The kids are alright

February 18th, 2009 § 6 comments

The above video was submitted by a kid in his 20s for an AARP contest, U@50, and came in second. It’s simple, yet striking.

Since these are our kids, it would be quite an indictment of us if they are indeed a “lost generation.” As the mother of a 25-year old, I have to say that I’m awed by him and his friends. At that age, I was a slacker in a dead end job, thought I was nature’s gift to humanity, and had a very high (and completely false) opinion of my own intelligence. It took impending motherhood to get me off my arse, when I was well into my 30s. If I had had his work ethic, intelligence, and creativity right out of the starting gate, who knows what I might have accomplished by now?

§ 6 Responses to “The kids are alright”

  • wisewebwoman says:

    Thanks for this, Tessa, I so needed a smidgin of hope after my post today!!
    XO
    WWW

  • I’ve seen/heard this before but glad to hear it again. Thanks for the reminder.

  • JES says:

    My niece and nephews are all in their 20s (well, a couple in late teens). And they all simultaneously scare and awe me with their smarts and cleverness. Sure, I missed my siblings and mother and friends when I moved from NJ. But, in hindsight, I really do regret not having been around the next generation much at all during the last 15 years or so.

    Great video, Tessa. Thanks for posting it!

  • Pseudo says:

    This gave me chicken skin.

  • Anne Gibert says:

    I am dazzled by my children. They make me think I must have done something right. They are mostly middle aged now, but I have equally dazzling grandchildren to watch now. Thanks for the video.

  • Luckily I am surrounded by youngsters even more useless than I was (and imbibing plenty of substances which I never did). Oh and they’re far worse dressed. There’s hope if you look for it Tessa!
    ;-)

  • § Leave a Reply

What's this?

You are currently reading The kids are alright at Nuts & Mutton.

meta

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes