©2025 Myrna Urmanita. All Rights Reserved.
Having lived as long as I have, I belong to the older generation. We are the Baby Boomers, born 1946 - 1964. Our parents are the Greatest Generation, born 1901-1927, and the Silent Generation, born 1928 - 1945.
We are the children who have lived through an extraordinary spectrum of personal, cultural, and historical changes. And yet, we are also the generations that have earned a quiet frustration: watching younger generations assume we have little or nothing to offer to the problems and issues facing the world today.
Never mind that we were the generations who carried responsibility, loss, reinvention, failure, recovery, love, and survival. We are the children whose parents lived through the Great Depression, fought in WWII, and some of us are the children of parents from the post-WWII baby boom.
We are the generations who lived through the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War and Space Race, political turmoil and assassinations, the Civil Rights movement, the Women's Liberation movement, the gay rights movement, the environmental movement, the counterculture/hippie movement, the Vietnam War, Middle Eastern conflicts, the Persian Gulf War, and early post-9/11 operations, the rise of the Internet, and the digital revolution.
And still, our words are dismissed for carrying no weight or value. We become unseen in a world obsessed with speed, disposability, and a more-is-better mentality.
But, here is the hushed reality they are missing:
Technology changes.
Language changes.
Platforms change.
Fear, ambition, grief, hope, ego, love, and resilience do not.
The only currency with lasting value is human connection. Leadership and success have always been about relationships—about building bonds grounded in sensitivity, compassion, kindness, and humanity.
We are the generations who do not need to shout or correct, but stand firmly in our lived reality. There is depth beneath our storytelling—depth that only time can create.
We are not seeking validation. This is about legacy. Our storytelling is not about ego or praise; it is about planting seeds. Seeds for those who will one day say, "Now I get it. I understand."
And just as the cycle repeated itself with us, it will repeat with generations that follow.
We are not late, outdated, or irrelevant. We are the generations that have been there, done that, and are arriving now with power and authority that are not fabricated, but in real-time.
We don't just want to be heard.
We want to be felt.
And feelings are what endure.
I am not alone in this. You are not alone. Together, we are not disappearing into the background.
We're leaving a light behind. 🌺
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Some things that are learned are timeless — what comes next asks me to notice more.