The Globe and Mail - 02.11.2019

(John Hannent) #1

Opinion


SATURDAY,NOVEMBER2,2019 | GLOBEANDMAIL.COM


E


veryone on this side of Germany remembers the evening of Nov. 9, 1989, when
the extraordinary scenes from Berlin reached this far northern corner of their
40-year-old communist country.
“For me, it was a feeling of catastrophe,” says Lotte Hansen, who was born in
1939, as she strolls around the half-decayed buildings of the “model socialist village” of
Mestlin, on the rural outskirts of the Baltic port city of Rostock, in the former East
Germany. “I was teaching in the school when we heard the Berlin Wall had come down.
The next day, a couple kids were missing. The next week, even more left to go join
relatives in the west. ... It was a really terrible time for us. We took it all very personally.”
Ms. Hansen had reason to see the Wall’s demise as a disaster. In 1958, she had been
one of the young idealists sent by the Soviet-backed government of the German Demo-
cratic Republic (GDR) to expel land owners and collectivize the farmlands, in her case
as a schoolteacher and as the wife of the top local party official.
As they watched the crowds demolishing the Wall and pouring across the death
strip, both she and her students understood instantly that this would soon mean the
end of their country – although they had very different feelings about it.
GERMANY,O8

PeoplecelebrateattheBerlinWallduringtheofficialopeningoftheBrandenburgGateinBerlininDecember,1989.©PATRICKARTINIAN/CONTACTPRESSIMAGES

THE


OTHER


SIDE


Thirtyyearslater,theBerlinWallcontinuestodivideGermans,DougSaunders


writes,shapingtheirpsychological,economicandpoliticallives


OPINION

Doug Saunders is the international-affairs columnist for TheGlobe andMail and currently a Richard von Weizsaecker
Fellow of the RobertBoschAcademy inBerlin.

I


was born in 1989, part of a gen-
eration for whom gold stars
and cheerful posters proclaim-
ing “If you aim for the moon,
you’ll land amongst the stars”
were plastered on the wall of
seemingly every elementary-
school classroom. I was relent-
lessly conditioned to believe I
could achieve everything I want-
ed to achieve, and for a long time, I
believed that to be true. So far, the
defining feature of my adult life
has been a recalibration of expec-
tations. Every year, the success
and accolades I once imagined for
myself grow further out of reach. I

will not be everything I wanted to
be. That’s why I started giving my-
self participation ribbons for
achieving the bare minimum.
It’s generally accepted that
people are supposed to find pur-
pose, or at least a modicum of sta-
bility and satisfaction, in the insti-
tution of marriage, parenting and
home ownership. But having lit-
tle interest in the first two and
priced out of the latter, I look to
simple tasks such as making the
bed, watering plants and cooking
a meal to find purpose in my life.
Like so many other millennials, I
live in an overpriced city with di-

minishing job prospects in my
chosen field. But rather than fan-
tasize about torching my current
situation in favour of moving to a
cabin, a less expensive city or,
worse, grad school, I have com-
mitted to finding pleasure in the
life I currently inhabit.
As someone who has spent
most of my life working toward
the next lofty goal, my life got a
whole lot better once I stopped
searching for ways to improve it.
Mundanity is my succour. Consis-
tently completing tasks such as
keeping track of my expenses or
remembering to take my library

books back on time – all loosely
tied together under the umbrella
of “adulting” – are a form of revel-
ling in my own mediocrity. Al-
though “adulting” is a puerile
word I can barely bring myself to
utter in seriousness, I embrace the
definition of the term as a duty to
myself.
My ability to complete the
tasks that most people have been
trained to view as tedious, or a
waste of time, is my way of mak-
ing peace with living a life that is,
by all accounts, totally unspec-
tacular.
ADULTING,O5

Thesmallpleasuresofadulting


WhyIsabelB. Slonelookstosimpletaskstofindpurposeinherlife


OPINION

IsabelB. Slone is a writer
living in Toronto.


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ROSTOCK,GERMANY
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