Being a Slacker May Have its Benefits

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David Scarfenberg at The Boston Globe has written a thought provoking article that ponders the idea that “maybe the slackers had it right after all.” He exalts the often vilified subset of society who have chosen to lead scaled back, simpler lives and sees an unexpected benefit to their slacking, in the fact that a recession won’t be affecting their lives so much.

He explains:

WE MOVED to San Francisco and Brooklyn and Mission Hill. We jumped from job to job. Put off marriage. Never bought a place. And we never heard the end of it. We were drifters, they said. Layabouts. No respect for work and real estate or the value of a good pair of cufflinks.

But now, in the cold glare of a recession, everything looks different: We’ve got no house to lose, no career to dash, no school-aged children in need of pricey Wii gaming systems.

Not recession-proof, exactly, but recession-resistant, at least.

Of course, it’s not like we saw the crash coming. We didn’t plan for this, didn’t time the market. And we made some bad choices along the way: The persistent neglect of our 401(k)s, battered stock market notwithstanding, will catch up to us someday.

But in retrospect, it’s clear that we did something right. We lived a smaller life, a life we could afford. And as the country rebuilds the economy, as it tries to replace it with something more sustainable than a leaning tower of subprime mortgages and consumer binging, it is time to reevaluate that much-maligned Gen X archetype: the American Slacker.

Boston Globe: “So maybe the slackers had it right after all”

[via The Morning News]

Comments (2)

  1. Oh good. Now I don’t feel bad for not feeling bad when my family tells me I’m wasting my life. They hate my happy-go-lucky not a care in the world attitude. Stinks for them really.

  2. The previous commenter stole my comment. A smaller life with less consumer binging is an attitude before it is a deed. The lucky ones find the beauty of this afetr crashing down from a higher class lifestyle.

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