“Middle Class Is Over”: 32 People Share Things Young Gen Zers Aren’t Ready To Hear

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Article created by: Indrė Lukošiūtė

Like the millennials before them, Gen Z is now the subject of every well and not-so-well meaning thinkpiece about what they are doing wrong. But the fact is that it’s still smart to listen to one’s elders and learn from their mistakes, experiences and stories.

Someone asked “What’s something Gen Z isn’t ready to hear?” and people shared their thoughts. So get comfortable as you read through, if you are in the right category, perhaps take notes, upvote your favorites and share your thoughts and experiences in the comments section below.

#1

If you’re “triggered” by some harmless, normal, everyday thing, to the point you can’t function, then it’s your job to get therapy. It’s not society’s job to reshape itself so **you** never experience stress.

Image credits: anon

#2

Not every bad thing that happens to you is “trauma.”.

Image credits: FreshwaterOctopus

#3

Other people aren’t responsible for your safety or emotional comfort.

Image credits: Ultraviolet_Spacecat

#4

You don’t know nearly as much as you think you do.

When you look back at yourself 10 years from now, you’ll realize this too.

It happens to everyone.

Image credits: kellzone

#5

It’s actually not ethical, in most cases, to film and post random strangers. Your friends, with their permission? Sure. Someone on the street, clearly experiencing mental illness issues? Not ok. Goofy children you don’t know in a park? Nope. People you’re sitting with in the ER? Violation of privacy.

A good rule of thumb would be that if you’re not willing to approach the person for permission to film or post (because they would be embarrassed, because they would be mad, or because they would deny permission) then you probably shouldn’t be filming them. You aren’t entitled to use other people’s images for fifteen minutes of tiktok fame.

Image credits: severalcouches

#6

I’m a part of Gen Z but I have something to add: the amount of disrespect some of us have is just shameful. I was sitting in class yesterday and the teacher was telling some kids to get off their phones RIGHT IN FRONT OF THEM and they just continued to ignore her and keep staring at their phones. You can last 1 hour of your life without your phone, put it down and do some work.

Image credits: QUINNYBEAN69

#7

Sometimes in life, you gotta do something you really dont want to do. Just buckle up and do it. No one in your life will do it for you.

Image credits: ShaRo_

#8

Dealing with confrontation and discomfort is a necessary life skill. Not everyone who challenges you and makes you “uncomfortable” through mere argument or disagreement is a bully. If you want to succeed in business or life in general you will need to handle difficult situations. Nobody owes you a “safe space” for your feelings.

Image credits: RecursiveSubversive

#9

You don’t have to strive to be famous or to go viral. It’s perfectly ok to be average.

Image credits: AHotColdBrew

#10

I’m in gen Z, and I would say that one of the most important lessons I’ve learned is that it’s okay to *not* be opinionated. It is far more beneficial to yourself and others if you take time to listen and understand multiple viewpoints instead of seeking to form a concrete opinion.
Along those same lines, it is okay if your opinions change. That shows that you are growing and learning about what you value most in life.

Image credits: megstheace

#11

Not everyone is special and sometimes people need to be told they aren’t a good person.

Image credits: Feathers137

#12

“Every generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it.”

-George Orwell.

Image credits: soulcrusher2005

#13

Machine Gun Kelly is a talentless hack and you know it.

Image credits: GIGABRO98

#14

People aren’t black and white. Everyone has good and bad traits, and no one is perfect.

Image credits: Jebruhuh

#15

Get outside. It will do wonders for your anxiety and depression.

Image credits: thestereo300

#16

Teenagers should know that it’s ok to feel depressed and heartbroken. It’s okay to feel like everything is out of control and that you should talk about all these feelings to an adult.

Image credits: Tanushree

#17

We can’t all be content creators some of us are gonna have to be plumbers.

Image credits: cadavardark

#18

Toxic positivity isn’t positive.

Image credits: anon

#19

Well as a gen z, you (we) are contributing as much (or more) to pollution and waste production than previous generations because of our partaking in the constant cycling of clothing trends and constant use and consuption of new products and technology. With really dirt cheap online shopping probably being more accessible, prevalent and normalized in our generation than any one before, we really won’t realize the damage done before it’s too late. They’re definetely gonna blame us for being the straw that broke the camels back when it comes to the environment in 30-50 years and i shudder to think about it.

Image credits: anon

#20

Not everything can be solved with a YouTube video.

Image credits: HobbitFoot

#21

The “cool” clothing you’re wearing now will look silly in five years.

Image credits: jessek

#22

It’s okay to give yourself a break from fighting injustices. I see a lot of gen Z posting about different problems in the world to bring awarenesses to those issues but if you’re engulfed in every problem out there, you aren’t giving yourself a chance to actually be happy. So it’s okay to not know about every issue all the time. Give yourself a break sometimes and just try and have fun.

Image credits: GabeNewellExperience

#23

I know it’s sounds Boomer like, but you’re way more addicted to the internet than you would admit.
I’m also Gen Z btw.

Image credits: tillTV746

#24

It’s not uncool or irresponsible to be hopeful, joyful, gracious, or to happy with yourself. Take a break from the news and the internet, it’s making you too anxious to really *live*. It’s cliché, but I mean it! Turn to your community and make change and relationships where you can see them in real life. Let yourself be inspired and don’t listen to older grumps who want to yuck your yum just because the world keeps turning.

Image credits: Material_Marzipan302

#25

Crypto currency isn’t going to be the future.

Image credits: PleaseStepAside

#26

Staying inside staring at screens for your entire childhood has made many of you socially inept.

you are trying to learn lessons at 18 that you should have been learning at 12.

Image credits: theloosestofcannons

#27

Just like harry potter/disney/anime/lolcomic bacon culture millennials, you, too, will one day be an embarrassment in the eyes of teens and anyone else who isn’t chronically online. quit seeking the most moral and respectable of interests – just be cringe! be a decent person, but enjoy tiktok, or youtube gamers or cringey music or anime, or whatever. nothing matters! enjoy your hobbies and shed guilt from your guilty pleasures

Image credits: puzzlekitty

#28

You’re in an echo chamber online.

Not everyone agrees with you.

Some of us just don’t want to write our opinions on twitter for fear of abuse because you can’t get across nuance and complex topics with a character limit.

Image credits: nazgul987

#29

You have to actually work for what you want.

Image credits: fischgeek

#30

The choices you make today matter. You are not invincible.

Image credits: anon

#31

Go to work.

Image credits: almira_99

#32

That people who have “jobs” are generally happier than those who don’t.

There’s a million ways I’m on the side of a modern Labor movement, but this notion that people would be happier without *any* semi-mandatory need to get out and do something that someone is willing to contribute capital toward has approximately zero correlation with my lived experience.

Image credits: Pristine_Nothing

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