I'm from the '60s, but no one has ever accused me of being a hippie. I never had much interest in the Woodstock crowd, which partied to change the world, while real people were starving to death in Africa.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I was a little too young to be a hippie.
I went through bits of the 60s and thought myself a bit of a hippy.
I never was a hippie! I went to India because so many friends like Mia Farrow and the Beatles were going there to discover truth. And so I went and trekked through India by myself, but instead of discovering truth, I wanted to join the Peace Corps.
My parents are hippies, so I must have a bit of hippie in me.
At the time of Woodstock, I was just 13, but I used to see these exotic hippy creatures and I did look on with envy. How could you not? In an ideal world, I would have loved to have been a hippy - but I might have been a bit strait-laced. It was my fantasy.
I was pretty much a hippie. I was a vegetarian, gypsy-like. I liked to meditate, and it's curious because I was very much attracted to the possibility of change.
I grew up counterculture. I'm essentially a hippie, and I'm essentially a folkie.
I grew up in a hippie commune so I have a real hippie part of me.
Basically, I was a hippie and still am a flower child.
I'm a bit of a hippie.