many seem to have rediscov- seems to have changed. When ered the sense, buried for a few people in this survey describe decades, that one calling in life is meaning, they didn’t describe to become a better person. Your moral causes or serving their current self is not good enough. community, country or God. You have to be transformed They described moments when through right action. they felt loved, satisfied or good It’s often uncomfortable and about themselves. They described over the top, but we’re lucky to positive personal emotions. As have a rebellion against boomer one respondent put it, “It’s easy to quietism and moral miniaturiza- tion. The young zealots may burn forget what’s wrong in the world us all in the flames of their auto- when you are pretending to be a da-fe, but it’s better than living puppy with your daughter.” It’s as if people no longer see in a society marked by loneliness life as something that should be and quiet despair. organized around a specific voca- ——— tion, a calling that is their own David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times. way of doing good in the world. ear the close of last Wednesday’s Dem- tions between the world’s two biggest economies ocratic presidential debate, Chuck Todd — the U.S. and China. Either the U.S. will per- suade China to abandon the abusive trade practices asked the candidates what he called “a sim- ple question.” In “one word,” he asked, who or what it adopted to go from poverty to middle income and from a technology consumer to a technology pro- is the biggest geopolitical threat to America today? ducer, or we’re headed for a world divided by a new Reflecting on that moment, I asked myself what digital Berlin Wall. There will be a Chinese-con- I would say. It didn’t take long to decide. It’s not trolled internet and technology sphere and Ameri- China or Russia or Iran. It’s us. We’ve become the can versions — and every other country will have biggest threat to ourselves. to decide whose to join. The globalization that pro- China, Russia, Iran and even North Korea’s vided so much peace and prosperity for the last 70 “Little Rocket Man” aren’t going to take us down. years will fracture. Only we can take ourselves down. Fourth, technology is propelling social Only we can ensure that the American networks and cybertools deeper and deeper dream — the core promise we’ve made into our lives, our privacy and our politics to ourselves that each generation will do — and democratizing the tools for “deep- better than its parents — is not fulfilled, fakes,” so that many more people can erode because we fail to adapt in this age of truth and trust. But the gap between the rapidly accelerating changes in technol- speed at which these technologies are going ogy, markets, climates, the workplace and deep and the ability of our analog poli- education. tics to develop the rules, norms and laws to And that is nearly certain to happen if govern them is getting wider, not narrower. we don’t stop treating politics as enter- T homas tainment, if we don’t get rid of a president That gap has to be closed to preserve our F rieDman who daily undermines truth and trust — COMMENT democracy. the twin fuels needed to collaborate and Fifth, today’s workplace is distin- guished by one overriding new reality, adapt together — if we don’t prevent the argues Heather McGowan, an expert on the future far left from pulling the Democrats over a cliff with of work: “The pace of change is accelerating at reckless ideas like erasing the criminal distinction the exact same time that people’s work lives are between those who enter America legally and those elongating.” who don’t, and if we fail to forge what political When the efficient steam engine was devel- analyst David Rothkopf described in a recent Daily oped in the 1700s, McGowan explains, average life Beast essay as “a new American majority.” expectancy was 37 years and steam was the driv- That’s a majority that can not only win the next ing force in industry and business for around 100 election but can actually govern the morning after, years. When the combustion engine and electricity actually enable us to do big hard things, because were harnessed in the mid-1800s, life expectancy we have so many big hard things that need to be was around 40 years and these technologies domi- addressed — and big hard adaptations can only be nated the workplace for about another century. done quickly together. So in both eras, notes McGowan, “you had mul- Sounds naive? No, here’s what’s naive: thinking tiple generations to absorb a single big change in we’re going to be OK if we keep ignoring the big the workplace.” challenges barreling down on us, if we just keep In today’s digital information age, “you have taking turns having one party rule and the other multiple changes in the nature of work within a obstruct — with the result that no big, long-term generation,” McGowan says. This dramatically and well-thought-out adaptations get built. increases the need for lifelong learning. “The old Indeed, this moment reminds me of something model was that you learned once in order to work, that Mark Mykleby, a retired Marine colonel, said and now we must work in order to learn continu- in a book I co-authored in 2011 with Michael Man- delbaum, “That Used to Be Us: How America Fell ously,” she contends. So we’re going from a model of “learn, work, retire” to a model of “learn, work, Behind in the World It Invented and How We Can Come Back”: learn, work, learn, work.” In that kind of world the new social contract has “At no time in our history have our national to be that government makes sure that the safety challenges been as complex and long-term as those nets and all the tools for lifelong learning are avail- we face today.” But, he said, the most salient fea- ture of our politics of late has been our inability “to able to every American — but it’s on each citi- zen to use them. This moment “is not about who to respond coherently and effectively to obvious prob- lems before they become crises. ... If we can’t even blame or what to bring back or what to give away,” have an ‘adult’ conversation, how will we fulfill the McGowan concludes. “It is about how to create a new deal that engages the American people to ‘take promise of and our obligation to the Preamble of longer strides,’” as President John F. Kennedy said our Constitution — to ‘secure the Blessings of Lib- erty to ourselves and our Posterity’?” How indeed? in seeking funding for NASA. But more of that Here are just a few of the challenges coming striding will be on you for more of your life. head-on: Fortunately, the midterm elections showed us First, if we have four more years of Trump, that there is a potential new American majority we’ll probably lose any chance of keeping the out there to be assembled to meet these challenges. global average temperature from rising only 1.5 After all, it was the independent voters, subur- ban women and moderate Republicans — who degrees Celsius instead of 2 degrees — which sci- entists believe is the difference between being able shifted their votes to Democrats, because they were to manage the now unavoidable climate-related appalled by Trump’s lying, racist-tinge nationalism and divisiveness — who enabled the Democrats to weather extremes and avoiding the unmanageable win back the House of Representatives. That same ones. partnership could topple Trump. Second, as Ray Dalio, the founder of the Bridge- water hedge fund, recently pointed out, there has If Democrats can choose a nominee who speaks to our impending challenges, but who doesn’t say been “little or no real income growth for most peo- ple for decades. ... Prime-age workers in the bottom irresponsible stuff about immigration or promise 60 percent have had no real (i.e., inflation-adjusted) free stuff we can’t afford, who defines new ways income growth since 1980.” In that same time to work with business and energize job-creators, frame, the “incomes for the top 10 percent have who treats with dignity the frightened white work- ing-class voters who abandoned them for Trump — doubled and those of the top 1 percent have tripled. and who understands that many, many Americans The percentage of children who grow up to earn are worried that we’re on the verge of a political more than their parents has fallen from 90 percent civil war and want someone to pull us together — I in 1970 to 50 percent today. That’s for the popula- tion as a whole. For most of those in the lower 60 think he or she will find a new American majority percent, the prospects are worse.” waiting to be assembled and empowered. The anger over that is surely one of the things ——— that propelled Trump into office and, if not Thomas Friedman, a New York Times colum- nist, was awarded two Pulitzer Prizes for interna- addressed, could propel someone even worse, like tional reporting in Beirut and Israel and one for Donald Trump Jr., in the future. Third, the next four years will redefine rela- commentary.