Missing The Train? The Train’s Missing!
This is a spinoff from an article I’ve been talking about by William Doherty, of the University of Minnesota, with the provocative title See How They Run. His theme is that “… for many kids, childhood is becoming a rat race of hyperscheduling, overbusyness, and loss of family time.”
In his article he uses an image that has become important to me in my private practice: He says that parents fear that their children will “be left behind when the achievement train leaves the station.”
I have the privilege of working with a good many twenty-something ex-kids. Some are already done with college and looking at grad school; some are thinking about trying out a community college after a disastrous high school experience. Some are desperately hoping for their first serious relationship, some are married and beginning to imagine having children. Some are still living with their parents while they struggle with “What will I be when I grow up?"; others are five years into a career and wondering if it was the right choice. You get the idea: the most varied of situations.
For a frightening portion of this generation, I’m hearing the same fear, one I’ve come to reflect in a train image. When I present it to my 20-something clients, it seems to resonate for them. I say to them, it’s like you’re telling me:
There’s a train and everyone else is on it, and I’m not. Or maybe I’m on it, but it’s the wrong train and everyone else is at the right station and I’m not. Or maybe it’s the right station, but everyone else got here first and I’m the one who’s behind. ”
Worse than that, as I listen, is my sense that they’re saying
There’s only one train, only one track, only one schedule, only one set of stops, and I don’t even know where the station is, or what the stops are, or when I’m supposed to be there, but I know I’m behind.”
The train image helps, I think, because it lets them giggle a bit at their fear, and start to look at it. Because underneath, they know there are many trains, many stations, many routes to the same destination, many good destinations, and no fixed schedules. The train they thought they missed is what’s missing – it doesn’t exist and never did. And if that’s so, who’s to say I’m behind? If everyone thinks they’re behind, but no one even has a schedule, who’s feeding us this fear? And anyhow, I am on a train, and there’ve been some educational stops, and some decent scenery; maybe I just need to keep riding a while.
But if I’m reading this fear correctly, what are “we” doing to them? To their career choices? To their sense of freedom to develop a life that works for them?
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It has always been useful to me to think of life as having many paths that branch off of each other and that often reconnect - they keep interlinking. We make choices and we learn something from each choice we make even though it may not be the same as what everyone else is doing at that particular time.
I went back to school in my mid forties and am now 10 years into my career in nursing, but everything I did prior to returning to school is just as important and satisfying to me as what I am doing now. My 25 year old son flunked out of college, went to Hollywood and worked as an extra in movies for a year, then came back and is now working at a kind of dead-end job while he re-groups and decides what he is going to do from here on out. I’m not pushing him to hurry up and decide. I think we need to enjoy every day as much as we can, and it doesn’t help to have someone nagging and pressuring you to make a huge decision about what you want to do with the rest of your life. I realize there are econonic reasons why a person might need to hurry up and start making money, but I’m a great believer in watching things unfold rather than forcing them.
Your train image reminds me of that song “Keep On Keepin’ On” by Len Chandler(it was one of my dad’s favorites)
“While sittin’ on a crowded southbound train, it happened just the other day, I could’ve sworn that I was rollin’ back as the train beside me slowly pulled away. Well, my whole life long it seems I’ve been on that track, with everybody rollin’ on and me just slippin’ back, and they don’t wave goodbye, and they don’t look back, so I guess I’ve gotta keep on keepin’ on”