My generation, faced as it grew with a choice between religious belief and existential despair, chose marijuana. Now we are in our Cabernet stage.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
My generation had to be taken seriously because we were stopping things and burning things. We were able to initiate change, because we had such vast numbers. We were part of the baby boom, and when we moved, everything moved with us.
The thing that makes my generation The Greatest is our ability to hang out. We're spectacular at it. If you take somebody from my generation and sit them on a couch and bring them food and plumbing, they'll sit there and talk to you about anything you want until the day you die.
I know my generation - a lot of them, they're getting old now, and they want to think back fondly, they want to kid themselves. A lot of them think, 'Yeah, we were the best.' That's the kiss of death. That's non-growth. And also that's very bad for the world.
My generation, we came along, we had to really know our craft.
My generation is having its midlife crisis in its 20s.
Marijuana is a much bigger part of the American addiction problem than most people - teens or adults - realize.
Mine is the first generation able to contemplate the possibility that we may live our entire lives without going to war or sending our children to war.
Nothing is more singular about this generation than its addiction to music.
I've got weird conflicting feelings about my generation.
Marijuana you can give up, Iv given it up for fifteen years now and it never occurs to me to smoke it anymore.