Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Quitcherbitchen about the millennials...and their younger siblings.

I was born in 1970. I grew up with the blue eyeshadow, parachute pants, and Little House on the Prairie crowd. I have had my good years and bad, but I like to think I have grown into some perspective. I have a lot of exposure to differing opinions thanks to my enormous amounts of wasted time on Facebook. I have been thinking about writing on this subject for a while. Millennial and youth bashing. We've all done it. What generation hasn't? I am not writing about your fifteen year old. Teenagers are rough, we should get combat pay, but they come out of it as they reach adulthood in most cases. So, lets take this one complaint at a time. These don't apply to everyone, but just play along. Some of us need an attitude adjustment.

1. They are lazy and entitled.
Guess what? You raised them. By you, I mean an entire generation of rushed, working, overly busy, overly joining, overly competitive, consumer parents. We drank the kool-aid. Two new cars, big house, working overtime, pressing education on our kids as the only key to success and happiness. We ate out, we overindulged, we let them join three sports. We went in debt. This generation is evolving passed the quest to have it all. They shop at thrift stores, they upcycle, they save money, they knit and sell it on Etsy, they buy used cars. Pay attention, because most of us didn't teach it to them. While I pay my huge cable bill/internet/phone bill, they are getting by with a $150 smart tv and a zulu account. Who's the dummy?  We complain about childhood obesity. Guess who hit the gym while their kids ate fruit chews and cheez-its in the daycare? These kids are having to battle the Childhood Obesity/BMI Nazi's with one hand and the Body acceptance/All about that Base crowd with the other. No wonder they are confused. Younger parents? Skip the wii fit and take your kids hiking. Show them birds and let them throw rocks (not at the birds). As for the teens and twenty somethings???Do they all evolve? Hell, no. There are lazy, entitled jerk-offs in every town and every cranny of this world and they aren't all young. Stop stereotyping young people. If you don't do it based on race, don't do it based on age. Period.

2.They don't care.  Right. Like you did? The seventies and eighties were jam packed with sex, drugs, and venereal disease. We littered, we dumped, we drank. The nineties we started throwing condoms and money at every problem. So, who didn't care? These kids and young adults are getting involved. They pick up trash, do fundraisers, grow gardens. They cook, for God's sake. Not because they are latch key kids and mom isn't home. They cook because they try to learn about taste, other cultures, healthy living. They recycle, they plant, they re-use. Some of them hunt and fish and when they do, they follow the poaching laws. They rescue animals, they stand up to bullies. You know what else they do? After years of watching their fathers and mothers go off to war, they enlist. Military millennials took Fallujah and Ramadi, they helped get fresh water to Haitians after the natural disaster, they dug out bodies after Katrina. Millennials guard our embassies, protect villagers, make sure food gets to hungry kids. Don't tell me they don't care.

3. They're on their phone too much. Probably. So are plenty of grown jackasses that should no better than to text and drive, but do it anyway. So do adults in every restaurant I go into. If you have a young child and you gave them a phone, it isn't their fault, it's yours.If you let your child text during dinner or sleep with their phone under their pillow, you failed, not them. We live in the nanny state, and we are the nannies. Every kid needs a phone because they are cheap and we fell for one of the best marketing scams in recent history. The family plan. If your child goes to a public school, "there might be a shooting. They need a phone." If your child is present during a school shooting, they need to be hiding, protecting themselves and others until reinforcements get there. They don't need to be texting you at work. If my niece or nephew are forwarding an article from autism speaks or Humans of New York instead of sending notes in class or reading the porn stuck in their mattress, they are doing better than my generation. If they check the news on the internet instead of watching Jon Stuart, good for them.This next generation is going to be helping you download your life when you couldn't get passed how to change your screen saver. Don't piss them off.

4. They are all liberals. Guess what, no they aren't. You may like that stance, you may despise it. What you shouldn't do is discount the fact that they have a brain. If you want to know what they think on certain issues, ask them. If you don't agree, tell them what you think. Don't assume that every decision they make is based on what Hollywood told them to think. If you think this generation has no faith, who in the heck do you think stopped taking them to church? You don't have to hate other religions to teach a specific doctrine to your kids. Most of you know that I am both Christian and conservative. However, my children have toured Shinto shrines, Buddhist temples, attended a Passover Seder meal, attended Iftar feasts during Ramadan, toured Mosques. They've also toured Abbeys and Cathedrals. As for politics? When I was eighteen I voted for who my parents liked. Some of my peers voted for who their parents didn't like. Now we have the Saira Blair's of the world that decided that if our generation wasn't going to fix it, she was going to have to. You also have movements where kids are sending their school lunch selfies to the white house. They speak out, and not everything they say is wrong. You may have the people like Caitlyn Ricci who think suing parents is a moral pursuit, but you also have the twenty something Matt Walsh that is taking on the world with his blogging while bouncing twins on his knees. You have 21 year old Daniel Norris who signed a pro-baseball contract and chose to live in his van on the beach. He didn't want the money to corrupt him. These young adults are thinking for themselves. Despite having a lot of bad lessons crammed down their throats, they are thinking for themselves.


For the Middle Agers:
Every generation has baggage, short-comings, screw ups, scandals, and shitbirds. Cut the millennials and the up and coming young adults a break. People have been complaining about the corruption of our youth since Cain slew Abel. If you keep giving them crap and failing to give them any credit, they will bring you free range granola snacks to your nursing home instead of the Cadbury eggs you asked for. Get to know them, listen, don't just preach. Teach and learn and see the good in them, not just the bad. Give them advice, though. Open dialogue. If you don't, someone else is going to. Our generation is cramming a whole lot of kool-aid, and you need to put your two cents in. Just don't be a jerk about it.


For the Millenials and Young Adults:
Believe.Love.Read books.Check the news. Get involved. Don't join ISIS, just volunteer at hospice or the food bank or the animal rescue. I swear, we aren't as bad as you think. Cook, learn to sew, travel on a shoestring budget,befriend an underdog, an old person, and befriend your parents. They are trying and they might have some interesting stuff to tell you. When I was your age "Nerd Day" at school was an array of insulting garb including broken glasses, pocket protectors, and fake acne. Nerd day at your schools is a Doctor Who t-shirt and a Gryffindor scarf. The same stuff you probably wore last week. That is why you are awesome. More advice? Well, maybe put the phone away and get some sleep. Have kids, lots of them. Kids make life good. Wait, but don't wait too long. Don't be afraid of marriage, kids, or church. They all have their rewards. For the men? Open doors. For every one female that might get offended that you think her weak and unequal, there are droves of women of all ages that think you are the balls. End of rant.

2 comments:

  1. Stacey, I have always admired you for your ability and "brass ones" for telling it like it is. Here, here! Keep on writing. I truly enjoyed reading this:-)

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  2. Thank you! I have trouble with my inner filter, but like to keep it real.

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