The last couple of JW "get-togethers" that I was invited to, they didn't talk about anything spiritual.
On one hand, it is diffferent. When I was younger and dubs gathered, there was usually some kind of "spiritual" talk. I remember being invited to get-togethers where a Bethelite was in attendance and we had to endure experiences of JWs around the world or reports on how things worked at Bethel. I remember one Bethelite took notes of some special meeting. The original talk was an hour but he gave a synopsis using his notes that took an hour and 15 minutes. Figure that out.
Some families would play Bible games, instead of Monopoly or some sports game. I remember having to study the WT twice a week before Sunday even sometimes, because my family studied it on Friday, but if I went to a friends house on Saturday, that's when they did it. Every fun experience was attached to a "spiritual" requirement. We had to go in service before we could go to the lake. We had to study the WT before we could visit friends. We had to do Bible reading before playing pick-up ball. Congregation picnics (when allowed) were usually held after the Sunday meeting, thus subliminally forcing everyone who wanted to go to the picnic to go to the meeting. It didn't do to show up at the picnic when you didn't go to the meeting just a couple of hours earlier.
But on the other hand, my peer group never talked about anything spiritual. Our parents and the elders and the pioneers always promoted the "spiritualness" of those gatherings. We just wanted to have fun. We got more than enough JW talk at the meetings and family study. Left to my own devices, I never studied for a single meeting. It's written on 4th or 5th grade reading level. What's to study? Read the paragraph, underline the answer, rinse and repeat. We dreaded all the "spiritual" requirements before we could do anything fun. And it took the fun out of having fun. You couldn't just decide to go have fun...it had to be preceded by a chore.
And that's how we came to view most things JW...as a chore. We have to go out in service. We have to go to the meeting. We have to study. Not too many look forward to those things. It's something that they're conditioned to do.
So now that I'm an old fart, my generation has pretty much taken over the reigns from the older ones. While they may still be indoctrinated enough to keep up the charade of meeting attendance and field service, my generation manages to find time to relax and enjoy life without having to pick up a Bible or pray or invite a Bethelite over to make sure the event will be properly sanctoined by Jehovah. I think all that forcing spirituality on us backfired in that those who lived through it don't practice it or force it on their families. True obsessive JW behavior is being bred out thankfully.