Baby Boomer Bust
Jeanine is 58 years old and has been married for 35 years. For the last 10 years of her marriage she hasn’t had any intimacy with her husband. She claims she loves and appreciates him but is no longer attracted to him. She has 3 daughters whom she describes as “very successful” between the ages of 30-35 and has 3 grandsons. Jeanine has a lot of free time, she doesn’t work, her husband and she are financially secure and of course all of her children are out of the house and married. Her circumstances make her the envy of her friends. She looks younger than her age and keeps herself looking very attractive, but under this facade Jeanine is frantic.
For the last 10 years of her life she has been involved in multiple affairs. No one knows of any of those affairs, she is very careful.
She is frantic because she feels that her life is passing by and she’s missing the juice of life in her marriage. She wants to be loved and she doesn’t feel loved either with her husband or with her daughters and grandchildren. She can’t distinguish for herself what’s really important in her life and what’s negligible, but she strongly feels that a major need in her life is not met. This feeling puts her in a frantic chase after an illusion. She can’t recognize in her actual life what she believed happiness was supposed to feel like. Jeanine is not an untypical baby-boomer.
Jeanine’s generation advanced the idea of “finding oneself” instead of keeping their parents’ traditions and ideals. She is completely involved with herself with great awareness of her own need for basic “love and belonging.” At the same time she is detached from everyone else that could have played an important part in her life. This explains why she flirts and has a great urge to realize those relationships with men from her generation who are looking for the same thing – a quick moment of intimate human contact.
The communication between her children and grandchildren is reduced to superficial Facebook comments and her children are too busy working every job they can because of their own financial burden. Jeanine (with her cohort baby boomers) is chasing the dream she believed in the 60s and 70s, dreams which she was never able to realize. Now, she is running frantically in an attempt to indulge herself – to have the “dessert” of life and is stuffing her face with “ice cream” as she continues to feel insatiate.