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Nathan Heller is a patient, comprehensive reader, a man not prone to snap conclusions. Which is why I enjoyed his recent
New Yorker story (January 14, 2013 issue) on twentysomethings. He remembers himself all those years ago. He reviews the literature of the young and the literature of those who purport to know about the young, and he wonders out loud in a voice both determined and delicate. This is how he ends his piece—a masterful, undamning, bittersweet conclusion. Here is how
you is I, and how
you is us:
The shock of the twenties is how narrow the window of experience really is, and how inevitable it seems both at the time and afterward. At some point, it is late, too late, and you are standing on the sidewalk outside somewhere very loud. A wind is blowing. It's the same cool, restless late-night breeze that blew on trampled nineteen-twenties lawns, and anywhere young people gather. Nearby, someone who doesn't smoke is smoking. An attractive stranger with a lightning laugh jaywalks between cars with a friend, making eye contact before scurrying inside. You're far from home. It's quiet. All at once, you have a thrilling sense of nowness, of the sheer potential of a verdant night with all these unmet people in it. For a long time after that, you think you'll never lose this life, those dreams. But that was, as they say, then.
Hark the distant sound of wedding bells. A new study on young Americans' (defined as 20 to 24 year-olds) views on marriage reveals that the nuptial tradition remains alive and well. At least, in theory. From the article:
- Among the unmarried young... Read the rest of this post
The quarterlife crisis isn't an invention of the recession. But the downturn and the growing ranks of unemployed twentysomethings has given the phenomenon a much higher profile as of late. As such, there's been a lot of interest in how affected... Read the rest of this post
During the whole "future of work" debate a while back between Ypulse and PSFK, I pretty much took a back seat and played the role of comment moderator. But, recently I've been thinking back to the subject. Not so much the "get a job" vs. "create... Read the rest of this post
A recent piece on Slate.com compiled a selection of emails from twentysomethings who responded to the question of how they were dealing with the economic downturn. The answers were well-crafted testimonials that not only articulated the situation... Read the rest of this post
By: Anastasia Goodstein,
on 9/24/2008
Blog:
Ypulse
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Design Girls (a DIY tween fashion site where girls can design their own real world clothes - and order them. Believe it or not I almost started a very similar site, but chose to focus on Ypulse. Nice to see proof of concept!)
- Marketing the Muppets... Read the rest of this post
Wow! Especially those last couple sentences!
The sheer potential of a night with unmet people! SO encapsulates the pure potential of the as yet unjaded twenties! Something of it reminds me of Gatsby!
I loved that piece too. And for the same reason.