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In this episode, Joel and Antonia talk with Jessie Newburn about generational theory and how to apply the understanding of Boomer, Generation X, and Millennials to your life.

In this podcast you’ll find:

Jessie Newburn

Generational Theory – The predictable cyclical pattern around how groups of people evolve in time and impact and influence each other.

Generations are a huge node in the system.

Millennials Rising by Howe and Strauss

Four generational archetypes, lasting about 20 years and repeating in a predictable method.

Generations form history and history forms generations.

We are midway thru one of the 20-year cycles.

The Greatest Generation (GIs) are the same archetype as today’s Millennials.

The Four generational archetypes are characterized as four seasons or turnings:

  1. Spring – First turning. After winter. Renewal. Possibility. Fecundity. Spring is when the Boomers were born after the wake of WWII.
  2. Summer – Second turning. Generations X was born during summer. Cultural revolution. Everyone out of the dark. Time to relax while things grow. Look at music in 1963 and again in 1965 and you will see a clear distinction.
  3. Autumn – Third Turning. Millennials born in autumn. Harvest time. Wall Street. Materialism. Entitled. Expectation. A time of abundance and plenty.
  4. Winter – fourth turning – Homelanders. Winter represents the time when that which isn’t strong dies. You can’t go outside and play until 9 pm in winter. Scarcity. Fear of loss. Crisis. Underlying feeling around the world is of crisis which begets a different type of thinking. In every fourth turning, there has always been a total war.

We are in winter. It extends from 2004-2024 roughly.

As children we receive info. Not much ability to discern, just absorb.

Generations are formed by where they are per their life phase:

  • Boomers born in spring. Everything is wonderful. Their young adulthood was characterized by peace, love, and rock-n-roll during summer. Prime money earning years were in fall. Elderhood is in winter, a time of crisis.
  • Gen. Xers are born in summer during a time when everyone is free to do whatever. Who needs seat belts and bicycle helmets? Their young adulthood is in fall which is the wild west of economics. Prime earning years is in winter. Elder years are in Spring.
  • Millennials are born in fall. Plenty. Abundance. Young adulthood is in winter. Not enough money. No jobs. What they don’t understand is this is cyclical for them. They get to be the heroes of this era. Their midlife will be in spring. When things are fresh and new again and society is coming out of its darkness. Elder years in summer when the cultural revolution decides everything they have built is garbage.

Millennials will give birth to the next generation of Boomers who will call everything created by “The Man” or their parents crap, and demand a cultural revolution.

Millennials were the beloved special children. Everything was done for them in the young adult years (“Make college more affordable,” “Make the workplace safe.”).

In midlife, they suck money out of the system in the form of government that they direct to their generation.

Homeland generation (aka Silent Generation) are born in winter when adults are very scared about the outer world.

The Primary generation raising Homelanders are Gen Xers, who grew up in an unprotected world, so they flip the energy as generations do and end up overprotecting and suffocating their children.

Homelanders have their young adulthood in spring when there is massive opportunity.

Homelanders hit every phase of life right for economic prosperity and every phase of life wrong for experiential bonuses. They miss out on a lot but tend to be a very wealthy generation that is well liked and respected.

If you live an average 80-year life span, you will experience every generation. But every generation will be slightly different than every other.

Race is a non-issue to Millennials. Same with alternate sexuality.

Silent Generation still wants to have a conversation around race. They are 70s-80s.

Boomers still want it to be at the forefront of the conversation with pickets and signs.

Gen Xers carried immigration on their shoulders. They’ve been called the smallest generation which is inaccurate. They are the largest generation because of massive immigration.

Millennials enjoyed a time of abundance, so they think there is always enough resources for everybody.

It’s only when there is a scarcity of resources that scarcity mentality rules everything.

Millennials aren’t prepared for the winter. They have a mindset of abundance and then encounter scarcity.

An understanding of generations helps us understand our parents and our children better.

We are halfway through Winter. There’s no speeding it up. Things aren’t going to get better for another decade. We will likely see a total war. So, how are you choosing to live your life? Do you want to keep expenses minimal? Do you want to buy property? Do you want to maintain some flexibility in life? Do you want to have children?

Everyone’s decisions will be more informed if they take generational theory into consideration.

Each generation wants to be different. Generations are not linear. They make sharp turns from generation to generation.

Millennials rebel against the Gen X definition of youth.

Gen X rebelled against the Boomers definition of youth.

Gen Xers were very scattered. So Millennials see that and decide they don’t want to be scattered they want to work together for change.

Part of what makes America great is because it is one of the most predominant cultures that experiences Generational Theory. Cultures that allow their children expression and choice experience Generational Theory because they experience this ability to hit reset and change ideals from one generation to the next.

Gen X creed is: “I just want the world to suck less after I’m gone.”

Boomer creed is: “Values! We have to stand for something!”

Every generation looks down on every other generation

Millennial optimism is tremendous. A nice contrast to the cynical Generation X.

Millennials bring a sense of togetherness. Part of what makes them the hero generation is their persistent optimism in the midst of winter. Even in the darkness, there is light.

They’ve transformed the heavy work focus of the previous generations.

Every generation has different technology:

  • Silent Generation – credentialed expert. Believed in PHDs, job titles, authority. If info doesn’t come from a credentialed expert, it’s not valid.
  • Boomers – Prophet Generation. Focused on the guru that can speak to something from the most fundamental value driven perspective. Who has the most book sales and biggest audience? Kings and Queens of broadcast.
  • Gen Xers – Panache and brand. Create status. Affiliate links. Monetize. They break the stronghold of the credentialed experts. Scatter. Move away from the center.
  • Millennials – Crowdsourcing. Sharing info. Move toward the center.

Prediction is that when millennials hit midlife, we will see a quelling of minority voices and dissent.

Nobody cared about Gen Xers. The focus is always on Millennials.

Generations are either recessive or dominant. Boomers and Millennials are dominant, and Gen Xers and Homelanders are recessive.

Gen Xers tend to independence and lean Republican

Millennials tend to be more involved in govt and lean Democrat. Millennials believe in govt because govt took care of them.

Gen Xers world view is that the govt doesn’t care. There is no net. The system doesn’t have my back. Gen Xers are the gamblers, the risk takers, and they put their time and energy into where things will work. If politics doesn’t work, it’s not worth the effort.

Talk with Millennials in positive future paced language that supports their success and growth.

Talk with Gen Xers with radical honesty. Function and getting things done.

Boomers want to mentor Millennials. Tired of cynical Gen Xers.

Generational theory can help frame self in time and understand the world. We have a tendency to be less panicked about world issues if we realize its cyclical nature.

Jessie Newburn’s Twitter Feed

In this episode Joel and Antonia talk with Jessie Newburn about generational theory and how to apply the understanding of Boomer, Generation X, and Millennials to your life. #generationaltheory #millennials #Generationx #BabyBoomers

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46 comments

  • Ashe
    • Ashe
    • August 18, 2018 at 11:21 pm

    I love this idea! I’m a ‘homelander’ who’s mother is a baby boomer, I have one younger brother, but my older siblings are a millennial and a gen X spread out. Everything kind and makes sense as to how we had our hardships and Miscommunications could have come about! I’m glad you guys talked about this :)

  • Antonia Dodge
    • Antonia Dodge
    • July 26, 2017 at 11:49 am

    “How much time have you guys actually spent talking to millennials ? Especially, less privileged millennials.”

    An exorbitant amount.

    A

  • Antonia Dodge
    • Antonia Dodge
    • July 26, 2017 at 11:47 am

    We offer models that make sense to us and from which we’ve benefited. None of them are empirically true. Most rest comfortably in philosophy at this time, not science. They’re maps of how reality works, not reality itself. If you don’t like a model, that’s cool. There are plenty to choose from.

    A

  • ELIZABETH
    • ELIZABETH
    • July 26, 2017 at 2:55 am

    I just did some research on generational theory. This was originally developed by Strauss and Howe and the book was published in 2000. They based their theory on survey data from an online survey . That’s a serious issue because that means the data this theory is based on is from a non-random sample which is not representative of the full population. The respondents of the survey were all young people from middle and upper-middle upper socioeconomic background. That is not the average American. That is another issue with the data they used. Most of the data from other books that deal with this formation of generational theory is based off of similar data from college students which is again not representative of the average millennial. . This explains the issues I have with what you have described in this podcast. It’s based on a model which was built from seriously flawed data. We should not use Strauss and Howe’s version of generational theory for informing our decisions it’s not empirically supported. In fact, research in the field of sociology shows that generational differences are distinctive only in the statistical sense generally usually only percentage points one way or the other.

  • ELIZABETH
    • ELIZABETH
    • July 26, 2017 at 12:49 am

    This is just wrong. There might be something to generational theory, but this entire episode completely fails when it comes to understanding millennials. It’s utterly tone deaf on issues of classism, racism, and sexism. There is so much that is wrong with the way this presents modern history that there just isn’t space in a single comment to cover it all. How much time have you guys actually spent talking to millennials ? Especially, less privileged millennials.

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