‘A JOURNEY WITHOUT MAPS’
The
discussion was about vaping. The presenter said it is a problem with young
people. They see it as a substitute for smoking – not harmful to health and yet
giving a kick like smoking. Besides, it is ‘cool’ and there is peer pressure to
get into it. But, she said, it is now known to be harmful though maybe not so
much as smoking. Further, she said, it is addictive and we don’t really know
its long term effects but research is far from positive about them.
Her guest
agreed and said the government should do something to discourage vaping. One
way would be to sharply increase tax on it and she suggested other ways of arresting
its effects. It was the other guest’s response that struck me. He said the
difficulty is that many young people are searching for meaning, identity –
anything that would enable them to cope with life. And he used the word
‘narrative’. ‘They have no narrative.’
He was
raising the conversation to another level, a frightening level. Is it really
true that many young people have no ‘narrative’ in their lives? I understand
his meaning to be; their parents and family have given them no base, no
tradition, on which they can build their lives. There are no fixed points to
start with and so it is unclear where they can go.
Normally a
person grows beyond his or her upbringing or training and develops their own
story or ‘narrative’. But if there is nowhere to start, there is a danger a
person will have no confidence to set out at all. So the alarming conclusion is;
the downside of our progress in affirming human rights and individual liberty
is that people have cast off their moorings before they have the compass of
their ship set. If one has no idea where one comes from it is going to be
difficult to see where one is going.
All this
reminds me of a distinction I have come across, from George Kennan, which I
have used a number of times. It is between the mechanic and the gardener. The
good lady, above, who wants to increase taxes, is like a mechanic. She believes
you can ‘fix things’ by making certain adjustments. But the man in the
discussion, whose name escapes me – as does hers, was pointing to a more
fundamental issue, the foundations of growth.
With all
our progress, we may have succeeded in uprooting our young people so that they
are now adrift in a ‘journey without maps’. It is hard for a parent to see
their son or daughter in their late thirties still searching for what they
really want in life. Many of us grew up in a time where family, tradition and
our faith helped us make our own way. Today, it seems, these landmarks are
often no longer there.
We may
believe that soon there will be a swing back to older sureties, however
modified. But in the meantime a whole generation suffers.
11 June
2023
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