Home : Publications : The 60s Movement

The Sixties Movement

These turbulent years faded away without bringing about anything that was in the heart of the sincere. We write these articles to those who were also disillusioned and hurt by the unfulfilled promise.

The Woodstock Nation
A chance to live out the values we embraced, to love and share, to be natural, to be free from what he hated in society. We could reject what we saw around us, but would we find our way to build a new society? Could we truly love and be loved?

Hippiecrit
If we did not attain to the society of love and peace we sought, who is to blame? Most of us eventually settled for the status quo and have become what we once hated. If you have ever wondered why the Movement never got off the ground, you may find the answer in these articles.

Personal Experiences
Can the zeal and ideals of youth be tempered with wisdom and experience without losing the original vision? These articles describe the struggles of some who grew up in the Sixties, and how they found the reality of the life they longed for.


The Woodstock Nation

The Elusive Dream

Haight-Ashbury! Do you remember what magic these two words held in our minds?! Thousands grabbed their bedrolls, backpacks, or sleeping bags and left home to find this Promised Land...

A Place to Belong

Thirty years ago communes sprang up where everyone shared everything, searching for peace and love. But our little utopias faded away. Can the longing in our hearts to live together in peace ever be satisfied? Is there such a place?

A Hope that Doesn't Disappoint

If we human beings really could be washed and cleansed of all the guilty stains buried deep in the recesses of our souls, then we could be one!

Timothy Leary's Dead

Doctor Timothy Leary began to preach the gospel of LSD and left Harvard in search of disciples. He preached that we could expand our minds, deepen our consciousness and lift ourselves out of a mundane existence. We swallowed it, hook, line, and sinker.

We Are Stardust, We are Golden

Getting back to the garden had tremendous significance at Woodstock. We were trying to find Utopia, that place of everlasting bliss and happiness, which history had taught was nowhere.

The Hippiecrit

Roots

The hippie exterior eventually wore off, exposing the roots that were still there. Like it or not, we'd become the very thing we'd railed against.

Come Together!

This was the cry that became a Movement. It was in the heart of a whole generation, fueled by a desire for a love we sensed was possible and a justice we knew the world needed.

Are You a Hippiecrit?

Did we really think we could throw off the ancient boundaries of conscience and create a society of love and unity?

After All is Said and Done

Our higher learning enabled us to know everything that was wrong with the world and yet justify our enjoyment of that same world to its fullest.

Personal Experiences

Children of the Children

As I got older, I began to discover that all these dreams of "getting back to the land" had evolved into one thing.

Back to the Garden

A fine home, a good marriage, beautiful land, and healthy children — but the tranquility was only external. Going back to the land and being self-sufficient wasn't enough.

Radical of Radicals

A radical can only bring about a positive change in society if he himself is rooted in a life-sustaining source.

Confession of a Former Feminist

It is true that woman is the key to restoration, but feminists won't like the recipe...

Flower Children

From that first "summer of love" to the close of the Vietnam War, we burst into flower, faded, and scattered the seed of our generation all across the United States. We were the flower children — young, innocent, and short-lived.

For more about this topic, please see the Hippiecrit standalone site:
hippiecrit.org

English
Español
Português (BR)
Deutsch
Français
Magyar
Afrikaans
Slovensky
Euskera
日本語
עברית
فارسی
All languages...