The Hopes of a Young FCJ on Our Bicentenary Year: Part III
By Audrey fcJ. This is Part II of a reflection on what it means for her to be a young FCJ in today's world, first posted on her blog Surprising Grace. Read Part I here and Part II here.
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3. People of Our Time
A short piece in the local newspaper about millennials and burnout caught my attention a few days ago. On doing further research I discovered the hypothesis made by some commentators that “millennials” suffer from a type of burnout specific to their generation. In a nutshell, this generation has – because of the expectations placed on them by society, and the prevalence of communications technology – internalized the idea that they must always be working, and that it is not enough just to be “average”, but they must always strive to be the best. As a result, they overcommit, work too much, are unable to relax without feeling guilty or thinking of what they should do next, and are more prone to mental health issues such as anxiety and depression.
Whether or not I am a “millennial” at age 32 depends on which categorization you use – and I am sure that this generalization applies only to particular socio-economic contexts – but I certainly recognized myself in the description of their problems, along with many of my peers who struggle with the same. Intrigued to think that this could be a generational issue, I went home and tested the hypothesis on the rather small sample size of non-millennial FCJs around the dinner table. To my surprise, while all of them worked hard, none of them felt that they should be working all the time, and they were curious as to why I did!
This small episode brought home to me again the fact that each generation, coming of age in its particular time and circumstances, has its particular shape and struggle (though of course not everyone goes through the same experiences or is shaped the same way). Whatever the exterior manifestations, though, I am sure they are all expressions of the very human needs and desires that we share deep down. The millennials’ compulsion to work probably arises, fundamentally, from our need to be loved, to know we are loved; to love in return and be a part of something bigger than ourselves. In our own ways – rightly or wrongly – we are all looking for something that transcends the fleeting, fragile nature of our mundane reality. We are looking for God.
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I can hardly imagine the kinds of changes we will face in a world that is so rapidly evolving – even in my short lifetime! But I hope that as we move forward into the third century as FCJs, we will be open to “the joys and the hopes, the griefs and the anxieties” of the people of our age (as the Church urged us decades ago in Gaudium et Spes). At the same time, may we continue to be sustained by the resources of our FCJ tradition, which keep our hearts free for God and the service of others.
What about you? What are your hopes as we move into the future?