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TweGene10-06-087 |
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Generation
Me Why
Today’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled—and More
Miserable Than Ever Before Jean
M. Twenge Free
Press, 2006, 292 pp. ISBN 978-0-7432-7697-9 |
Twenge is associate professor of psychology at San Diego State University
whose research has been published in several national magazines. She writes about the generation born in the
70s, 80s, and 90s. She was born in
1971. She writes from a secular
perspective on the basis of her voluminous research. Generation Me has created a profound shift in
what it means to be an individual in today’s society. This generation has been actively taught to
put themselves and their own needs first and to focus on feeling good about themselves, thus the name, GenMe. This is in direct opposition to the
family-first, group-oriented ethos of many cultures in the world. (8) Chapter 1. You Don’t Need Their
Approval: The Decline of Social Rules.
“Being different is good.” “It’s a mantra GenMe
has heard over and over. We absorbed
the lesson of tolerance with our baby food—not just for race and religion,
but for sexual orientation, beliefs, feelings, and all kinds of other
intangibles. Just about the only
difference that wasn’t good? Someone
who was prejudiced.” (25) “Basic consideration for others seems to be on
the wane as well.” “This breakdown in
consideration and loyalty, and the increase in cheating, reaches all the way
to the top.” (such as the Enron business
scandal.) “‘Downsizing’ and
‘outsourcing’ are the modern corporate equivalents of rudeness—and a lot more
devastating.” “Cheating on tests
easily translates to cheating on the balance sheet.” “In an increasingly competitive world, the
temptation to cheat will be ever stronger for GenMe.”
(16-8) “But GenMe doesn’t just
question authority—we disrespect it entirely.” (28) “GenMe is not very
religious. Only 18% of 18-29-year-olds
attend religious services every week.”
The belief systems of young people are ‘highly individualized,’
make-your-own-religions. Everybody has
their own idea of God and what God is.
(34) As one young woman said,
“I just didn’t like having anyone telling me what my lifestyle should be.”
(35) Another woman stopped believing
because feeling guilty made her unhappy. “Some managers are surprised at young people’s
willingness to critique the performance of older people—it’s a combination of
the eroding respect for authority and the compulsive honesty of the younger
generation. … Young people see their directness as an asset.” It’s more ‘true to yourself’ to be honest
than to be polite. (39) “The culture of self is our home town.” “We simply take it for granted that we
should all feel good about ourselves, we are all special, and we all deserve
to follow our dreams.” (49) Most of
today’s common sense is focused on the self.
Just be yourself. You have to
love yourself before you can love someone else. Express yourself. Stand up for yourself. (50) In the years after 1980, there was a pervasive,
society-wide effort to increase children’s self-esteem, to help them feel
good about themselves for no particular reason, usually promoting feelings
that are actually a lot closer to narcissism, i.e. excessive self-importance. Feeling good is more important than
performance. This is a “cotton-candy
sense of self with no basis in reality.”
(53-4) This is echoed in a lot of Christian literature
and curriculum for children. A very
common theme goes something like, “You can believe what others say about you,
or you can believe in yourself as does God, who says you are truly
acceptable, lovable, valuable, and capable.” (The author claims to quote Rick
Warren with this statement.) (58) The results are young people who can’t take
criticism, who are easily hurt, who tend toward whiny defensiveness and
little learning, and who become unfriendly, rude, and uncooperative. “They tend to act as though they believe
they have worthy and good inner essences, regardless of … how they behave,
that they deserve recognition and attention from others, and their unique
individual needs should be considered first and foremost.” (65) The author’s recommendation: “Forget about
self-esteem and concentrate more on self-control and self-discipline. … Self
esteem is an outcome, not a cause. … Children develop true self-esteem from
behaving well and accomplishing things.” (66)
Chapter 3. You Can Be Anything
You Want to Be “The logical outcome of every kid having high
self-esteem is every kid thinking that he can achieve anything.” (78) Work should provide a rich and fulfilling
experience as well as make me rich.
(80) Of course, this often
clashes with reality. “Many twentysomethings struggle with the decision to keep
pursuing their dream, or to cut their losses and go home. More and more young people are going to
find themselves at 30 without a viable career, a house, or any semblance of
stability.” (83) Many expect to be famous. “Reality television has spawned a
generation of viewers who feel entitled to be on camera.” (88) “Blogs are built around the idea that
everyone wants to hear your thoughts.” (89) One of the most widely accepted cultural aphorism
is that you must love yourself before you can love others. Of course many in earlier generations loved
their spouses and children even though they never thought about loving
themselves. But pop psychology [and much
Christian material per dlm] teaches us
otherwise. Make sacrifices for
yourself. Make yourself happy
first. Be there for yourself. This is narcissism—narcissists are people
who really love themselves and
aren’t very good at getting along with others. (92) “It’s difficult to adapt to another
person’s needs when you’re used to putting your own needs first and doing
things your way.” (93) The most common reason given for tattoos is
“self-expression,” to communicate my individuality. For many, adulthood begins at 30 [compared
to perhaps 12 or 14 for our great grandparents] and the 20s are a time to
move around, try things, and date people.
(97) “Materialism is the most obvious outcome of a
straightforward, practical focus on the self: you want more things for
yourself. You feel entitled to get the
best in life;… you deserve special things.”
(100) Chapter 4.
The Age of Anxiety (and Depression, and Loneliness): Generation Stressed Expectations are very high just when good jobs
and nice houses are much harder to get.
When we are fiercely independent and self-sufficient, our
disappointments loom large because we have nothing else to focus on. The result can be crippling anxiety and
crushing depression. (109) Social contacts are slight and superficial. There is a famine of warm
relationships. “We’re malnourished
from eating a junk-food diet of instant messages, e-mail, and phone calls,
rather than the healthy food of live, in-person interaction.” (110) Almost
half have divorced parents or have never known their father. “The cycle of meeting someone, falling in
love, and breaking up is a formula for anxiety and depression. This often begins in high school.” (111) “Many spend their twenties in pointless
dating, uncertain relationships, and painful breakups.” (112) “Even people in unhappy marriages are
happier than those who divorce.” (115) You need a college degree to be where high school
graduates were a generation ago.
Essentials such as housing and health care are astronomically
expensive. “High expectations can be
the stuff of inspiration, but more often they set GenMe
up for bitter disappointment.” (130) The vast majority of young people couldn’t care
less about politics. (138) “It makes
more sense psychologically to believe in fate. If you don’t, your self-esteem will plummet
each time you fail.” (148) “The victim
mentality arises full force in schools, where
teachers often bear the brunt of these attitudes.” (153) Students and their
parents hold teachers responsible for their grades. They are often defiant and
argumentative. “Teens who have been
told their whole lives that they are special will desperately try to protect
their self-esteem, and many will choose cynicism as their armor of choice.”
(156) “Perhaps because they don’t think their actions
will have consequences, externals have weakened self-control and an inability
to delay gratification. They’re less
likely to work hard today to get a reward tomorrow…. Externality and low self-control are also
correlated with the impulsive actions that tend to get young people into
trouble, like shoplifting, fighting, or having unprotected sex.” (157) Chapter 6: Sex: Generation Prude Meets Generation Crude “Waiting for marriage is, to put it mildly,
quaint.” “…do what feels good for you, and ignore the rules of society.” (160)
The standard of ‘being true to yourself’ drives the sexual decisions
of young women. Sexual choices depend
on the individual. Sex in high school
is the majority experience. 75% of
young people (80% of young women) approve of sex before marriage. (163)
Young people are comfortable talking about sex in great detail. “The
most striking shift in teenage and twentysomething
sexual behavior in the last decade is the disconnect
between sex and emotional involvement.” (167)
Teens that watch a lot of sexual content on TV are twice as likely to engage
in sex. (171) Chapter 7. The Equality
Revolution: Minorities, Women, and Gays and Lesbians “We are less likely to believe in moral
absolutes, so we are tolerant and accept diversity in all its forms.” (181) Women prepare for careers but find themselves
trapped between needing two incomes to survive and the high cost of day
care. Twenge
advocates a nationally organized and sponsored day care program. Chapter 8. Applying Our
Knowledge: The Future of Business and the Future of the Young There will be a full-scale collision between GenMe expectations and the unfortunate realities of life
that will lead to a lot of anxiety, depression, and complaining. Young
employees will expect job fulfillment and quick promotions. Employers must try to understand GenMe with their high expectations for salary, job
flexibility, and duties. They were
raised on extensive praise and expect it.
They are not motivated by duty.
They will be frank and they appreciate directness, but they do not
take criticism well. They do not
respect authority and will feel free to make suggestions. You have to earn their respect. They will learn best by interaction and
doing, not by listening or reading.
They are flexible and used to dealing with diversity. They may have to be taught to clean up
their attitude and language when talking with older folk. They appreciate independence, flexible
schedules, and casual dress code.
[Let me know how this all works for you! Dlm] Recommendations:
Ditch the self-esteem movement.
We’re creating an army of little narcissists. (223)
Provide better career counseling.
Create more support for working parents [the author’s hot
button]. Recommendations for parents: “Junk the self-esteem emphasis and teach
self-control and good behavior.” “Do
not automatically side with your child.”
“Limit exposure to violence.”
(235-36) |
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