Pubdate: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2009 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: John Gormley, Columnist TOO YOUNG FOR HIPPIES THEN, TOO OLD NOW Born near the end of the baby boomer generation, I always felt ripped off. When the British invasion swept music, I was in kindergarten. I don't remember the Beatles appearing on Ed Sullivan and don't have a clue where I was when JFK was shot. During the "summer of love" I had to be at home in bed every night by 8:30 p.m. The other day, now in this summer of 2009, an interesting collision of past and present occurred when a young guy stopped me in a crosswalk. In the Broadway neighborhood, clad from head to toe in shapeless raw cotton, he wore sandals, had a fabric bag slung over his shoulder and, smiling through matted long hair and a beard, asked for spare change. Though I felt so old and unable to connect with this guy's life, at the same time I was suddenly transported back in time. We were on a family vacation and, like the epicentre in Haight Ashbury, every city had sit-ins of the young, wearing the universal uniform of the bohemian. One writer described it as "a melting pot of music, psychoactive drugs, sexual freedom, creative expression and politics." "Oh, they're hippies" my mother breezily explained, wisely deciding not to elaborate on the role that communal living, sex with strangers and copious drug use had on the search for awareness, expression and discovery. There was nothing particularly bad about hippies -- they were harmless enough if you could see past the long hair, aimless lifestyle and aversion to bathing. >From the eternal search for peace and love and trying to raise their consciousness -- which explained all the hallucinogenic drugs -- hippies were all about idealism. Many were middle-class white kids who could afford not to work. They criticized middle-class values, opposed war, the nuclear industry, weapons, capitalism and consumerism. And they weren't going to knuckle under to "the Man." Hippies liked the environment, vegetarianism, mysticism, alternative art, street theatre, folk music and communal living. Psychologist, hippie icon and LSD advocate Timothy Leary -- who coined "turn on, tune in, drop out" -- explained that he wanted young people to act more harmoniously with the world and, by "dropping out" he meant "self-reliance, a discovery of one's singularity, a commitment to mobility, choice and change." "Unhappily my explanations of this sequence of personal development were often misinterpreted to mean 'Get stoned and abandon all constructive activity,' " Leary later wrote in his autobiography. Hippies were everywhere. And there I was in elementary school, fascinated by how guys could grow their hair that long. Arguably the apex for hippies was the historic summer of 1969. Beatle John Lennon and Yoko Ono held their "bed-in" for peace in a Montreal hotel and recorded Give Peace a Chance. Later that summer, nearly half-a-million young people came to Max Yasgur's dairy farm near Woodstock New York. For four days, 32 musical acts made cultural and musical history. Wikipedia observes that Woodstock became "a countercultural mini-nation. Minds were open, drugs were used and love was free." Rolling Stone magazine would describe Woodstock as one of the 50 moments that changed the history of rock and roll. The Woodstock crowd, three times larger than expected, was wet, muddy, stoned but generally well-behaved. A local bus driver would later call the assorted hippies "good kids in disguise." In that same summer, prime minister Pierre Trudeau made Canada an officially bilingual country of English and French -- cereal boxes would never be the same. Two weeks later, Neil Armstrong would walk on the moon as the lunar lander Eagle descended from Apollo 11. And in August of that momentous summer of '69, the hippie-like cult followers of Charles Manson would murder seven people in two days in the Tate-LaBianca murders, made famous by the book Helter Skelter. It doesn't seem like 40 years ago this summer. Time passed; we all got older. By the mid-1970s when I finally came of age, hippies had pretty well disappeared -- or at least most of them had grown up, gotten jobs and were on their way to becoming "the Man." The word hippie largely fell into disuse. It wasn't until much later, during the late 1990s, that I heard an urbane young woman snort "dirty hippies" at a shaggy group of hemp-wearing globalization protesters. Recently, and you can see them in the midst of anti-nuke and green campaigners, they're back -- the hippies have returned, now the age of our kids but with the same wardrobes, idealism and hair styles of 40 years ago. It's all in the timing -- what was old is new again. And for those of us too young for hippies the first time, now we're the old people who just don't get it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr