Part I – Understanding the Remixed Generation
It has been a while since our last entry. Life has moved quickly—our children have grown, four have graduated from college one is still in college, one is married, another is engaged, and AI is suddenly everywhere. This year also marks the beginning of the new Beta Generation. In my book clubs with my daughters and my sisters, we’ve read authors like Dr. Edith Siro, Dr. Lisa Miller, and Tara Isabella Burton, BrenĂ© Brown, all in an effort to understand the world our children are navigating—a world of “remixed spirituality,” where many young people search for meaning outside traditional faith.
In Strange Rites, Burton explains how Silicon Valley transformed spirituality around 2006, when smartphones and social platforms became central to daily life. Technology began acting like a “new priest,” shaping beliefs, behaviors, and communities through algorithms. Instead of receiving tradition, many young people were encouraged to design their own spirituality—personal, customizable, and detached from any religious authority. This is the world in which our children grew up at the same time raised in great catholic traditional schools.
The Silicon Valley mindset also fueled radical individualism: create your own truth, optimize your life, curate your rituals. Practices like mindfulness, yoga, wellness apps, or biohacking often replaced deeper spiritual needs—peace, belonging, and purpose—but without God. Spirituality became something to consume and improve, rather than a relationship with a Father who calls us to holiness in everyday life.
This shift gave rise to the “Nones”—spiritual but not religious, searching but often alone. Burton argues that this tech-shaped culture left many young adults spiritually hungry yet institutionally disconnected. For us as parents, this is both a challenge and a mission: to form our children in faith and virtue leading though our own example of a life lived with faith, hope and joy so they can recognize true meaning. Not a meaning they curate, but a Person they encounter. And to live our vocation with such joy and coherence that a cheerful Catholic family life becomes its own quiet, luminous guide. Talk to Him about your children and He will make His way to their heart. Good luck.


