Forty-Seven


A Response to Amy Miller's Twenty-Four

This story is a response to Amy Miller’s “Twenty-Four.” It is a story about how I became an adult.

But first, I hope you had a Happy Birthday Amy!

THE STORY

After I graduated from the college my parents sent me to, moved back to their house, and tried my hand at a few dead-end jobs I realized I had to make a change to myself and my life. I was 23, just about the same age as you, Amy. My much needed change involved moving a long way away, to Philly, with no friends or family there to support me, no place to stay past a couple of months, no money in my pocket, and no car. It was the first really important choice I made as an adult, independent of my parents’ input, and it was reckless, romantic, and stupid. But it all worked out. I found a job to help me pay off my loans, made new friends, played in a rock and roll band, and over time became who I am now.

All the worms you can eat, kids. Forever!

Now that I look back on those days I realize that when I decided to blindly jump out of the nest, that was the beginning of a journey from the shallow and unprincipled socialist ideas that we who were educated by unionized school teachers and went to progressive churches breathed, via the ignorant and self-consciously transgressive kneejerk social leftism of my rock and roll years, to the principle based classical liberalism of a husband and father who has faced divorce and managed to keep family and marriage together.

All those years spent chasing pleasure and grasping only disappointment: It was the choice to stop chasing pleasure, embrace my family’s needs, and consciously base actions on principle, that brought happiness. But it was the choice to leave my parents’ house and risk total failure that started me on the trip.

THE MORAL

Imagine that I hadn’t been using my parents as a crutch but the government instead. What would I have had to do to get out of the nest if it was the size of the United States? Surely moving from the Midwest to Philly wouldn’t have been far enough. Even Mississippi, where I am now, wouldn’t have been far enough.

In the future will other 23 and 24 year-olds be able to find a place that is free enough for them to make their own way and become adults? I like to repeat the example of Admiral David Farragut, who shipped out as a midshipman in the US Navy at age 10 and commanded his first ship at age 12 (in the war of 1812). Will future Americans be forced to live their whole lives in an extended childhood, even longer than the already extended childhood we now call adolescence? Or will there be an opportunity for 23,18, or even 12 year-olds to make actual adult choices for their own lives? Will there be freedom or confining restraints, arbitrary limits, nonsensical mandates? Will government be a guardian of the unalienable rights with which we were created, rights that preceded and justified government, or a nagging, interfering parent we can never escape?

Or if you have studied the history of the 20th century on your own and recognize certain awful patterns in developments of the last ten years, and especially the last six months, will our own government be a boot stepping on a face for a thousand years?

beaglescout-48.jpg

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13 Comments Leave a comment

I did the same thing when I was 24

Karina Saturday, June 6th at 5:41AM EDT (link)

A friend and I took out a map of the US, decided we wanted to live where we had no family (we wanted to be independent), and picked a two spots. Charleston and New Orleans. We chose Charleston because we had been there on a college trip and loved it. Two weeks later we went down to find jobs and an apt. Two weeks after that we moved. A month later, my friend had moved back home, my brother and my best friend had both moved in with me. A month after that I met my now husband on an island there and the rest is history. What would have happened if I hadn’t broken away from the controls of my family? Who knows? But I wouldn’t change what I have now. It’s been tough but I know I’m a lot stronger than that 24 year old who needed to exert her independence.

Stop confusing me with the facts, I’m making up my own imagination. ~My grandmother who voted for Obama

 

the boot-to-the-face link

molybdanthan Saturday, June 6th at 5:58AM EDT (link)

Nice piece on growing up. Gotta be done eventually. I like what it says in the Desiderata, about “gracefully surrendering the things of youth.” Actually, that’s all it has on the subject, but the rest is good too:

http://wikilivres.info/wiki/Desiderata

Maybe it’s something kids should read, along with the speech Polonius gives Laertes. “To thine own self be true…”

As for the boot link. What a great little read. From Orwell. I find it interesting that he wrote to warn the people of the threat of Big Government. But it seems the BGers use his message like a road map. Guess that’s why they’re still on course.

a conservative is a former liberal that is mugged by reality - many are being

Mike gamecock DeVine Saturday, June 6th at 4:02PM EDT (link)

mugged by Obama’s failed policies as we speak.

Mike DeVine’s Examiner.com, Charlotte Observer and The Minority Report columns
“One man with courage makes a majority.” - Andrew Jackson

I Was a liberal

OccamsRazor Tuesday, June 9th at 1:00AM EDT (link)

when I was 12.

I was only a moderate.

The_Gadfly Tuesday, June 9th at 4:55AM EDT (link)

I’ve never been to the left side of the aisle. I joke with my friends that I know I’m on the edge of the extreme right, because everyone who has ever tried to move to the right of me has fallen off the edge.

We’ve been called racists enough now that it shouldn’t bother us any more.

-AChance, http://www.redstate.com/moe_lane/2009/11/03/what-men-may-do-we-have-done/#comment-24463

If NY23 was a beat down for Conservatives, what do you call what happened to Progressives in NJ and VA?

inspired by ColdWarrior, http://www.redstate.com/hooah_mac/2009/11/04/ny-23-the-agony-of-defeat-not-so-much/#comment-156

 
 
 

Link chasing

LJ "Beaglescout" Miller Saturday, June 6th at 5:22PM EDT (link)

Thanks for the ideas. I chased down Polonius’ speech to Laertes too. And along the same lines, it is not unheard of for youngsters to complete their schooling on the same sort of schedule as our founding fathers.

Moshe Kai Cavalin, 11, graduated with honors Friday from East Los Angeles College, but he’d rather you not call him a genius.

“I consider myself a regular kid who works hard and does his best,” says this only child of a Taiwanese mother and an Israeli father.

When Moshe started college at the age of 8, he may have been the youngest person in class, but he ended up tutoring some of his 19- and 20-year-old classmates in math and science.
Story continues below ?advertisement | your ad here

Astrophysics is his passion. Albert Einstein and Bruce Lee are among his idols.

I think it’s very interesting that Moshe sees video games as a total waste of time.

“Each of us has a natural right, from God, to defend his person, his liberty, and his property.”

–Frederic Bastiat
 
 

It makes one wonder what genetic defect liberals have....

JadedByPolitics Saturday, June 6th at 8:45AM EDT (link)

that they never grow up to take responsibility for their actions oh and let me be clear there are ‘Republicans” with the same missing gene!

Whoever has his enemy at his mercy &
does not destroy him is his own enemy

I would be a little more generous

LJ "Beaglescout" Miller Saturday, June 6th at 11:20AM EDT (link)

Most liberals grow up.

But for some reason they don’t think that growing up is important, or worth acknowledging in their politics. Instead, their politics emphasizes protecting people who haven’t grown up and doing things “for the children,” who turn out to be everyone in the end.

“Each of us has a natural right, from God, to defend his person, his liberty, and his property.”

–Frederic Bastiat

I'm just now reading

OccamsRazor Tuesday, June 9th at 1:02AM EDT (link)

this downthread, which mimics what I posted upthread.

 

Yes, I've seen this

NotSoBlueStater Tuesday, June 9th at 10:50AM EDT (link)

My fiancee lives here life as conservatively as anyone I know, but her identity as a liberal Democrat is baked into her essence.

It’s interesting to watch this very bright woman navigate the dissonance. One wonders if the Obama Administration will end up being a wake-up call for a lot of these folks…

-
The Conservative creed has never offered a life of ease without effort. Democracy is not for such people. Self-government is for those men and women who have learned to govern themselves. - Margaret Thatcher

 
 

In case you missed it

molybdanthan Saturday, June 6th at 12:13PM EDT (link)
 

"Damn the torpedoes full speed ahead"...

DONTREADONME Saturday, June 6th at 4:13PM EDT (link)

LJ, seems like your story is quite similar to mine though you have more than a decade on me. Jump out of the nest and make it for yourself. I believe that quote was from Admiral Farragut.

“The UN is right? you can’t be any more “un”; Than you are right now, the UN is undone, Another mushroom cloud, another smoking gun, The threat is real, the Locust King has come, Don’t tell me the truth; I don’t like what they’ve done, Just give me ammo for the United Abominations”-Megadeth

 

Me too on the 47.

Brian Hibbert Sunday, June 7th at 3:30PM EDT (link)

I think one of the best descriptions of maturity is in the Bible, 1 Corinthians 13:11

“When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put childish ways behind me.”

Many people seem unable to put childish ways behind them. Your transition was abrupt, others are more gradual. But I see all too many people who have remained in the womb. I have family members in their 50’s that are still unable to break the dependence on parents for sustenance. The same is true with great numbers of people who have developed a dependency on government largess.

Socialism doesn’t work. It looks nice on paper, but it’s been tried and it’s failed miserably every time (usually accompanied by widespread death and suffering).
Proud member of the V.R.W.C.

 

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