Broken but Readable
My mother grew up in a house with five kids and almost no money. My grandfather made their lunches every day: two slices of Wonder Bread, one slice of bologna, repeat. The day she got into medical school she came home holding the acceptance letter, breathless, and showed it to her mother, who looked at it for a moment and said, “Oh. Okay. I’m going to bed.” What I remember most from school is how I felt walking home with a good grade in my backpack. The excitement was hers, really. I was borrowing it forward. My mother lit up when I showed her things, and that kind of light costs something to give, and not every house has it. Hers rarely had it. She did better than her mother did. And her mother had done better than hers. That is how this is supposed to work, when it works. My grandmother wasn’t cruel. Her parents came over from Italy with almost nothing and gave her what they had, which wasn’t much warmth, because nobody had given them any either. On my father’s side, my great-grandfather sold fruit on the streets of Newark after coming over from Sicily. His son sold insurance. My father became a doctor. Each one parented imperfectly, the way I do, doing the best with what they had. Lately my generation has taken up a kind of recreational dunking on the Boomers. I see it every day on social media. Someone posts a photo of a paid-off center hall colonial and writes, “they pulled the ladder up behind themselves.” Someone else, a thoughtful person, says her parents’ generation “ate the future.” I read these and I think of my mother and of the sandwiches her father made and the letter her mother would not look at and the long quiet years that came after. And I wonder if we know what we mean. I wonder if we ever have. “Boomer” is a demographic shorthand that has been quietly promoted to a moral category, and the promotion was illegitimate. Pew defines the cohort as Americans born between 1946 and 1964: nearly twenty birth years of people across every race, class, region, and circumstance this country contains. What I mean is that “boomer” isn’t a personality trait. Before we picture every Boomer on a paid-off patio with a margarita, it is worth noticing what the Bureau of Labor Statistics actually says. Nearly one in five Americans sixty-five and older is still in the labor force. Of those working, close to forty percent are part-time. Some of that is preference, but a lot of it is rent. The next time you are at the pharmacy and the woman behind the counter is in her seventies, ringing up your prescription with hands that have done forty-five years of work, look at her. She is closer to a witness of your generation’s economic story than its villain. The Boomers inherited wounds, and their 20s were not a block party. American troop levels in Vietnam peaked above five hundred thousand in April of 1969. Later that year, more than half a million people marched on Washington against the war. The older Boomers were inside that rupture as young adults. They came of age under the draft, under assassinations, under the AIDS crisis that killed their friends in their thirties, under the slow dismantling of the unions and pensions their fathers had counted on. They also built things. The first Earth Day, in 1970, drew twenty million Americans into the streets and led, that same year, to the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed segregation in public accommodations and banned discriminatory employment practices. Much of the moral language my generation now uses to condemn the Boomers was built, marched for, voted for, or imperfectly absorbed by the Boomers themselves. In 1984, a twenty-five-year-old named Ruth Coker Burks was visiting a friend at a hospital in Little Rock, Arkansas. She was a single mother who sold real estate. She had been raised Methodist in a small Arkansas town where almost no one she knew had ever said the word gay out loud. Walking the corridor, she noticed that one of the rooms had a red bag tied to the door. The nurses at the station were drawing straws. She asked what they were doing. They told her: the man in that room had AIDS, and somebody had to bring him his dinner tray, and none of them wanted to. She walked in. His name was Jimmy. He weighed less than a hundred pounds and his eyes had retreated so far into his skull that you could not tell him from the linens. White upon white. He asked for his mother in a voice Ruth had to bend down to hear. She walked to the nurses station and asked for the number. His mother isnt coming, the nurse said. I would like to try, Ruth said. She took the paper and she dialed and she waited. A woman answered. Your son is dying, Ruth told her. The line went quiet. A long quiet from a house in some other county where the light was failing and a woman stood at her kitchen with the receiver pressed to her ear. My son died years ago, the woman said. He died the day he went gay. I dont know what is in that hospital but it is not my son. And she hung up the phone. Ruth went back into the room. She did not have the language of allyship or any of the words that would be developed, in the decades to come, for moments like this. She had her hand, and she gave it to him. She sat there for thirteen hours. She did not let go when he died. She set out to bury him and found that the town would not permit it. One funeral home after another refused the body, as if the disease itself had moral character, as if to touch what he had been was to be implicated in what he had become. She drove an hour and a half to find a man who would do the work, and she paid him out of her own money, because no one else would pay it and because someone had to. The ashes came back to her in a cardboard box, of the sort that holds office supplies or a pair of shoes, a container that announces by its ordinariness that no ceremony has been arranged for what it holds. She could not afford an urn. She walked into a pottery shop in Hot Springs and stood among the kilned bowls and serving dishes, and a man there, hearing what she needed and perhaps not hearing the whole of it, took down a chipped cookie jar and gave it to her. Into this she placed what remained of Jimmy. A cookie jar. The kind a grandmother keeps on a kitchen counter for visiting children, made to hold the small and pleasurable things of an ordinary life. He had been refused his mother, refused the rites of his town, refused even the dignity of an urn, and what he received instead was the vessel of a childhood no one had let him have. She buried him at night, alone, in her family’s cemetery, with a posthole digger she had thrown in the back of her car. She said a few words over the grave herself. She would do this many more times over the next decade. Word traveled fast through the quiet networks of dying men. There is a woman in Hot Springs. She is not afraid. She will sit with you. She had never heard the modern catechism of inclusion and there was no social media. She was a Methodist single mother in Reagan-era Arkansas, and the Ku Klux Klan would twice burn crosses on her lawn for what she was doing, and she kept doing it anyway. The Boomers, like every generation that ever drew breath, came into the world owing a debt no one had thought to explain to them; their twenties were the long humid corridor of a house their fathers had built and could not bring themselves to leave, full of the war their fathers had won and could not stop fighting, full of the wars their own sons would be sent to fight, full of the slow patient carnage by which a country becomes itself. The credentialed classes have spent a generation learning to treat fluency as a kind of virtue. To deploy the current vocabulary of suffering, to know its nouns and its cadences and the audiences at which it must be aimed, has become a moral performance in its own right. It is one of the more comfortable confusions of American life. The right words came late. They came after a working-class woman in Hot Springs walked through a hospital door no one else would open, and held a stranger’s hand for thirteen hours, and buried him in the dark, in a cookie jar, in a cemetery she would not speak of for thirty years. Her name is Ruth Coker Burks. She is alive. She is a Boomer. My generation is not wrong about the damage. Housing is scarce because zoning was designed to protect those who already owned. Student debt is crushing because policy allowed a lending architecture to expand faster than the wages of the young people it depended on. Health care extracts rent at every turn. Both parties are governed, on most days, by men and women who have held office for too long and acquired the habits of holding it. None of this is generational; it is only human. The country lost its compact with the young because, over the past four decades, American institutions learned to protect accumulated wealth better than they protected the young. Again, this is a policy that is supported today by young and old alike. Here is the spiritual cost of generational contempt, which I think we feel without quite naming. Every generation eventually becomes embarrassing to the next one. Mine will not lack for accusers. The easy charges are already being written: that we outsourced our attention to algorithms, that we treated our children as content, that we replaced therapy with chatbots without first understanding what therapy was for. The deepest charge, I think, will be that we were the first generation in human history to live our entire adult lives inside a system that recorded us, and we did not refuse it. We did not, in any meaningful sense, agree to it either. By the time we thought to ask whether it was a problem, we had already taken its shape. Then there is the matter of what we trained. Every confession, every grief, every cruelty we typed into a search bar in the small hours of the morning will have become, by the time our grandchildren are grown, part of the model that judges them. Gen Z will be blamed for something we do not yet have the language to name. They are being formed by whatever that is now, and one rarely sees clearly the shape of the thing forming you. And the unborn will look at all of us, Boomer and Millennial and Gen Z and the generations after, and they will ask the question that gets asked of every era that has ever ended, which is just what did you think you were doing? The honest answer, in our case, is that we were not certain we were doing anything in particular. We were checking our phones. The contempt we aim at the old is but a rehearsal for the contempt that will one day be aimed at us. My mother is seventy now. She still lights up when I tell her something I am proud of, the way she lit up when I came home with a good test, which is more than I earned, more than she ever got, and the only way any of this ever moves forward. She did better than her mother did. I am trying to do better than she did, which is hard, because she set the bar high. My children, God willing, will do better than I do. This is an inheritance, and it is a long, imperfect handoff, where each generation gives the next a slightly better version of the world than it received, by working harder than is fair, and loving more than is easy, and sometimes, often, by refusing to pass on what was passed on to them. I meant to post this on Mother’s Day, but I didn’t. Happy belated Mother’s Day, Mom. And to all of you, your mothers out there too. Even the boomers. Especially the boomers. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gregscaduto.substack.com/subscribe [https://gregscaduto.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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