Posted on 03/19/2019 7:25:32 AM PDT by NOBO2012
Helicopter parenting, the practice of hovering anxiously near ones children, monitoring their every activity, is so 20th century. Some affluent mothers and fathers now are more like snowplows: machines chugging ahead, clearing any obstacles in their childs path to success, so they dont have to encounter failure, frustration or lost opportunities. NYT
Snowplowing, more appropriately known as bulldozing, is a large reason why millennials, and now the GenZ cohort, are having trouble in life and at work.
A third of millennials fail to even make it through their three-month probation periods. It appears when left to their own devices as young adults a great many of them fail to make the cut.
Of the reasons for failing, 62 per cent is poor performance, 50 per cent is absence, 25 per cent is lateness and 30 per cent is gross misconduct.
Sadder still educators say GenZ college students are uniquely bad at dating. Dating, for crying out loud! Sure its always been stressful, but a stress that teaches you how to cope with rejection and failure: two things no parent today wants their kid to experience.
Welcome to Gen Z dating. Educators say the current generation in college is uniquely bad at romance. Online dating has created a (false) feeling of an endless buffet of romantic choices. And mobile technologywhich this generation has never lived withouthas been a security blanket of sorts that has kept them from developing solid in-person communication skills.
Experts say that members of Gen Z, born starting in about 1997, also show a striking lack of resiliency. Micromanaged by parents, teachers and coaches since they started school, theyre more sheltered and less independent than previous generations.
So its not just parents anymore. Theres an entire fleet of bulldozers out there, prepping the ground for youngsters before theyre allowed to take their first step into the real world; a team of enablers willing to scorch the earth if necessary to pave the way.
No matter how well-intentioned, removing all obstacles in order to provide short term protection results in psychologically fragile children who dont know how to survive as theyve never been required to develop coping mechanisms, never been left to their own devices to work through a problem. Children whose entire lives are surrounded by bulldozers will never learn how to successfully navigate a bump in the road, regardless of its size. They wont know how to decide whether to plow through it or maneuver around it. Is this not obvious? It doesnt end well, you either end up with a young adult who cannot cope at all or a complete ignoramus who thinks they know it all, and believes that anything that goes wrong is somebody elses fault.
Here I am in my very important House hearing wearing my Im 29 years old and know way more than you old farts ever will face.
Posted from: MOTUS A.D.
“A third of millennials fail to even make it through their three-month probation periods. It appears when left to their own devices as young adults a great many of them fail to make the cut.”
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I’ll cut the mill-losers just a little slack there; to quote Red Forman (”That 70s Show” father) - “Everybody quits their first job, it’s no big deal.”
:: Of the reasons for failing, 62 per cent is poor performance, 50 per cent is absence, 25 per cent is lateness and 30 per cent is gross misconduct. ::
Millenials and GenZ have also been hampered by Common Core math...
just saying.
But they get a “Good Job Buddy” participation trophy for just showing up don’t they?
Helicopter parenting, the practice of hovering anxiously near ones children, monitoring their every activity, is so 20th century...
It’s also a lie. We were out from morning till night in the summer by 12 as long as we were on the block.
The times would lie about the time of day with a dozen clocks standing behind it.
When I was a kid my father the three war Marine, said to all three of his sons the only thing I want to leave you is the ability to take care of yourself.
That is the same philosophy we had raising our daughter and I believe we were quite successful.
The interesting thing is, the more independent you can raise your children to be the more they will be close to you as adults.
We home-schooled our daughter and she left home at 16 to go to college out of state on scholarship. At 17 she somehow finagled grants and went to Korea for a year as a foreign exchange student and celebrated her 18th birthday in Hong Kong. We weren’t the bulldozers, I think she’s the one who turned out to be the bulldozer LOL
I am not so sure the snowflake millennial issue stems entirely from alleged helicopter parenting. I think social media reinforces juvenile thinking in this cohort and they failed to mature. Schools indoctrinating instead of educating contributes to the immature feedback loops these flakes are trapped in.
I also think this is why Jordan Peterson has become so popular with this group. They know something is wrong and are looking for answers.
And blaming others for everything is a common human failing since Eden.
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