nemorathwald (
nemorathwald) wrote2005-01-19 10:14 am
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The Twixters, and Fandom
TIME Magazine's January 2005 cover story is on The Twixters, a new life-phase that's emerging between teenager and adult. Modern educations have ceased to be worth much in the job market, so they can't afford a home, a marriage, or kids. They're renowned as Secret Masters Of Friendship, the "New Tribes."
I don't live with my parents, which would be wrong to them, but as long as I don't have kids or get married, I have no one to be irresponsible to. Why does the transition to so-called "adulthood" create more neediness in this world just in order to level it back out to zero in their lifetimes? If you're worried about being selfish, there's plenty enough pre-existing need to be met without having more kids.
And don't get me started on permanent, institutionalized romantic commitment as a pointless anachronism and "The One and Only True Forever Love" as a hormonally-deluded illusion.
And career? Anything worth loving is worth doing as a labor of love, for free, like open source software. People pay someone else to do the rest, which is called a job.
The article talks about "settling down" as if its value needed no defense whatsoever. What's that, a real-estate ad? The best they could do was question-begging, vague moral tut-tutting and undefined fear. We are expected to follow the railroad tracks of normality "because... uh... hmm... um... Peter Pan!" It should have asked, "why shouldn't everyone be a Twixter?"
Has this resulted in an influx into Fandom, which seems tailor-made for the tribalizing Twixters? Even though I'm 30 and therefore outside the high end of the age range, I am a Twixter and so are my friends. It occurred to me while reading the article that I don't spend time with anyone who has children. At M.O.F.O., I can only think of three couples, and none of them have kids. Is it just me, or do there exist two distinct hermetically-sealed contingents of Fen? I speak of those who have a house, a spouse, a career, and children; and those who have one of the above at most. Never the twain shall meet except at Concom meetings?
I don't live with my parents, which would be wrong to them, but as long as I don't have kids or get married, I have no one to be irresponsible to. Why does the transition to so-called "adulthood" create more neediness in this world just in order to level it back out to zero in their lifetimes? If you're worried about being selfish, there's plenty enough pre-existing need to be met without having more kids.
And don't get me started on permanent, institutionalized romantic commitment as a pointless anachronism and "The One and Only True Forever Love" as a hormonally-deluded illusion.
And career? Anything worth loving is worth doing as a labor of love, for free, like open source software. People pay someone else to do the rest, which is called a job.
The article talks about "settling down" as if its value needed no defense whatsoever. What's that, a real-estate ad? The best they could do was question-begging, vague moral tut-tutting and undefined fear. We are expected to follow the railroad tracks of normality "because... uh... hmm... um... Peter Pan!" It should have asked, "why shouldn't everyone be a Twixter?"
Has this resulted in an influx into Fandom, which seems tailor-made for the tribalizing Twixters? Even though I'm 30 and therefore outside the high end of the age range, I am a Twixter and so are my friends. It occurred to me while reading the article that I don't spend time with anyone who has children. At M.O.F.O., I can only think of three couples, and none of them have kids. Is it just me, or do there exist two distinct hermetically-sealed contingents of Fen? I speak of those who have a house, a spouse, a career, and children; and those who have one of the above at most. Never the twain shall meet except at Concom meetings?
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On the fandom question, having a child means that if one is going to go hang at Mofo or Tio's, one must also have a babysitter. This costs $4 an hour in the Ann Arbor area in general; local mileage may vary (ie. you may have a swap arrangement with another family, or your mom may live nearby, etc.). In any case, add some inconvenience and about $20 to the cost of the evening. It makes it non-trivial to stop by.
There is an entire spectrum in fandom, from folks who are kid-phobic (there's just no other word for it; they get nervous and shaky when a small child enters the room) to folks with several kids, and everything in between. It does form a commonality - you have something to talk about. Oddly, people without kids tend to get bored hearing about my kids...hmmm....it's one of my favorite topics.... :-)
So clumps of 'With kids' tend to form, and also other clumps of 'Kid free' tend to form. The 'Kid free' can take off and go places on random weekends with minimal planning; the 'With kids' tend to have the next three months planned out like a military expedition. That's just how it winds up going.
Few are doing this intentionally; it happens because of economics and individual interest level.
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You ask, "Why shouldn't everyone be a Twixter?"
I read a book where the narrator postulated that the most important thing you could do between the ages of 18 and 40, was find something that will give you purpose during your 40s, 50s, and beyond.
I think the authors of this article are expressing the same thing, and worrying that the twixters aren't finding that thing.
I'm 38, and I haven't found anything like that myself. And I do worry about it. Why am I here on this earth? Surely there's something else besides the accumulation of ever more stuff. Religion's a crock. I am not a parent and I don't really want to be. What should I do with myself?
One big advantage that people who reproduce have, is that they don't have to wonder what their purpose is. They're parents; their job is to do their best for their children. They can just defer all that meaning of life stuff onto their kids. It may not be very fair to the kids to lay all that weight on them, but it's probably better to do that to your kids, than it is to decide that you DO know what it all means, and inflict fundamentalist christianity or some such thing on them.
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Nomadic tribes of single childfree room-mate apartment dwellers (I am not talking about people who live with their parents) is a life that needs defending, and is not a pitiable accident, it's often a conscious choice. Frankly, you need no such help if you have the support of the monolithic "home and family" status quo. Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family program and all it stands for can use a bit of healthy opposition in our country's conservative backlash.
Second, I've lost close friends to weddings and childbirth. I pointed out the Twixters just to make people aware that there exists more than one kind of family. If you're in a nomadic urban tribe, you may not realize when you are breaking up with it, but the tribe can still feel kind of... well, divorced. "Well, this just happens in life, people just naturally sort themselves into family and non-family" is not true in an age of effective birth control. It doesn't just happen.
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This is good stuff.
(Anonymous) 2005-01-25 02:58 pm (UTC)(link)Re: This is good stuff.