Anonymous wrote:GEN Z is the real GREAEST greatest generation.
No other Generation had to deal with school shootings, COVID or other issues like GEN Z did at such a young age.
WE had to complete school from home for one year. NO OTHER Generation ever were ever told to stay home and complete all the school work at home.
Other other Generation had to deal with so many school shootings
No other Generation had to deal with so much drama.
No other Generation had so many mental health issues.
GEN Z THE REAL "the greatest generation."
Anonymous wrote:GEN Z is the real GREAEST greatest generation.
No other Generation had to deal with school shootings, COVID or other issues like GEN Z did at such a young age.
WE had to complete school from home for one year. NO OTHER Generation ever were ever told to stay home and complete all the school work at home.
Other other Generation had to deal with so many school shootings
No other Generation had to deal with so much drama.
No other Generation had so many mental health issues.
GEN Z THE REAL "the greatest generation."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No other Generation had to deal with so much drama.
No other Generation had so many mental health issues.
I mean, it's normal for young people to be very self-involved and also ignorant of history.
But imagine thinking that you have more mental health issues than the generation that lived through both the Great Depression and World War II, or the one raised by alcoholic veterans of WWI and the Great Depression, or the one raised by people raised by people who lived through the Great Depression and WWII, all of whom mostly had to do this without any mental healthcare available AT ALL, or even basic understanding of stuff like depression, alcoholism, childhood trauma, etc.
Gen Z is highly aware of mental health issues, which is good. But the idea that they HAVE more of them doesn't track. My parents used to hit us, with a belt, and if anyone suggested this was abusive or bad, the majority of society would say no, it was just good parenting. And you think you have MORE mental health issues than me? Child, please.
It's not the fact that we have more mental health issues, its that we are addressing them more. Previous generations didn't talk about them or acknowledge them as much as we do. We are bringing light to something that isn't so light. We understand that your generations went under a lot more trauma, we aren't disregarding that. But as I said it's not about having more mental problems it's that we talk about them more and we are open to talking about it more. We are grateful that we are able to have the tools to help us get better but now you do so go get better. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t even be bothered to proofread.
Have you moved out of your parents’ home yet?
Yes, I am 25 year old and I did moved out, to a one bedroom apartment although a lot of my friends haven't and some will never move out.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a generation X and will be very happy if Generation Z is the greatest. You will be my doctors/care givers in my old age.
Anonymous wrote:Gen X’er here. As someone who grew with with Greatest Generation grandparents I find it hard to beleive that any generation since has had it harder. My grandparents all had to quit school around the 5th grade (yes, thats 10 years old) and get jobs working in fields or factories - whatever they could get to help feed their families. My grandad’s parents died when he was 9 so the nextdoor neighbor tried to take care of him before the depression hit. She couldn’t afford to feed him and her family during the depression and he started illegally hopping trains (at 10 years old) to go to other towns to find work and send money home. He got the hell beat out of him regularly by the bulls (cops) on the train. Then the war hit and he got drafted and was in 5 major campaigns in WW2 starting with D-Day. At the D-Day invasion he was the only guy who made it to shore from his boat. Everyone else drowned or was shot. He was blown through a window in Belgium and cut up by broken glass. He was badly winburned and frost bitten during the Battle of the Bulge and ultimately was part of the occupying force in Germany.
He came home and self medicated for two years and then wuit drinking, got married and became a wonderful family man. I never once heard him complain about his “trauma”.
Anonymous wrote:Also gen z had to overcome terrible transphobia from generation X, the most racist generation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen X’er here. As someone who grew with with Greatest Generation grandparents I find it hard to beleive that any generation since has had it harder. My grandparents all had to quit school around the 5th grade (yes, thats 10 years old) and get jobs working in fields or factories - whatever they could get to help feed their families. My grandad’s parents died when he was 9 so the nextdoor neighbor tried to take care of him before the depression hit. She couldn’t afford to feed him and her family during the depression and he started illegally hopping trains (at 10 years old) to go to other towns to find work and send money home. He got the hell beat out of him regularly by the bulls (cops) on the train. Then the war hit and he got drafted and was in 5 major campaigns in WW2 starting with D-Day. At the D-Day invasion he was the only guy who made it to shore from his boat. Everyone else drowned or was shot. He was blown through a window in Belgium and cut up by broken glass. He was badly winburned and frost bitten during the Battle of the Bulge and ultimately was part of the occupying force in Germany.
He came home and self medicated for two years and then wuit drinking, got married and became a wonderful family man. I never once heard him complain about his “trauma”.
If you only understand that words leave lasting scars that nothing can heal. /s
I've heard, in real life and not just on social media, younger people claim that words=violence, and can be banned by law.
Anonymous wrote:No other Generation had to deal with so much drama.
No other Generation had so many mental health issues.
I mean, it's normal for young people to be very self-involved and also ignorant of history.
But imagine thinking that you have more mental health issues than the generation that lived through both the Great Depression and World War II, or the one raised by alcoholic veterans of WWI and the Great Depression, or the one raised by people raised by people who lived through the Great Depression and WWII, all of whom mostly had to do this without any mental healthcare available AT ALL, or even basic understanding of stuff like depression, alcoholism, childhood trauma, etc.
Gen Z is highly aware of mental health issues, which is good. But the idea that they HAVE more of them doesn't track. My parents used to hit us, with a belt, and if anyone suggested this was abusive or bad, the majority of society would say no, it was just good parenting. And you think you have MORE mental health issues than me? Child, please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen X’er here. As someone who grew with with Greatest Generation grandparents I find it hard to beleive that any generation since has had it harder. My grandparents all had to quit school around the 5th grade (yes, thats 10 years old) and get jobs working in fields or factories - whatever they could get to help feed their families. My grandad’s parents died when he was 9 so the nextdoor neighbor tried to take care of him before the depression hit. She couldn’t afford to feed him and her family during the depression and he started illegally hopping trains (at 10 years old) to go to other towns to find work and send money home. He got the hell beat out of him regularly by the bulls (cops) on the train. Then the war hit and he got drafted and was in 5 major campaigns in WW2 starting with D-Day. At the D-Day invasion he was the only guy who made it to shore from his boat. Everyone else drowned or was shot. He was blown through a window in Belgium and cut up by broken glass. He was badly winburned and frost bitten during the Battle of the Bulge and ultimately was part of the occupying force in Germany.
He came home and self medicated for two years and then wuit drinking, got married and became a wonderful family man. I never once heard him complain about his “trauma”.
If you only understand that words leave lasting scars that nothing can heal. /s