efore
settling down on a long retreat and
averting my eyes from the other practitioners,
I like to scan the crowd for the under-30 yogis.
I check for overalls, Doc Martens, concert t-shirts, body piercings.
hy are there so few young
ones? I thought Buddhism was
hip. New York magazine and
the Wall Street Journal say
so. Adam Yauch, Laurie Anderson,
Richard Gere, and Tina Turner are Buddhists. My teacher, U Pandita Sayadaw, says
people coming to the practice at an early age progress extremely fast.
oung people were the ones to bring
vipassana (meditation)
west in the '60s, when they protested the war,
formed communes, tripped on
psychedelics,
pioneered therapy movements and
took off for India.
he '80s--the
decade my peers went to college and learned about financial success--were another
story. Few students took time off to travel to Asia or otherwise explore their
minds. In fact, I remember scorn for the "hippies in the '60s": the line was that they went off and neglected their responsibilities. Look at us, we
announced, we're serious. We care about good grades and high-paying jobs.