[this article was originally posted to my Facebook page in June 2015]
I can remember hearing, on my car radio in 1997, of the death of actor Jimmy Stewart. Two things immediately came to my 29 year-old mind:
* "I kind of thought he would live forever"
* "I feel sad for my parents' generation"
Today, nearly 20 years later, we learn of the death of actor Christopher Lee. It has been a long time since I could forget that even famous people pass away. And the sorrow I feel this time is for my own generation's loss.
We see them now a little more often than we saw them before, don't we? The online posts about heaven gaining another angel. It could be a pet. It could be a classmate. It is, with increasing regularity, a cherished relative of the previous generation or a parent.
And, here we are: the 40-something masters of the universe, agog and bewildered that the people we all looked up to for so long are turning over the keys to the kingdom, increasingly, to us. I marvel at how many of us announced their children's graduations from high school this year. We have now produced a new generation of adults that look up to us the way we looked up to our parents (whether that's been clear over the previous several years or not). Many of them will have felt, on learning of the death of Christopher Lee, the way I felt when learning of the death of Jimmy Stewart.
So, besides evoking a sense of poignancy with these observations, what is my point? Simply this: Life waits for no one. We, the remnants of the Baby Boomers and the vanguard of Generation X, find ourselves, finally, in the driver's seats of our worlds. No more hand holding; no more training wheels. We are now "they", "them" -- "those people" who, increasingly over the next two decades or so, get to say how our families, our neighborhoods, our governments, and our society will go. There is no longer the shadow of someone greater than us hiding us from our moment in the spotlight.
Seize the scepter - lay hold on the empty throne. Our idols have grown frail and are abandoning us. We 'get to say' now; it is our turn to be looked up to.