the perpetual infantilisation of millennial women

Ғылым және технология

this girlboss is eating girl dinner because she's tired of adulting - let's talk about infantilisation, millennials, and queer time theory...
No sponsor for this video so please support my work on patreon if you so wish: / rowanellis
Leave a tip here: ko-fi.com/rowanellis
Buy Here & Queer: smarturl.it/HereAndQueer
TikTok: / heyrowanellis
Instagram: / heyrowanellis
Newsletter: rowanellis.substack.com/
Twitter: / heyrowanellis
Additional research and scriptwriting by Nicky Watkinson (nickyjwatkinson.co.uk)
__HIRE ME__
www.rowanellis.com/events
I deliver engaging and inspiring workshops and talks at events, businesses, and universities across the world (see below for more details).
If you would like to speak about the possibility of me running a workshop or speaking at an event please get in touch via email: rowanellisyoutube@outlook.com.
__WORKSHOPS__
I facilitate tailor made workshops, designed to give participants a variety of discussion opportunities, interactive elements, and a final longer task individually or as part of a group.
The goal of my workshops is that participants come out of the them with actionable points to be put into practice afterwards, rather than feeling as if they had simply talked through the same old topics on that subject.
__TALKS & PANELS__
Talks, presentations, panels and Q&As allow for an in depth look at a topic or issue. I can deliver solo talks on a specific topic and/or moderate or sit on group panels. I have previously spoken on topics including:
- Building Inclusive Communities
- Using KZread for social good and charitable efforts
- LGBTQ+ Representation on TV/Film
- LGBTQ+ History
- Pop culture and Feminism
- Writing Strong Female Characters
- Women on KZread
- How to use KZread/social media as a tool in your career.
- & many more.

Пікірлер: 4 000

  • @spigney4623
    @spigney462311 ай бұрын

    A growing number of my friends have noticed that we have grown more *emotionally* mature than our parents. After years of therapy, speaking to my mom can feel like communicating with a child. She's reactive, denies her own emotions, suffers in silence, and then grows resentful when i cant read her mind. I'm not financially independent, but i was pushed to reach a level of emotional independence that my parents never developed from their parents.

  • @anabibi8178

    @anabibi8178

    11 ай бұрын

    Omg exactly my experience 😭😭😭😭

  • @nighthawk7050

    @nighthawk7050

    11 ай бұрын

    Your parents probably have mental or personality issues. That’s not true for every millennial’s parents

  • @someonerandom256

    @someonerandom256

    11 ай бұрын

    As a 40 year old Millenial, I am painfully cognizant of the fact that I have far surpassed my silent generation/Boomer cusp of a mother in emotional maturity. There are aspects of my life that cannot be discussed with her, because she lacks the emotional depth to internalize them.

  • @hereiam1041

    @hereiam1041

    11 ай бұрын

    Same here.

  • @zot2698

    @zot2698

    11 ай бұрын

    just make sure you dont ran out of money and have to live with your parents.....that would be ironic....

  • @gnarlybrad8309
    @gnarlybrad830911 ай бұрын

    I think it's important context that the woman who originally created the Girl Dinner sound/meme is 18 years old, and therefore firmly gen z. That the sound resonated with so many millennial women as well is interesting on its own.

  • @HikaruCrystal8

    @HikaruCrystal8

    11 ай бұрын

    I just wanted to say I love that your pfp is a pile of cookies

  • @HikaruCrystal8

    @HikaruCrystal8

    11 ай бұрын

    🍪

  • @abagofsprite

    @abagofsprite

    11 ай бұрын

    god bless karmapilled!

  • @heatherlee2047

    @heatherlee2047

    11 ай бұрын

    @gnarlybrad8309 do you remember the name / social profile of the person who made it?

  • @twiggledowntown3564

    @twiggledowntown3564

    11 ай бұрын

    Cookie Queen!

  • @kayaknight-zq2ff
    @kayaknight-zq2ff10 ай бұрын

    i personally think that a lot of women feel happy when they call themselves girls and „act childish“ because girls are forced to grow up insanely fast and are expected to act maturely at a very young age. i think we only realize this when we get older and try to get this part of our childhood that was taken from us back.

  • @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    9 ай бұрын

    My sentiments exactly!

  • @missb.197

    @missb.197

    9 ай бұрын

    you hit the nail on the head

  • @aprilmichel7816

    @aprilmichel7816

    9 ай бұрын

    I think you're right, but personally I feel and see the opposite - women (like me) disliking the term 'girl', whether applied by ourselves or pushed upon us by others, because it is often used as an insult - as in "you are not a woman, you are just a girl with all the traits a girl has". Another issue I personally have with this usage of the world 'girl' is that it is often applied to things that should absolutely be a part of an adult woman's life. It feels like further division, gives off (definitely unintetional) hints of gatekeeping almost. Another way of possible policing of one's behaviour, and I feel like it could give assholes another way of disregarding us: "this is what _girls_ do, not women, so are you a girl or a woman? can't be both!" I see these two main thoughts/opinions on the 'girl' trend, if one can call it that, and it makes me wonder if there is some sort of common denominator between the people that share the same agreement. My gut feeling is that people who would agree more with you were probably more likely parentified, and people who would agree with me were likely infantilised, but I have no evidence of that. It certainly is interesting.

  • @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    9 ай бұрын

    @@aprilmichel7816 There was carried out a scientifical experiment to check, which words make people glad. Certain words have been said or read from the paper, and brain activity measured simultaneously. Funnily enough, the brains of most participants reacted positively, when the people heard/read a word "girl". Not "boy", not "woman", not "man". Girl. Just saying :))

  • @mudza92

    @mudza92

    9 ай бұрын

    I think the exact opposite. I think we baby our children well into adulthood and we see them as kids even as 20 something adults. We behave like they are still young teens when they should already be responsible adults. We let them rely on us too much for far too long and they grow up incapable of properly living in this crazy world and taking care of themselves let alone somebody else.

  • @SchizoSchematic
    @SchizoSchematic10 ай бұрын

    As an autistic person, the notion that adulthood and agency can be "taken away from you" really hits home. I live in constant fear that I will say or do something *just* badly enough that other "adults" decide that I no longer deserve the privilege.

  • @theoldaccountthatiusedtous6767

    @theoldaccountthatiusedtous6767

    10 ай бұрын

    This... resonates so much!

  • @Attmay

    @Attmay

    10 ай бұрын

    My boyfriend’s mother has been doing that to him ever since an accident he was in two decades ago.

  • @DerRabenbarde

    @DerRabenbarde

    10 ай бұрын

    I met my cousin after 13 years and we really clicked and had great conversations. She's been to Japan a lot and I know so much more about it than anyone she's met here in Europe, but when she asked if I was so interested because of animation I froze and my mind went blank because throughout my life people saw it as something childish and socially unacceptable to be consumed as an adult. I would have denied being into games too if I wasn't developing them but she was really supportive. A lot of older people 50+ really look at me like the biggest loser when I tell them what I studied my ass off for.

  • @lemurlover7975

    @lemurlover7975

    10 ай бұрын

    @@DerRabenbarde You are an artist and that is something to be proud of. Don't let them get you down.

  • @lemurlover7975

    @lemurlover7975

    10 ай бұрын

    I very nearly did get my adulthood taken away when I was surviving human trafficking as an adult with seizures but not running away and escaping and trying to commit suicide instead. It's hard to run away when you have seizures all day and are paralyzed from your seizures some of the time. Rather than rescue me and support me with mental health providers who would provide me a safe place to live, where I would eventually recover and leave and be an adult out in the world living my life as I am now, the police threatened to lock me up in a mental health facility forever and make one of the police officers or one of the human traffickers in my family my power of attorney who would make all my decisions for me. Obviously, they would have kept on raping me until I was murdered. Fortunately, that did not happen, and I did manage to escape, and then when I was homeless, people also told me that I was not an adult and abused me, which made no sense because by then I was in my 30s. Now I'm in grad school and I think people see me as an adult...though I am not sure? Most younger students think I am more adult than they are or at least as adult as they are. For the trans ones at least. I seem to be able to better make friends with trans men (biological women) than others. Everyone else finds me weird and doesn't want to be friends with an asexual like me. I have one bisexual friend. I just do not have too many friends. I try, but it's hard.

  • @dasflunkie8400
    @dasflunkie840011 ай бұрын

    I‘m over fifty, still write fanfic, still cosplay, and will very likely do so until the day I drop dead. It‘s not my „inner girl“ doing this, it’s just me. One day I decided that doing what is best for me, as long as it does not negatively impact others, is the way to go. Making that decision was the most adult thing I have ever done in my life.

  • @cricketiiella

    @cricketiiella

    11 ай бұрын

    you’re very cool

  • @asthejayflies

    @asthejayflies

    11 ай бұрын

    Hell yeah! What fandoms do you write for? :0

  • @dasflunkie8400

    @dasflunkie8400

    11 ай бұрын

    @@cricketiiella Thank you!

  • @dasflunkie8400

    @dasflunkie8400

    11 ай бұрын

    @@asthejayflies l‘m part of the Tolkien fandom. :-)

  • @TimeBunny

    @TimeBunny

    11 ай бұрын

    42 and same. I’m embracing cosplay and writing fanfiction. All the time escaping to a fantasy world helps with my mental health, I’ll keep doing it. Also like a bit of causal gaming.

  • @NormalEyeJoe
    @NormalEyeJoe11 ай бұрын

    Sometimes it's nice to be told you're not a failure, enjoy ya girl dinner

  • @SpinDoc420

    @SpinDoc420

    11 ай бұрын

    😂 we guys have dealt with the same judgement for "eating like a frat boy ( pizza rolls, tacos, etc) in the food we eat,it's judgemental BS.

  • @SpinDoc420

    @SpinDoc420

    11 ай бұрын

    And that is all I will say about us guys, as this is focused on y'all and your choices.. Reclaiming your own power through what you chose to eat should have never been ostracized ❤

  • @AUniqueHandleName444

    @AUniqueHandleName444

    11 ай бұрын

    @@SpinDoc420 what a little simp 😂

  • @gregvs.theworld451

    @gregvs.theworld451

    11 ай бұрын

    @@SpinDoc420 And that's wrong too king. Enjoy your pizza rolls and tacos. Screw anyone telling you your wrong for eating things that make you happy.

  • @josheydubs

    @josheydubs

    11 ай бұрын

    I did until brands started hopping on

  • @violetblythe6912
    @violetblythe691210 ай бұрын

    “When I became [an adult] I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up.” ~C.S. Lewis

  • @anneblackwood9013

    @anneblackwood9013

    7 ай бұрын

    I was hoping to see this quote here hehe

  • @acedianihil8208

    @acedianihil8208

    6 ай бұрын

    right. and never forget he walked with confidence because of the drinks he had in his hand. and that is also what destroyed his kidneys. its fun to pretend that you can be strong but dont think quotes will teach you how.

  • @MsSarahJosephine

    @MsSarahJosephine

    6 ай бұрын

    @acedianihil8208 "Do as I say, not as I do," - C S Lewis probably at some point i'unno 🤷

  • @nadjaannabel1

    @nadjaannabel1

    5 ай бұрын

    Childhood is not from birth to a certain age. And at a certain age, the child is grown and puts away childish things. Childhood is the kingdom where nobody dies. - Plagiarism, Bella Swan, Twilight

  • @chickadeestevenson5440

    @chickadeestevenson5440

    4 ай бұрын

    @@nadjaannabel1 “There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes.” - The Doctor

  • @kp-da
    @kp-da10 ай бұрын

    A lot of us have childhood trauma and didn't get to BE a ✨girl✨ in our girlhood. We are reclaiming it. And I'm here for it.

  • @tara9559

    @tara9559

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes! I needed to read this comment. I feel seen.

  • @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    9 ай бұрын

    Totally agree!

  • @s.durbar1294

    @s.durbar1294

    9 ай бұрын

    there's a chunk of the market that is really glad a lot of you are willing to pay for their products to "help" you reclaim it

  • @kp-da

    @kp-da

    9 ай бұрын

    @@s.durbar1294 good thing that's not what I'm talking about. GTFO here 😂

  • @mariya_tortilla

    @mariya_tortilla

    9 ай бұрын

    Omg?? I'm experiencing this rn

  • @n.j.5044
    @n.j.504411 ай бұрын

    "Maybe embracing my inner girl is the most mature thing I can do" has been my new life mantra for about a year now. I get called 'childish' for expressing my true feelings. Well, if that's childish than I fully embrace that because I'd rather be childish than continue to be unhappy

  • @tayter_chip

    @tayter_chip

    11 ай бұрын

    I love this! I had to grow up way too quickly as a child and I also was conditioned to view “girly” as bad. Now, as an adult, I’ve been leaning more into “girly” things and it’s been so healing for me

  • @n.j.5044

    @n.j.5044

    11 ай бұрын

    @@tayter_chip I actually thought I'd get more into stereotypically girlie things along my healing journey cause I used to love them as a young child, but I've become increasingly more "womanly" in my interests. Things like pole dancing and hyperfixating on sw. Idk, I just find that interesting I guess it comes down to just embracing what you like, no matter how it's stereotyped

  • @tayter_chip

    @tayter_chip

    11 ай бұрын

    @@n.j.5044 I love that for you!! There's so much joy and power in embracing what you truly enjoy

  • @harrietamidala1691

    @harrietamidala1691

    11 ай бұрын

    To quote from Doctor Who, there’s no point in being grown up if you can’t be childish sometimes.

  • @PosthumanHeresy

    @PosthumanHeresy

    11 ай бұрын

    Seriously. And like... "grown up" in the 21st century generally means "predatory hypercapitalist who doesn't care about social issues". Being "mature" in the 21st century in general is defined by apathy and casual cruelty.

  • @xXNekou
    @xXNekou10 ай бұрын

    As a millenial girl/woman: I'm not really afraid of "failing at adulting", but more I'm afraid of becoming a bland, proper and boring adult that has no passions, no openness and doesn't really experience joy. I wish to not be an "adult" in the sense that I wish not to lose that childlish curiosity, silliness and joy.

  • @kellylyons1038

    @kellylyons1038

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Reminds me of the Spongebob episode where he tries to be an adult but feels unfulfilled and misses his grandmother's kisses and cookies.

  • @mnieves-rios7808

    @mnieves-rios7808

    10 ай бұрын

    @xXNekou 60yo mother of 2 amazing adult daughters here. I have shared with them about "adulting" and have agreed it's so overrated. I am able to hangout and have a great time with them because even though I'm not as agile as a 25-35yo, I feel as that age. In reality I believe most "adults"are walking youngsters just faking at being the adult in the room. A boring, bland adult might have been a boring, bland child (?), for whatever reason. Just do you, only embracing the responsibilities coming your way, which should be very empowering. I wish you the best.

  • @dianavasileva3979

    @dianavasileva3979

    10 ай бұрын

    Well said!

  • @EFergDindrane

    @EFergDindrane

    10 ай бұрын

    Hallelujah.

  • @tswrangle1000

    @tswrangle1000

    10 ай бұрын

    :3

  • @haleyhutchinson6748
    @haleyhutchinson674810 ай бұрын

    Another part of it feels like a lot of women’s stereotypical interests are considered childish and immature. I’ve noticed alot of reels since the Barbie movie of women embracing their “girly” interests and being confident. It’s great to see and it makes my heart full.

  • @rixatrix
    @rixatrix10 ай бұрын

    I’m 40 this year, a geriatric millennial. My grandma (born in the 30s, married in 1950) told me that for her generation, getting married and having kids was HOW they grew up. In our generation, we need to feel grown up to even consider those things. But what’s interesting is that, although she married at 19, she was divorced by her mid-40s. She went back to college, got her teaching degree, met the love of her life. The “adult” life she had built while she was still very young-turns out it didn’t fit her at all. So even among the people for whom those markers were a way of growing up, they were still seeing them through a child’s eyes, as these goals to reach that would confer adulthood upon them, rather than individual choices they could decide not to make. As I near 40, I kind of feel like I have to think of myself as a woman. Every day, society reminds me I’m no longer a girl. People are less friendly in general, but I also get left alone by randos way more. 40 isn’t old by any stretch. But it is the age where most of my friends have a renewed commitment to doing the things that made us happy as kids-art, sports, games. A lot of the things that make a girl into an “adult” are just adopting the responsibilities society pushes on her. Housework, cooking, childcare, managing appointments, whatever. Even as a feminist, it’s hard not to slide into that role a little more every year because it’s been so normalized. But that’s not adulthood-that’s just sexism. And maybe by reclaiming girlhood, we’re reclaiming a more authentic part of ourselves, the one that just loved what she loved without shame or fear of being judged.

  • @iridescentraindrops

    @iridescentraindrops

    9 ай бұрын

    You're so right about everything. What annoys me is that so many responsibilities are pushed on us, even from a young age, while men are free to act immature way into their old age and nobody bats an eye or judges them, it's even expected from them to be unreliable in many areas. In some less developed countries it's even normalized for them to be a drunk or a cheater and they still get more respect from people for doing the bare minimum, while somehow everything a woman does is more times than not, taken for granted.

  • @zoinksscoobdoob

    @zoinksscoobdoob

    4 ай бұрын

    "by reclaiming girlhood, we're reclaiming a more authentic part of ourselves" is so beautiful and true, I think

  • @anymeaddict
    @anymeaddict11 ай бұрын

    The entire 'adulting' thing gets to me. My sister at Mothers day dinner tried to argue with me that she was more of an adult then me, and my mom and grandmother seemed to agree with her. For Context, She is 20yo. She dropped out of College to marry a guy whom her ENTIRE relationship with was less then 4 months, like from first date to wedding. I am 26f and have been in a 5+ year committed relationship. I have 2 degrees and have a full time job in my career field, AND was able to buy a house, after saving for years. My mom also knows my partner and I are planning to get custody of a the younger sibling of a family friend. My family has never considered me an adult. But now my sister is one because she's married.

  • @poppyblue1512

    @poppyblue1512

    11 ай бұрын

    Please tell me you told her that, because dropping out of college at 20 year old to marry a guy she's been dating for 4 months is not being an adult, is being an idiot.

  • @sofiabravo1994

    @sofiabravo1994

    11 ай бұрын

    @@poppyblue1512That’s her choice why are you being so judgmental? If she’s happy then more power to her. I don’t think we should put other people down to bring others up. Both are women regardless of what paths they choose to take.

  • @nicolelopez4133

    @nicolelopez4133

    11 ай бұрын

    @@sofiabravo1994I don’t think bringing up a lack of actually knowing your partner before you go into a huge financial decision of marriage is putting someone down. some actions are just unwise

  • @sleepavoider614

    @sleepavoider614

    11 ай бұрын

    I’d rather people be truthful and bash idiotic behavior than mindlessly side with it for the sake of being ‘nice.’ People being ‘nice’ and lying will get you nothing but reinforcement of poor judgement and misery

  • @HauntedCadaver

    @HauntedCadaver

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@sofiabravo1994if that was my daughter doing that shit I'm calling her out for stupid actions. Women should be doing the same for each other.

  • @user-sj6sf5hl2f
    @user-sj6sf5hl2f11 ай бұрын

    The trend of girlification feels more indicative of a widespread loss of girlhood because of how much we're expected to be mature as girls. Coupled with the shame we felt for just existing as a girl and not being enough of our own person (i'm not like other girls!), girl dinner feels like stepping back into the proper childhood many of us never experienced while still recognizing womanhood as both subjective and inherently "girly" at its core. Instead of diving straight into adulthood, girl dinner seems like working through the loss of girlhood with the perspective of the much more empathetic and mature woman we are as adults.

  • @hgdoesthings3457

    @hgdoesthings3457

    11 ай бұрын

    I also want to point out a correlation between being raised by mothers who were careerwomen constantly toting the importance of maturity and shying away from emotions to gain respect. In the hope of making 'strong women' the ability to be a vulnerable 'girl' is taken.

  • @user-sj6sf5hl2f

    @user-sj6sf5hl2f

    11 ай бұрын

    @@hgdoesthings3457 yes exactly! Thanks for your reply (:

  • @Nassifeh

    @Nassifeh

    11 ай бұрын

    @@hgdoesthings3457 Or, flip side, mothers with careers who didn't think about making their daughters into "strong women", just thought "here is another set of hands in my household that can take some of this labor". I don't think my mom was trying to get respect particularly hard, but she needed to pay bills, and I was available to do stuff like dinner or dishes or helping my younger sibling get homework done, and now I hate anything that reminds me of then.

  • @michaelgray4833

    @michaelgray4833

    11 ай бұрын

    ‘Girly’ means ironically unjustifying pain?

  • @grandempressvicky6387

    @grandempressvicky6387

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@Nassifehomg stop calling me out. But for real, girls tend to become the second parent no matter which child they are. I was the the 2nd child with an older brother, 10 years older than me. Despite this, my mother expected me to look after my baby brother and do the chores. The only reason she stopped was because I eventually got old enough to say no or would run away. She fears social services getting involved so.😢

  • @kbucket
    @kbucket9 ай бұрын

    As a millennial, we were raised being told we could have what our parents had, and then it was all taken away. The media we grew up with had these expectations of what being 25 was supposed to be like but once we were pushed out into the real world, we realized that everything had changed, and it felt like we were sent downstream without a paddle. At least younger gens have some forsight through us now as to what they can expect.

  • @harleyloraine7699

    @harleyloraine7699

    9 ай бұрын

    Not much foresight. I was taught the same thing growing up. I didn't realize how fucked it all was until I was 18 and moved out already. And that was only 2 years ago

  • @killjoyprose6802

    @killjoyprose6802

    7 ай бұрын

    Maybe if you didn't spend a third of your income on eating out you'd be able to save for a house

  • @joyrankin4635

    @joyrankin4635

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@killjoyprose6802name checks out

  • @doid4354

    @doid4354

    6 ай бұрын

    @@killjoyprose6802Yeah because being able to afford a cup of coffee is equivalent to being able to afford a downpayment on a house. Absolute moron

  • @jazzwilliams7040

    @jazzwilliams7040

    6 ай бұрын

    @@killjoyprose6802A house currently costs a larger percent of average income than it did than even during the Great Depression. There has quite literally never been a more difficult time to afford a house. You then couple that with prices, especially for school and medical care (in the USA), exponentially increasing while wages have been stagnant for decades. You’re insane to think it’s “eating out” that is the problem. People are working a job and a “side hustle” just to barely afford a 1 room apartment and basic cost of living.

  • @jonahsbonah6244
    @jonahsbonah624410 ай бұрын

    as a 21 year old guy (it feels weird calling myself a man but also im not a boy anymore) the stuff about housing really hit home. my father would always tell me that when i was 30 i would he living in his basement, and that my career would never take off. i currently live with my mom until i can get approved for this apartment, but even being barely in my 20s living with her makes me feel like the neckbeard world of warcraft nerds that used to be a commonplace depiction of a "failed" adult in 2000s and early 2010s media

  • @80s_graffiti

    @80s_graffiti

    9 ай бұрын

    these anxious statements are kinda funny to me bcus they instantly identify op as white, since they're the only people that actually care about housing independence. In poc families, or at least the Mexican ones I grew up with, it's typical to have children, parents, and grandparents all under the same roof everyday. This gives free housing + supervision to the older parties, provides the parents with some additional help with the kids, and generally maintains a sense of stability and community. Americans shunning this communal approach is why the majority are broke and sad, imo. You're doing great though my guy. As long as you prioritize what actually matters and keep in mind that falling back on your own family isn't shameful, you'll be ok.

  • @samkadel8185

    @samkadel8185

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@80s_graffitithis sentiment more heavily depends on ethnicity/economic status rather than race. Italy, for example, has a lot of intergenerational homes. A lot of recent immigrant families are particularly obsessed with class markers, too.

  • @Crouteceleste

    @Crouteceleste

    9 ай бұрын

    @@80s_graffiti I'm not the least bit American but living with your family implies you'll be forever trying to live up to their standards, but the times have changed and not the standards. the "supervision" you're talking about feels like hell. Especially if the family housing is small and not their own either but rented, and if you're craving solitude and calm and have a life rythm radically different from them.

  • @shanazaw9207

    @shanazaw9207

    9 ай бұрын

    I wouldn’t worry too much, plenty of 18-26 year olds still live with their parents because it’s just so expensive to move out. Just use the time to save up

  • @FowCowMow

    @FowCowMow

    7 ай бұрын

    Multigenerational houses are also hotbeds of resentment and conflict. There are good things and bad things about living with or not with your family, and one of the most serious downsides is the pressure that gets put on you as a "kid" even if you're a grown-ass adult

  • @hgdoesthings3457
    @hgdoesthings345711 ай бұрын

    I want to discuss the infantilization of education for women. All of the classic 'adult stereotypes' that a woman must achieve to be considered an adult directly clash with advancing education. I will never forget when I had just graduated with my bachelor's a family friend told me I wasn't a 'real adult' because I didn't have children. She hadn't gone to college but she still considered someone who had completed a degree a child. the farther a woman advances in education the more set back other parts of her life can be. You can get married or have children or buy a house while getting a master's or PhD but it is considerably harder. Yet, if you focus on getting that PhD and finish as a single childfree person with no property ownership you are still considered a child in the way a college student is considered a child. I'm currently 25 and writing my master's dissertation, but my older family members and their friends look at me like I'm still a child. I can't discuss children, marriage, or property ownership and the pitfalls and joys that come with that, so they have infantilized me. It feels like society is trying to punish women for getting advanced educations by treating them as children who weren't ready for the 'real world' so they stayed in school.

  • @UmbraKrameri

    @UmbraKrameri

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm getting my PhD in biology, making me the first person in the family with one, and although they are somewhat proud of that, I find what you said extremely relatable. All they want to talk about are these life milestones and why am I failing to achieve them at 30.

  • @ashh1371

    @ashh1371

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes!! Part of the reason I put off getting my masters degree. I felt way behind in being an adult because those around me especially family told me things like “you’re making a career out of going to college” and “you’re an old maid, women rarely get married after 30”.

  • @lillianmoon4573

    @lillianmoon4573

    11 ай бұрын

    I got a lot of the same until I turned 30 and got a career in my field. I had to tick both boxes, (be over 30 and gainfully employed in my profession) before I was treated like an adult. It was frustrating to see others get that respect sooner because they had children, but I also personally feel a lot more mature/stable than those women who had kids early. I'm really glad stayed on my own path.

  • @CaptainSoftboy501

    @CaptainSoftboy501

    11 ай бұрын

    I hate so much the idea of a one size fits all and it sucks that they see your Masters degree and go "but no kids tho???" Like you got a whole degree 😭😤😤 Everyone in these comments is so smart and I hope y'all keep living how y'all want bc you deserve happiness 🌷💖💕

  • @CaptainSoftboy501

    @CaptainSoftboy501

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@ashh1371I HATE when people think life ends at a certain age. You can most certainly find someone to be in a relationship with past 30 y/o!! Age doesn't matter to do whatever you want when you want 😤😤😤

  • @Tomoitochan
    @Tomoitochan11 ай бұрын

    As 27 years old, not being able to leave my parents house, I can't fathom to call myself a 'real woman', I feel closer to girlhood then womanhood

  • @4444randomness

    @4444randomness

    11 ай бұрын

    Same here

  • @VoltaMagica

    @VoltaMagica

    11 ай бұрын

    Same here, I'm 29 and still living with my parents (who don't have a house of their own either, we all live with my grandparents) and I don't feel like an adult, I feel like a daughter

  • @SpringBlingThing

    @SpringBlingThing

    11 ай бұрын

    Same. Lack of total financial independence makes me feel like a child. It’s a weird limbo to be stuck in.

  • @onethree123d

    @onethree123d

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@VoltaMagicaSame.

  • @Qtopian

    @Qtopian

    11 ай бұрын

    But why. Is being called a woman all that bad? To me womanhood and girlhood means the same thing but i prefer to say girl instead of woman because woman have “man” in the word. I would call a 65 year old a girl too

  • @justinbailey1669
    @justinbailey16696 ай бұрын

    I'm a childless unmarried 32 year old in an apartment. my parents got divorced when i was 10. i grew up hearing my parents talk shit about each other nonstop. eventually i had the courage to ask my mom woman-to-woman, "if you hate him so much why did you marry him?" she explained that my dad lived in the neighborhood and was "just kind of around", and getting married young was "just kind of what you did back then". all of her friends were getting married and she felt like she needed to too. This undoubtedly shaped my views on what adulthood means, and the potential consequence of making adult decisions!

  • @JordanS-ww4eu

    @JordanS-ww4eu

    18 күн бұрын

    We are the same age

  • @nonnieJ94
    @nonnieJ9410 ай бұрын

    Ladies enjoy your “girl dinner” or “single ladies dinner”. Enjoy dressing up. Enjoy creating things and using your imagination. Yes be an adult who is responsible for their responsibilities but seek to enjoy your life too. Do your hobbies. Learn the skill you’ve always wanted. Go outside and frolic. Find ways to make the inner child that never really goes away happy!

  • @Mossy500A

    @Mossy500A

    6 ай бұрын

    See, men can't have that. Society would crumble into dust, if we started believing this.

  • @nonnieJ94

    @nonnieJ94

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Mossy500A in my opinion the problem is y’all don’t believe it and you’d rather believe the BS that society feeds. Y’all stay miserable and unhappy instead having balance of joy and hardship, responsibility and play.

  • @Mossy500A

    @Mossy500A

    6 ай бұрын

    @@nonnieJ94 We work to find that balance, but not at the expense of our greater obligations.

  • @nonnieJ94

    @nonnieJ94

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Mossy500A I never called for any adult to abandon their obligations 🤷🏾‍♀️

  • @Riatehmonstrrbunneh

    @Riatehmonstrrbunneh

    6 ай бұрын

    I needed this comment

  • @sarahclayton5845
    @sarahclayton584511 ай бұрын

    I think for me, the tendency to call myself a girl rather than a woman is definitely a way to try and define my gender identity without using the negative aspects of that identity. I grew up in the deep south of the united states, and as a child, womanhood was always defined to me by women’s struggles. When I complained about period pains or pain from wearing bras or even things as serious as being mistreated or harassed by men, it was very common for older female family members to tell me “Welcome to womanhood” or “That’s just part of being a woman.” This was never said in response to positive aspects of “womanhood.” When I realized I was a lesbian, I sort of had to redefine my identity as a cis afab person, yet all I could think of when I thought of “woman” was pain and failure to perform my duty as one and marry a man. “Girl” offers so much more freedom. Girls can be weird, girls can be independent, girls can be defined by their relationships to other girls rather than men, girls can be happy, girls can throw some random shit on a plate and call it dinner-things I found myself unable to conceptualize under womanhood. So am I a woman? Yes, technically, legally speaking. But when I think of myself in a way that brings me joy, I think of my self as a girl.

  • @kai_fatallysapphic

    @kai_fatallysapphic

    11 ай бұрын

    omg some random lady at Walmart sarcastically remarked "the joys of being a woman" when I was literally just grabbing a pack of pads while with my mom, honestly kinda uncomfortable cuz I'm nonbinary :/ I don't know why middle aged white women in grocery stores feel like it's appropriate to say stuff like that to strangers unprompted, when I was a little kid a lady made fun of me for "sticking my butt out in the isle" and I've literally been self conscious about that ever since 😐

  • @greggerusframkus7999

    @greggerusframkus7999

    11 ай бұрын

    Exactly this. Honestly I always try to explain it and you did it best.

  • @ida6950

    @ida6950

    11 ай бұрын

    Perfectly put thank you

  • @joniwilson1558

    @joniwilson1558

    11 ай бұрын

    Well put

  • @starscrambled

    @starscrambled

    11 ай бұрын

    Holy shit, you just put my feelings about my gender into words.

  • @sallybalkin8507
    @sallybalkin850710 ай бұрын

    Once, after a ridiculous day, I picked up my 4 year old granddaughter from daycare, and asked the educators if I could be a kid for 10 minutes. They said "Sure." I sat on the mat with the other kids and listened to story time. It was wonderful.

  • @VelcroPoodle

    @VelcroPoodle

    10 ай бұрын

    I hope to reach your power level, you're a goal for me right now.

  • @aazhie

    @aazhie

    10 ай бұрын

    that sounds delightful :3

  • @noronahahaha

    @noronahahaha

    10 ай бұрын

    High tier girling. Sounds lovely!

  • @junkerburn2341

    @junkerburn2341

    10 ай бұрын

    damnit i want storytime!

  • @desperadox7565

    @desperadox7565

    10 ай бұрын

    Nothing kid-like about it. Listening to story time is great.

  • @pokemaniacdavid
    @pokemaniacdavid7 ай бұрын

    When my parents were my age, they both had a child in elementary school, a beautiful house, retirement plans, health insurance, all on entry level blue collar jobs. I have dogs and a plushie collection. 💀

  • @daviedarling
    @daviedarling10 ай бұрын

    as a person with a developmental disability who will probably always be dependent on my parents in some way, I have very complicated feelings about the markers and expectations of adulthood. really enjoyed this video, thanks!

  • @belleyouuu2637
    @belleyouuu263710 ай бұрын

    I am a 29 year old woman. I think the main source of ladies not wanting to "adult" or "woman", is the stigma that a lady passed a certain age cannot partake in certain activities or enjoy certain things anymore. And that's what really needs to change. I will still go to anime conventions, music festivals, laugh at fart jokes, enjoy capri suns until the day I die, --responsibly ofc. And I will not let society stop me from "living" because it thinks I have to fit into the suburban mom or business woman template.

  • @aprilshowers3246

    @aprilshowers3246

    9 ай бұрын

    love that you enjoy capri suns responsibly 😄

  • @aprilmichel7816

    @aprilmichel7816

    9 ай бұрын

    I like enjoying capri suns irresponsibly - I am rebellious like that 😈 (but fr caprisuns were the first way of healing my inner child)

  • @bisexualantigone

    @bisexualantigone

    9 ай бұрын

    meee

  • @P0oDoll

    @P0oDoll

    9 ай бұрын

    Me too! kekeke :D

  • @laurenstorey8206

    @laurenstorey8206

    9 ай бұрын

    I love this!!! Woman in modern context has a negative connotation imo. As a "girl" we had to in fact strive to be feminine (a woman) to no longer be seen as a "child" we then try to get there too soon and feel the need to backtrack to be considered fun and equal to our peers (of any gender). However we also feared "women" as they seemed far more seductive, strict, headstrong, and organized. I think the word woman during my developmental phase was often someone that men feared more than desired if desired they had to be unattainably amazing? Woman feels too "man" focused. I feared growing into a woman, afraid I couldn't be fun, easy going and also the thought I would embark on having to hold up others responsibilities for their actions (mother, wife, community member). I also feared I could never really fully play the part. This is kinda a trope in media is the "mother" responsible figure in many T.V. shows such as Marge Simpson, who mostly try's to do the right thing however when she makes a mistake, lets loose, or even just takes a weekend for her self her family does horribly without her, she inevitably can not be her self since there is too much at stake (later seasons of course loose this). Although women are beautiful and strong there is a sense of tiredness and lack of freedom that is thrust upon them since their responsibility is far more important and mistakes are less forgivable than the male counterparts (starting usually when people start referring to us as young women). IMO Infantilization of women is merely a choice to be free from the less than the straight forward, responsible for everyone, bare minimum expectation of what a woman is. The use of the word "Girl" is a way us women can express our true self's, the part of us that was only and is only responsible for ourself, our girlies are expected to only look after them selfs, sad girl music is for our self, girl dinner is for the self, the hot girl walk is for the self! I think the "girl" is the inner child I want to make happy free from whatever the hell womanhood is, suppost to be, or represent

  • @cori742
    @cori74211 ай бұрын

    this reminds me of that social media trend of jokingly referring to oneself as "just a 25 year old teenage girl"

  • @Nicole-zh7pl

    @Nicole-zh7pl

    11 ай бұрын

    It's just another word. I truly do not feel calling yourself a girl means you fear womanhood or adulthood. Golden Girls exist for a reason. I'm about 40.. I work 75 hours a week, I take care of my home, I raised my kid into "adulthood" themselves so I will dress how I want. I will eat and do what I mf want. I'll call myself a goddam girl if I want. It's not about appealing to men or feeling younger. (Believe me, I don't) It's a word. "I don't want to adult anymore" has always been a joke. Not to be taken seriously..I truly do not care whether someone calls me a woman, a lady, a girl or shit, even old. It's just a label. Maybe it's once you get to a certain age you just stop giving a shit whether it's whatever everybody thinks men want or don't want from us or what society wants or doesn't want from us..fuck em all, I say.

  • @lyrablack8621

    @lyrablack8621

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@Nicole-zh7plI think youth is something nearly entirely unrelated to age, something much more shaped by experience and attitude. For example, for the most part, i feel incredibly old and worn when i'm around the vast majority of people, but mainly men, except for a few, who take a bit longer to make me feel tired; while i feel spectacularly bursting with life and energy the more time i spend by myself, or with like-minded women/femmes. It's kind of like the war on pink and femininity as a whole; it's more than possible to do very strenuous and very necessary work while maintaining youth (which, again, has little to do with age, and even less so to do with bodies - bodies have never mattered much to me at all)

  • @abrielle13

    @abrielle13

    11 ай бұрын

    Honestly I didn't truly feel like a "real" adult until I was about 25 and then had an early life crisis 😂

  • @michaelgray4833

    @michaelgray4833

    11 ай бұрын

    I genuinely feel that certain people cannot grasp the concept of irony

  • @djreems8813

    @djreems8813

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@Nicole-zh7plgenuinely, hope i grow up with your attitude

  • @juliebean1910
    @juliebean191010 ай бұрын

    I think the key is that we cling to girl things because being an adult is so much more difficult, unattainable, and miserable than anyone prepared us for. I cling to childlike things because that’s when life still felt like it could be joyful.

  • @cupriferouscatalyst3708

    @cupriferouscatalyst3708

    10 ай бұрын

    Also, like, look at the world falling apart around us, with fascism, poverty and globabl warming on the rise while the "adults" are doing nothing about it. Clearly "being an adult" doesn't make anyone better at making decisions, so what's the point?

  • @GameFreak7744

    @GameFreak7744

    9 ай бұрын

    @@cupriferouscatalyst3708 Poverty isn't on the rise (~38% of the world population was in extreme poverty in 1990, ~8% in 2019), fascism is in the open more than ever thanks to people being chronically online but it's not exactly a new thing, CO2 emissions have been starting to level off over the last 10-20 years. Taking the attitude of 'whats the point' can literally only serve to undo the very, very real progress that is being made.

  • @CarolynRae

    @CarolynRae

    9 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@GameFreak7744 I know you probably don’t mean to be invalidating as you are coming off but there ARE reasons to feel hopeless. (I have a point hold on) For many adults now entering their twenties, they are the first generation of humanity who has had extensive knowledge of world events in the palm of their hands since birth. Humans are not equipped to have this level of awareness about so many problems at such great scale. The wealth disparity in America is percentage wise currently worse than the Great Depression, there’s active legislation to roll back what were once thought irreversible hard-fought-for rights, to roll back environmental protections that will worsen climate change in an already escalating crisis, and layer losing key moments of childhood and adolescence to the pandemic. It’s hard to grow up and despite all that, realize the current societal expectations are to continue to just go about life as normal pretending there aren’t major systemic issues. You can’t blame people for feeling hopeless despite overall upward progress when their immediate surroundings are getting more difficult to endure. Telling someone they’re part of the problem while they are having a VERY NORMAL REACTION to their situation is what actually contributes to the problem. Invalidating the experiences and trauma of today’s youth is one hell of a way to discourage them to keep their chin up and participate in change. I’m turning 30 next month. I didn’t get a smart phone till high school. I can’t imagine how it’s impacted people younger than me, as I’m currently still trying to find the strength to take care of myself as best I can, so that one day I can get back to the point where I can help larger causes. We gotta hold on to the little things. There’s still hope. Theres always hope. Humans would have gone extinct long ago without it.

  • @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    9 ай бұрын

    @@GameFreak7744 Thank goodness global poverty is down, that'll totally help me afford a home here locally.

  • @vvitch-mist20

    @vvitch-mist20

    9 ай бұрын

    But nothing you like is childish. I'm a huge nerd. I love everything fantasy, sci-fi. I'm also goth. These are all things people would assume are "childish". Even my grandmother told me I "can't" me goth in my 30s bc I should be "more mature". It's not childish because you are choosing to engage with it because you like it. A child might dress goth to piss off their parents. I do it because it's apart of who I am. THAT'S the difference.

  • @destinysoto5190
    @destinysoto51909 ай бұрын

    As a 22 year old on the last semester of her bachelor's degree, I'm terrified of officially steping into adult life once I finish it. I feel like a lost teenager.

  • @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    9 ай бұрын

    Just know that every single workplace is simply High School 2.0. No matter the profession, it's high school politics and popularity contests all over again.

  • @high-bi-password

    @high-bi-password

    9 ай бұрын

    Off topic but I love your profile picture, Iguro and Mitsuri are OTP. Honestly if you’re that into Demon Slayer I think you’ll be fine! The emotional maturity pays dividends.

  • @starchannel123

    @starchannel123

    7 ай бұрын

    Are the 18 year olds that go straight into the workforce more adult than you? No. You are afraid of working full time because you have never done it before. You can’t be afraid of adulthood because you are already an adult.

  • @kathypepe123

    @kathypepe123

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm in the same situation, and it's very scary. you're not alone

  • @doid4354

    @doid4354

    6 ай бұрын

    Me too, except I never went to college. At least you have something to be proud of. Im just as lost, and even more afraid as health problems started popping up and is making my life harder on its own. Im terrified I’m going to develop a chronic health condition that will render me “useless” to society. Because you aren’t seen as a “real adult” unless you have a job and can take care of yourself. Well I guess I’m not an adult and will never be if I end up disabled…

  • @catsaturday9900
    @catsaturday990011 ай бұрын

    Thank you for mentioning disabled people in this equation. I think ableism is an underpinning factor for how 'adulthood' is policed for everyone, disabled or not, but it's rarely acknowledged.

  • @darthszarych5588

    @darthszarych5588

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah the whole video I was like "when is she going to talk about disabled people?" And then she did. I'm disabled and I'm 24 so adulthood is something I really struggle with. The fact that I have to rely on others makes me feel very unadult in a way I think most non disabled people probably don't. I worry about having to be dependant for my whole life in this way and I hate it because I feel like I loose autonomy and maturity. I am also autistic and the image most people have when they think of someone autistic is usually a child so I am often infanitlized for that.

  • @MrPiccoloku

    @MrPiccoloku

    11 ай бұрын

    Also expectations for adulthood are DEEPLY gendered. During the society-implicatingly long time I spent as a doxastic boy (Relative to how obvious it was that I was NB; I was about 14 and extremely online and found out that way after being hyper-obsessed with shapeshifting Star Wars aliens specifically because if I'm not allowed to be an enby I'll try to be a Shi'ido and eat a bunch of carby bullshit to get the extra flesh necessary for shapeshifting) I was bombarded with societal messages that pretty explicitly tied financial stability to adult performance of masculinity and (Having to work through several massive mental health issues before even trying to get a normal job) I'm only now realizing as I'm writing this comment that my feelings of failure for not having one were tied to externally-imposed expectations of an identity that I actively rejected, and compound onto also-societally-imposed feelings of failure for not being part of that category, as if I've failed the having-money-and-rectangle-pants test by just not fitting into the rectangle pants and my brain stopped working at this point. I hope nothing bad results from being emotionally vulnerable in a YT comments section. That would be terrible :P

  • @annajohnson5779

    @annajohnson5779

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes! same here.

  • @possibly12

    @possibly12

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@darthszarych5588 Same!! I grew up dreaming of being my ideal - a single, strong and independent woman who didn't have to rely on anyone or conform to expectations. Then reality hit. Sigh.

  • @ArtichokeHunter
    @ArtichokeHunter11 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of that CS Lewis quote "When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up." I'm glad we get nuance here and empathy for why so many of us don't feel like Adults and want to acknowledge how hard adulting is.

  • @OspreySoul

    @OspreySoul

    11 ай бұрын

    Personally, I have always hated that thought process. I remember being told as a child that someday, I wouldn't care about the things I loved anymore, and there were many nights I cried myself to sleep, thinking someday the things that brought me joy would be ripped away from me. It doesn't exactly paint a rosy picture of adulthood-an alien world deprived of anything a child would call fun.

  • @ArtichokeHunter

    @ArtichokeHunter

    11 ай бұрын

    @@OspreySoul I'm not sure what you're responding to but I don't think it's my comment? My quote is about how as you get older, you don't mind seeming childish and just pursue what you want.

  • @Arcessitor

    @Arcessitor

    11 ай бұрын

    adulting? really?

  • @allanjmcpherson

    @allanjmcpherson

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Arcessitor you're really going to comment just policing someone else's language use. Why don't you come back when you actually have something productive to add.

  • @MizJaniceResinArt

    @MizJaniceResinArt

    11 ай бұрын

    We have to stop thinking that being a woman equates to "no more fun" "must be soooo serious" "no time for play". We have to stop thinking that being an Adult equates to those ideas.

  • @furiscafynn6275
    @furiscafynn627510 ай бұрын

    Completely agree with you at the end - I've never considered breaking away from fanfiction, and you're damn right I still have sleepovers with my besties. I'm nearly, 30 and it's just not stopping because it's what makes me happy. My mum has always made comments to those who haven't grown up yet, like someone older dressed as a goth - 'at some point you've just got to grow up' and I've always wondered why? What about that doesn't make them an adult?

  • @Anonymous-wb3nz

    @Anonymous-wb3nz

    9 ай бұрын

    Goth is a MUSIC based subculture. Do you listen to Dark Wave, Ethereal, Post Punk, Cold Wave, or Death Rock? If not, then no, you're not a Goth. It's not just a fashion statement.

  • @matildarose

    @matildarose

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Anonymous-wb3nzlook, if you haven't raided a Roman settlement at least *once*, you can't call yourself a Goth.

  • @paulgibbon5991

    @paulgibbon5991

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Anonymous-wb3nz Were you there at the Sack Of Rome? If so, you're not a goth, it's just a fashion statement.

  • @Anonymous-wb3nz

    @Anonymous-wb3nz

    6 ай бұрын

    @@paulgibbon5991 you're comparing the Visigoths of yesteryear to the music subculture today? Do you have some sort of tism or are you just a dumbas$? Goth isn't "fashion", poser. It's a literal music genre.

  • @ashtonstatesman6761
    @ashtonstatesman676111 ай бұрын

    ive been an adult for some time but i have never called myself a woman, it sounds weird to say and i cant get the image of motherhood and being a wife out of my head when i say it. not to mention I hate what people say makes you a woman, losing your vriginity, having your period. It's all so genital oriented and i dont care for it.

  • @FrumiousMing8

    @FrumiousMing8

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes how many times in media is the loss of virginity/start of menstruation seen as "Oh you're a woman now!" It's like they expect children to flip a switch and let go of girlhood, let go of childhood. It's so weird when you think about it.

  • @lmcb8447

    @lmcb8447

    11 ай бұрын

    Fr when I got my first period I was afraid of people knowing and calling me woman or ""celebrating"" my marker (into transition) to womanhood ... I really hated it , despite having a period I was very much still 12 , waaaay more a (early teenage)girl than in no way a woman!! I hated the feeling of being adultified , I was just a still somewhat little girl, I also hated the fact of becoming a woman societally wise I knew people were gonna be stricter as I grew up because "I'm no longer a child but a little youbg lady and must act like one" and also the fact of people mainly(older creepy predatory) men commenting about my looks especially if sexually and I indeed got catcalled way more as an early/mid teen than I do now as an older teen (19) ... nowadays I have no problem calling myself a woman and I hate it now when people infantalaze me, but I still get to call my self girl from time ti time because now, *yes* , I am transitioning from girlhood to womanhood and feel comfortable acknowledging and me and others *fairly* stating that at 19 yo not at freaking 12yo ,which is the normalization of the *predatory* mindset that still keeps making child brides happen around the world... you don't tell a young 12 boy that he's a man now because his phallus has started to grow due to the start of puberty nor when he gets his first pubic hair or has his first ejaculation wether to some wet dream or his first time touching himself, so don't do so with 12 young girls who get their first period either. I really wish people would stop adultifying children, regardless of gender but especially on young girls since they usually are the ones thar suffer most from it. Thank you for kind words❤they were very healing.😊

  • @somethingunusual8456

    @somethingunusual8456

    11 ай бұрын

    As an aroace girl I felt that deep to my bones

  • @MarlopolyGaming

    @MarlopolyGaming

    11 ай бұрын

    And the once you've had all that done to your body, there are people out there that don't deem you a woman unless you've given birth (genital oriented again.....) And if, like me, you will never do that (and are taking steps to ensure it) you are "not a real woman". I don't like this realisation though that pretty much all markers of womanhood are related to your vagina.

  • @catiso1057

    @catiso1057

    11 ай бұрын

    i actually feel the opposite. ive been an adult for 5 years now, and it frustrates me to no end to be called a “girl”, especially by strangers, when i am a grown woman with a womans body who has sex and makes her own decisions in life. i dont look like a “girl”, i dont live like a “girl”, i am a woman. then again, when it comes to finances and my living situation, im not at all in a place that an adult is expected to be. maybe im just trying to affirm my adulthood wherever i can to make up for that.

  • @sushiroll3795
    @sushiroll379511 ай бұрын

    Not a girl/woman myself, but I've found that more and more people have been realizing that embracing your inner child is a whole lot more enjoyable and fulfilling than trying to preform the dismal, stressful expectations commonly associated with "adulthood." I've noticed this trend from guys too, considering that we're usually much more likely to refer to our friends as "boys" than "men" (see the plethora of "me and the boys" memes that've been shared around for years).

  • @MidnightVixxy

    @MidnightVixxy

    11 ай бұрын

    Realising the inner child never really left is one of the most powerful things either gender can do. We just get more mature and along the way but our core remains no matter how much we twist it to appear mature. Elderly are a good example of this, the older they get the less fucks they give and they reconnect with themselves

  • @gypsywoman9140

    @gypsywoman9140

    11 ай бұрын

    Many guys love their various collections. The collectables may vary from dude to dude, but they are not to be messed with. A lot of work went into accumulating and displaying those. I'm glad the Barbie movie is simultaneously giving Ken his time to shine (I will be disappointed if Mattel does not release bad-ass Ken in the pimp coat and his Mojo Dojo Casa House) and letting women enjoy their inner girliness all over again.

  • @kaseynicole8965

    @kaseynicole8965

    10 ай бұрын

    I agree, I also notice a lot of guys embracing more 'childish' interest like video games and anime shamelessly, I think we as a generation just don't feel like adults and want to embrace the things we liked as kids to escape!

  • @loonflam8910

    @loonflam8910

    10 ай бұрын

    tbf "the men and I" doesn't have the same ring to it

  • @IVEmeritus

    @IVEmeritus

    10 ай бұрын

    I never gave it much thought, but I've seen this too. I'm 31, but realized I also tend to say "guy" or "dude" when referring to myself instead of "man".

  • @kerricaine
    @kerricaine10 ай бұрын

    The queer time thing hit like a brick. I often make jokes that "well, im only 30, but in trans years, that's practically geriatric". Ive had the same experience of watching my friends from high school die off one by one that my 80 year old grandmother is currently experiencing herself...

  • @beep3242

    @beep3242

    10 ай бұрын

    I think it's telling that, as a fresh adult, I sometimes feel like an elder trans in online spaces and sometimes in-person as well. I'm on hormones and on track for surgery. It puts me well ahead of many people my age. In that aspect I feel past my years, and it's frankly just strange. It's not just maturity via age, it's maturity based on progress in my "gender journey." It sucks that I do have to worry about my queer friends dying around me while I'm so young. It seems like trans people are progressively becoming more visible to one another, specifically trans people over 21, so I hope generations after me don't have to experience feeling like an elder in a community while they're pretty much kids.

  • @earthstar7534

    @earthstar7534

    10 ай бұрын

    Even opening up this scope, I don't remember ANY of my parents friends dying. My children have watched me grieve 8 people under 45 an infant and 3 children under 10. Young people are dying off at an alarming rate and it scares me.

  • @rachelmdiamond

    @rachelmdiamond

    10 ай бұрын

    @@earthstar7534Yes! I lost so many friends before I hit 25, but my parents have lost maybe 2 friends that i recall, and I’m 33.

  • @alexwyatt2911

    @alexwyatt2911

    10 ай бұрын

    In some video clip, I saw a young transgender individual express shock over encountering a transgender person with gray hair, because they just hadn’t interacted with transgender people who had the privilege and opportunity of reaching middle age or older. I might have let a tear or two slide out when I heard that. As an ally who has been advocating and fighting for the LGBTQ community for more than half my life, I know that equality is a worthy cause. However, _knowing_ the horrors of inequalities is distinctly different from _living_ and _feeling_ it.

  • @Hazeydaze92

    @Hazeydaze92

    10 ай бұрын

    I didn't even know about this and just done some research - heartbreaking to read.

  • @EmilyE96
    @EmilyE9610 ай бұрын

    Really interesting topic - I'm 27 and still living at home, I don't have my own car, and I'm asexual with no interest in starting a family. I struggle to feel like an "adult" despite attempting to remind myself every day that I am, and that I shouldn't even have to justify it. I find that whenever I attempt to be "independent" in my choices, I still feel this guilt or imposter syndrome - in the back of my mind it's like "how can you be respected when you don't even know how house bills work", or the like. So, when I do grocery runs or clean the house, or even book a doctor's appointment, those moments do make me feel like I've "proven" something and I'm "adulting". It's kind of gross that we feel we have to hit these milestones. I really wonder if the pressure of them is part of the reason we're so overwhelmed, and overwhelm often leads to inaction. Plus if we're trying to reach an ideal, it's no wonder we think we'll lose ourselves in the process, and we'd rather cling to childhood and play. I recently went through the fabled quarter-life crisis too, which is an interesting effect that's come up, often linked to Millenials. I think it's that wake-up moment, the "who am I really? Because I've been getting lost watching everyone else figure it out". We're so darn aware of everything, it's so hard to find your own voice.

  • @redrustyhill2

    @redrustyhill2

    6 ай бұрын

    Maturity comes with the acceptance of responsibility. You will never mature living at home with momma all your life.

  • @gunnasintern

    @gunnasintern

    6 ай бұрын

    you’re doing fine! material and status should never determine your worth. living with family is common in most cultures. having a family who supports you to live with is a blessing, you aren’t “less of an adult” for living with the people closest to you. you can easily still be independent in your choices and activities we all live our lives in our own timeline/pace anyway, you shouldn’t have to “prove adulting” to anyone cause the fact you’re taking care of your personal responsibilities is good. there is also no such thing as “figuring it out” because we are always learning and growing in life, it’s part of the experience of being human remember you’re not alone. the term “quarter life crisis” is just a fancy term for having an existential crisis relating to who you are as a person and the fact that you shouldn’t let society’s viewpoints shift your perspective, it’s your life you are right in that people are pressured too often to live a life they don’t want to live. no one has to reach those “milestones” cause everyone’s timeline is different i can relate lol

  • @19Rena96

    @19Rena96

    4 ай бұрын

    Wrong. Maybe get therapy and try to underestand why you think that.@@redrustyhill2

  • @lynnboartsdye1943
    @lynnboartsdye194311 ай бұрын

    The concept of adulthood always felt so alien and cruel to me. Especially with how adults treated children and eachother. This idea of expected respect and obedience on the basis of age feels arbitrary and doesn’t actually model respect or understanding of the human experience. I grew up autistic and would later find out I’m adhd as well so as I enter the expected age of “being an adult” I’ve felt a lot of Shame from being modeled that I’m behind where my peers are at in life. I’ve always been behind but as a kid I accepted it since I could always go home and let my imagination take me away from the pain of it for a few hours, now there’s this worm of shame wriggling in my gut because I’m expected to be able to perform things that people my age are expected to. Everything that feels like the right choice for me I’m told is lazy or unacceptable in the eyes of my elders. I’m supposed to be independent but when I make an independent decision I’m bound to hear how un-adult like it is to make that particular decision. Also I often feel media targeted towards adults is often very superficial and like it’s compensating to make the adult audience feel like they’re watching something mature and profound when really it’s just fluff or violence or really bad modeling of relationships. Adults are too confusing, I just want to exist :/

  • @kr3642

    @kr3642

    11 ай бұрын

    I was diagnosed asd 1 at 27, and I feel you. It's also hard having all of this go on while I have gen z siblings that are transitioning fairly well. It feels like my autistic struggles are being looked upon as just being a lazy entitled millennial. My siblings don't seem to be autistic l but even if they are, we aren't all the same anyway. No point trying to educate allistics that refuse to learn and believe.

  • @skitterly

    @skitterly

    11 ай бұрын

    Im an adhd gen z with potential autism as well and I totally get you. It’s hard to feel like an adult when adulthood is defined by arbitrary social expectations that neurodiverse people naturally gravitate away from. Couple that with Poor social skills adding to that feeling of incompetence and boom, a 20 year old feeling like a child.

  • @Embassy_of_Jupiter

    @Embassy_of_Jupiter

    11 ай бұрын

    Respecting your elders made a lot of sense when old people really had a lot of wisdom and knowledge to share. But because our world changes so fast today, it's much more important to be on the pulse of time so old people can't help you with their life experience, because it was so radically different. Of course some things never really change, like relationship advice etc, but I think that is the overall reason why people stopped respecting their elders.

  • @sportluver98

    @sportluver98

    11 ай бұрын

    10000%

  • @dp2768

    @dp2768

    10 ай бұрын

    I think you’re amazing. I’ve never been diagnosed spectrally but I’m completely in agreement with you

  • @t3tsuyaguy1
    @t3tsuyaguy111 ай бұрын

    The idea that society has made womanhood itself unappealing is very sad to me. I know many women whom I admire and look up to. As a man, embracing my manhood was celebrated. I received a lot of positive affirmation for embracing the changes, both physical and mental, that age instigated in me. Surely, women deserve the same security in the process of aging.

  • @altrag

    @altrag

    10 ай бұрын

    You have to stop and consider what traditional "womanhood" means - stuck in a kitchen, dealing with a gaggle of kids and subservient to your husband. The term "womanhood" brings with it a bunch of extra baggage that a lot of women aren't interested in taking on. Of course the term "girl" also has some negative cultural connotations, especially when applied to grown women. Of course those connotations are also ultimately rooted in patriarchal thought, they tend to be more about sexualization rather than any real expectation, and that goes pretty well with the concurrent growing acceptance of female sexuality.

  • @t3tsuyaguy1

    @t3tsuyaguy1

    10 ай бұрын

    @altrag I didn't say anything about "traditional" womanhood. The silly people who push that ahistorical "ideal" mainlined too much 'Leave it to Beaver' style propaganda. I know that womanhood has been understood a myriad of ways by different cultures at different times, and I've never elected myself to the position of deciding which one is "correct". What I am speaking to is the persistent message that aging is something damaging to women, that all your value lies in youth. I want to celebrate every stage of women's lives. I want them to feel that, from themselves and others.

  • @altrag

    @altrag

    10 ай бұрын

    @@t3tsuyaguy1 > I didn't say anything about "traditional" womanhood The word itself is "traditional". That's the point/problem. > The silly people who push that ahistorical "ideal" Are the ones who want to see women barefoot in the kitchen with a baby on their tit. Using their terminology only empowers them, even if you personally want the word to have a different meaning. > deciding which one is "correct" Its not about any definition being "correct", its about the definition that's popularly accepted - or worse, popularly propagandized. > I want to celebrate every stage of women's lives Then do that. Just pick a word that doesn't come with so much baggage. Or better yet, celebrate in a more meaningful way than just applying some arbitrary label based on equally arbitrary metrics. Unless of course you're in the camp who believes a "real woman" should be barefoot in the kitchen with a baby on her tit. Then that's exactly the word you should use I guess. There are certainly people (including women - I'm sure you've heard of "tradwives" by now) for whom that form of "womanhood" and all of its patriarchal baggage is indeed the ideal. And that's not a bad thing - for them. For anyone else, we just need to accept the fact that the specific word (or at least the baggage it comes with) has fallen out of fashion and needs time to gain a new positive connotation, if it ever does. (Also, I'm fully aware that it seems a little odd for "woman" to still be an acceptable term while "womanhood" has unavoidable baggage. Language is weird sometimes.)

  • @bunhelsingslegacy3549

    @bunhelsingslegacy3549

    10 ай бұрын

    One of the classes required for my engineering degree was called "professional practices" and the woman they had in to talk about being a woman in the workplace was all about how to be better than a man at a man's job and also that we women should hate all men for making us work harder to earn less and be less respected, it was just awful. Turned me off the word "feminism" for decades. And I grew up conditioned that anything feminine was weak and undesireable and that being more like a man was the only way I'd be worth anything, it's only in my 40s that I'm starting to really embrace a lot of things I'd put aside (like the colour pink) as a girl and now am just doing things I enjoy, whether it's auto repair or crocheting, woodwork or sewing, drywalling or baking.... it's just things, they don't have to be gendered, and there's nothing weak or wrong with being a woman or doing things traditionally feminine. But that took decades to figure out, and it's stupid that I was conditioned that way in the first place. I'm glad you got positive affirmation for aging, I got told "wear a bra" and "dress your age" at work.

  • @t3tsuyaguy1

    @t3tsuyaguy1

    10 ай бұрын

    @@bunhelsingslegacy3549 That's my point exactly. Many of the messages our society sends women at every stage of development are terrible. I'm not saying women should change their attitude. I'm saying the treatment of women should change. I'm sad that your experience seems to be the norm. It hurts.

  • @ALovelyJaunt
    @ALovelyJaunt10 ай бұрын

    I can’t help but wonder if it is also connected with a desire to rest from work. Adulting is associated with fulfilling our responsibilities. “I can’t adult today” seems to express a wish to rest, but lacking the sense of freedom to do so. It must be excused or blamed, like a fill in for the term laziness. It seems like we don’t feel we have the right to rest. Girl dinner seems in part to occupy the same space: a way to describe with humor the guilt felt over creating a low effort meal for herself when she’s too tired to do otherwise.

  • @karariekstins366
    @karariekstins3669 ай бұрын

    Your last comment struck a chord with me. I grew up in the inner city during the 90s, I've been abused as a child. I worked hard in school and gave a stellar education. I started saving for my RothIRA and figured out how to read stock charts to make smart investment choices. My parents are in their mid-70s now and developing dementia, and the elderly are not easy to get along with and take care of. Now that I'm 35, I have to remodel and run many properties that my parents let decay. I can plumb, wire, build cabinets--there's nothing I can't fix. I feel hella adult, I always have felt like I've had more raw exposure to life than my peers. BUT, all that adulting is exhausting. I could never give up dressing up, looking pretty, playing with makeup--its a way to keep myself sane when I'm up to my eyeballs in management and bills and family politics. These women who think cosplay is childish and something we have to grow out of...I seriously question the depth of their maturity. I know people like that, they speak seriously, they dress in serious clothing, they have no humor....but they don't know how to repair things, they think an expensive price tag is actually indicative of an objects quality, and they are not as financially stable as they want you to believe. If you've ever had to scrape by and survive, you'd appreciate the power that imagination has to get through hard times. There is nothing childish about appreciating beauty, having an imagination, believing in love, and holding onto your dreams.

  • @bluegreenglue6565
    @bluegreenglue656511 ай бұрын

    As someone just turning 55, this is very instructive to me. I have a 24 year old daughter and an almost-18 year old son. Understanding how different their experiences of "growing up" are and have been from mine is just about horrifying. Thank you for providing me with perspectives I otherwise would not have known I was missing.

  • @oliver-violet9381

    @oliver-violet9381

    11 ай бұрын

    as a gen z-er, this warms my heart 🥲

  • @gypsywoman9140

    @gypsywoman9140

    11 ай бұрын

    My mom has had all my sisters and I move out only to move back in at different points over the years. She can't believe how expensive everything has become and how much things have changed over the years. She's even experienced some of the changes herself. After retiring, she decided to sell her house during the pandemic and buy one that better suits her current needs. But she had a hard time buying because she doesn't have a job. Apparently it doesn't matter that she worked at the same place for over 30 years and is retired because she's in her 60s. She needed my sister who's a nurse to co-sign for her. Absolutely insulting, imo, to treat the retired like that. Those people worked their whole lives. We live in Ontario, Canada, so I can't say if that stupid retirement = unemployment when buying a house thing applies anywhere else. But it's something worth looking into for those nearing retirement age who are considering buying a new home, as you might need to do so sooner rather than later. Things have gone crazy for people of all ages.

  • @oliviakrause3336

    @oliviakrause3336

    11 ай бұрын

    They're not Millenials, they're Gen Z. That's huge difference.

  • @bluegreenglue6565

    @bluegreenglue6565

    11 ай бұрын

    @@gypsywoman9140 It is unfortunate that the world economy has settled into invest-and-squeeze mode. I had to move from a "liberal" state in the U.S. to a massively "conservative" one because I couldn't afford to live in the former any longer and am only able have a place to live in the latter because I share a home with two other adults and my son. My Mum, who'll be 80 next year, only has a home because one of her sisters married a man with rare and highly-valued skills in nuclear engineering. I can't take care of her, and nor am I able to sufficiently support my children. If I hear one person more, in my presence, say something about "lazy kids these days" I will let them have an earful, I declare. Our respective economies demand that you breathe, while choking the life out of you.

  • @elizrebezilmadommdo1662

    @elizrebezilmadommdo1662

    11 ай бұрын

    Your kids are in gen z, but I think gen z can relate to this too, though in a slightly different way

  • @m0L3ify
    @m0L3ify11 ай бұрын

    As a young GenXer, I like using "adulting" in reference to any adult responsibility that's extremely stressful or difficult to do. It's a refreshing way to distance my identity as an adult from those activities, a way to say "these are crappy things I'm forced to do as an adult today, but they don't define me. My existence is more than this." I also went through a period in my 20's and early 30's where I continued to call women my age girls because it was hard to break from that linguistically. Throughout childhood and early adulthood, women were older, they were "other," and it took time to grow into. I don't think this is new, nor is it just a Millennial issue. It just hasn't been as visible before.

  • @gypsywoman9140

    @gypsywoman9140

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm 40 and I can't say I feel like I've yet earned the title of woman. I certainly look like one and was born female. I've given birth to two children. But most of the time I don't feel very grown up. I don't feel like I have my ish together. I always viewed women (when I was young) as having their ish together and being a lot more grown up than I feel. I can't afford a vehicle, so I don't have a driver's license. Growing up, the women I knew drove. It's hard to feel grown up when you still need to bum rides or miss out if you can't get there. Or not knowing what I'm going to do when my parents are eventually no longer here. I rely on them too much, asking for financial help here and there so my youngest doesn't go without. (My oldest doesn't live with me.) Knowing that one day my kids are going to be coming to me for help like I do with my own parents and I don't know if I'm going to be able to help them like my parents have helped me. I'd like to. But most months it's a struggle just making sure we have enough groceries to last until pay day. I know I'm not alone in these struggles. I hear/read similar things from others. Just today I was talking to a mom of 6 who recently had to move back in with her mom even though she works full-time. The struggle is real. Its no wonder fewer people are choosing to have children. Those of us who have kids sometimes can't help but ask ourselves "What kind of world did we bring them into?" Not everyone will admit to such thoughts, ofc, and will act all indignant. Those are usually the ones living either in denial or in comfort. The rest of us? We're living the struggle and want better for our children...and ourselves.

  • @wintersprite

    @wintersprite

    11 ай бұрын

    @@gypsywoman9140I’m 37 and still live with my parents (which also allows me to have my kitties). I have driving anxiety so while I do keep my license active, I don’t have a car of my own and don’t drive often. My parents drive me most places. My anxiety and depression sometimes makes me fear what will happen when my parents are no longer here. What will I do, etc.? I’ve been single most of my life and have no kids. When I was younger, part of me wanted kids someday and I used to think I’d be married and have them at my age. Instead, I’ve never even had a first kiss, let alone experienced anything more (it started out as wanting to wait and eventually turned to nothing changing(happening); I want to have those intimate experiences and feel like I’m behind. As I’ve gotten older though, I’ve been leaning toward no longer wanting children for various reasons. I think I would rather stick to having pets. I don’t think I would be a good mother and don’t feel mentally mature enough to handle them. I would be afraid a potential child of mine would see me as a failure for my driving anxiety and I also wouldn’t want them to possibly end up with anxiety and depression as well. The world is also a crazy place right now. And yes, I do selfishly also enjoy my free/alone time. I also hate being in charge of other people (likewise, I would not want to be a manager at a job). There’s still a small chance I might someday have a child, either biologically or by looking into fostering or adopting. It also might not ever happen. While part of me feels bad that my parents might never become grandparents (my older brother also has no children), I also know that nobody should have children expecting that they will someday be grandparents because there’s no guarantee.

  • @samsprague3158

    @samsprague3158

    10 ай бұрын

    Well said. And it’s exactly the same for boys/men.

  • @ScottMStolz

    @ScottMStolz

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gypsywoman9140As I have gotten older, the more I have realized that my parents did not have their ish together, as you call it. They were just doing the best they could, while trying to deal with all of the stuff adulthood required of them. And they messed up in many places and they did great in other places. As kids, we think and often are taught that adults know best, but now that we are an adult, we know that was just something said to make kids behave, and wasn't necessarily true. And with social media, we now have evidence that adults don't always know what's best. The illusion of adults having their ish together has been broken. And here we are, wondering what that all means.

  • @stephanieweeks3489

    @stephanieweeks3489

    10 ай бұрын

    THIS! I’m 30 (so millenial) and I call all stupid adult tasks as “adulting”- scheduling dr appointments, making a budget, paying my bills, reviewing credit card statements, maintaining my car, etc. calling it “adulting” stuff for some reason makes it less awful, cause I recognize it for what it is- things I don’t wanna do but as an adult, I need to do I can enjoy the rest of my life of having fun, relaxing with family & friends, and having hobbies. I give myself a small treat after doing an “adulting” task and I don’t mind doing it as much if it’s in this little adulting box

  • @taylorkat8614
    @taylorkat86146 ай бұрын

    The marriage and parenthood part of this video feels so real to me. I'm a 20 year old student. I came back to live with my parents for a week for Christmas, and was thrilled to announce my engagement. My fiance has 2 children from a previous relationship which we raise together every week, and I love them as my own. Getting engaged to him makes sense to me, since I love him. My parents refuse to accept it as a real engagement because 1) I don't have a diamond ring (how on earth would a 23 year old who is struggling to make ends meet have the cash for a diamond?) and because neither of us will be able to afford a house together. They just do not understand that for my generation, we simply don't have the option of going through the traditional pipeline of education, job, house, marriage and kids in that order. They just do not understand that I am fully aware that I won't reach these milestones, and instead would like to marry the man I love, regardless of the fact that we will never have the big house in the countryside, a car each and the holidays every Summer that my parents could afford. Instead I just need to take the happiness I have (my future husband and kids) and hope that the rest will come, but be prepared for it to not

  • @Kira_Martel

    @Kira_Martel

    4 ай бұрын

    Yep, fuck the pipeline. Marry for love! My husband and I got married at 20 and 23. We announced our engagement at his college graduation party when we were 19 and 22. I never moved out of my parents house, he moved in with me. We're 34 and 36 now, headed toward 14 years of marriage, and we still live with my folks. It's very much a real marriage, despite not having a house, kids, etc. We didn't have a ring when he proposed either, we got one together later, with my birthstone instead of a diamond, which was much cheaper. It was the recession though, so the price of gold still made me want to faint! 😵😅 We put in on a credit card and paid it off by our 5th anniversary. We had our wedding in the off-season on a weekday evening, and we did the food potluck-style. Even though we were young and broke, people still talk about what a beautiful wedding it was, and I'm sure it's because we centered the love. Your love is legitimate no matter your financial situation, and you deserve to celebrate it!

  • @akaroth7542
    @akaroth754210 ай бұрын

    36 yr old married guy here. My wife and I still feel like we're pretending at being adults, even though we dont do anything frivolous. Feel like I'm winging everything.

  • @misskarinaleigh

    @misskarinaleigh

    5 ай бұрын

    I think we all feel like that for the rest of our lives, it’s just no one told us we wing it for life! 😅

  • @joannaellis7890
    @joannaellis789011 ай бұрын

    The "adulting" trend can also be partially attributed to the removal of home ec from schools. Before home ec was common, girls would learn such skills from their mothers, and men would be dependent on their wives knowledge. Vice versa also applies to traditionally masculine life skills. However, post home ec, we live in a society where parents are generally not expected to contribute to their kids education. If a kid doesn't know something, according to us, it's not parents' fault it's the schools fault.

  • @NoiseDay

    @NoiseDay

    11 ай бұрын

    While we gained a lot from removing gender from the equation, we've also lost some. It feels like people thought, "If I can't teach women to cook, I might as well not teach anyone to cook." Like, no. Teach EVERYONE how to cook jfc And there is definitely a huge amount of hoisting responsibility off of parents in the home ('cause they are both now at work all day) and onto teachers, who have only so much say in what they are teaching kids. So we get a huge gap in the applicability of standardized education.

  • @Anna-dd4rh

    @Anna-dd4rh

    11 ай бұрын

    Very much so! I wish Rowan would’ve dived into the loss of education more-both in actual schools and in hands-on apprenticeship work. So much of “adult” skills used to be taught to you by a parent OR by an employer/mentor (how to use a copy machine, professional writing, financial skills, etc). We’ve lost a lot of that 1:1 hands-on training of passing skills from generation to generation, which contributes to the feeling of being undereducated and underprepared for adult life.

  • @creepersonspeed5490

    @creepersonspeed5490

    11 ай бұрын

    I wish my mum taught me tbh, there's so much more than just the skill. Like the stories and warmth and interaction.

  • @cbpd89

    @cbpd89

    11 ай бұрын

    My school had home ec classes for everyone. They were actually some of the most popular classes because you got to eat whatever you cooked. We all learned how to sew, cook, make a job resume, and balance a budget. It wasn't a gendered class, the first level was required for everyone, but most everyone wanted to take the level 2 cooking class.

  • @Arcessitor

    @Arcessitor

    11 ай бұрын

    @@NoiseDay We gained nothing from removing gender from the equation, except misery and a generation completely out of touch with their own nature.

  • @breenaj1095
    @breenaj109511 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of the lolita fashion in Japan. From my understanding, it started as a movement for women/girls/etc to dress how they want and not for the male gaze.

  • @WishGender

    @WishGender

    11 ай бұрын

    a shame it got named Lolita, considering that’s literally a reference to a child being seen sexually through the gaze of a horrible man

  • @shyenghyrha

    @shyenghyrha

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@WishGender A bat (🦇 the animal ) or a ( baseball ⚾ ) bat. Two words that have different meanings depending on the context. People were named Lolita and Dolores way before the Russian book was written, and people are still named like that to this day. While I get where it's coming from, the idea that an obscure Russian book popular in some parts of the west is THE ONLY WAY japanese people could have heard the name is.... Well... Odd? There is this notion that every other country is obsessed with the trends from the USA. Obviously American media has a lot of influence but don't take it to this extreme. It's just an odd way to treat other cultures.

  • @gwennorthcutt421

    @gwennorthcutt421

    11 ай бұрын

    @@WishGender "lolita" was just picked as a victorian english girls name, since the style is heavily influenced by victorian english fashions for girls and dolls. its an unhappy coincidence

  • @ladygrey4113

    @ladygrey4113

    11 ай бұрын

    Yup, men actually hate the fashion in Japan too and considering a lot of gender issues in Japan and the weird expectations of women the fashion is pretty interesting

  • @froglegstastebestsalted

    @froglegstastebestsalted

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@WishGender good book tbh, shame what movie ads did to it's messaging.

  • @z.f.4516
    @z.f.45166 ай бұрын

    This deserves to be a TED Talk

  • @Crouteceleste
    @Crouteceleste9 ай бұрын

    For me, the term "adulting" is used because we, as millennials, don't feel we are as responsible and involved in society as our predecessors (parents, grand-parents). It feels like we are stuck in a perpetual state of teenage years where we don't have the power to change anything about this world, and we are still submitted to constant evaluation and devaluation from the older population like we did when we had to pass exams, instead of welcoming us as part of their world and relenting part of the power. This older population still have all the money, large housing and good jobs, since they live and work longer. I think we feel like we don't have any place in this society of theirs. We're grown up perpetual students. For people like me, who were born in the poorest population of their country, since everything is ten times or more harder to get because we begin even lower on the social ladder, adulthood seems even more like a faraway notion….

  • @misskarinaleigh

    @misskarinaleigh

    5 ай бұрын

    This is so true!

  • @PGOuma
    @PGOuma11 ай бұрын

    My parents sheltered me and never taught me independence as a kid and they wonder why NOW at 24 i can't do anything for myself. I've been slowly teaching myself how to adult ever since 18 and they still don't recognize my efforts, so now i don't consider myself as an adult and find it hard to fit in with other adults

  • @x.0.x.

    @x.0.x.

    10 ай бұрын

    Same for me

  • @kaedatiger

    @kaedatiger

    10 ай бұрын

    You are an adult, just not one who was given the proper tools. It saddens me how many people were not taught how to cook for themselves, do laundry, and other essential household tasks. Maybe I should make content for this 🤔🤔

  • @KatArriaza

    @KatArriaza

    10 ай бұрын

    we literally are on the SAME boat. i feel you hard on this one. it is truly very hard to be independent after being dependent all your life. adult life thrives on being independent so life becomes difficult. but you can do it though, we can do it

  • @JauntyCrepe

    @JauntyCrepe

    10 ай бұрын

    Same. My parents were so controlling and I’ve had to learn to be independent

  • @dylanfooler

    @dylanfooler

    10 ай бұрын

    Same, even in my gender identity I feel more comfortable with demiBoy than something like demiman, I don't properly feel like a man even tho if I'm around younger people I do feel like an adult

  • @andiralosh2173
    @andiralosh217311 ай бұрын

    People only asked me if I was a Uni student until I was 36 and we millennials have been called teenagers for a couple of extra decades. Maybe its not the biggest surprise that we wouldn't want to claim some carrot on a stick always out of reach like... I don't think 'adulthood' made boomers happy and no I don't want to buy the misery you're pitching. Hopefully we will yet redefine it as something worth being

  • @lisabeethree

    @lisabeethree

    11 ай бұрын

    This exactly 👏🏻 Yes, I think some in the baby boomer generation are legitimately happy. However, the amount of times I’ve heard “you just get on with it” … I sincerely wonder about the actual happiness found.

  • @Allison_Hart

    @Allison_Hart

    11 ай бұрын

    "Hopefully we will yet redefine it as something worth being." Yes. 100% this. You hit the nail on the head. I am for the most part asexual aromantic so most of what I feel pressured into, as part and parcel of being an adult (getting married and all that) doesn't resonate with me. But society makes us feel such shame for that still. It's only recently that I learned about the concept of "amatonormativity" and basically forcing the idea of romantic relationships on everyone and making it so utterly culturally pervasive. And that amatonormativity suits a capitalistic society, because it makes sure that everyone pairs off and mostly just cares about their own life and their partner and children. The nuclear family model disconnect us from our neighbors, our larger communities, and the fight for social change. Anyway I forget what point I was trying to make but totally agree with you. 😅 Like, can we change adulthood into something else already? What about those of us who don't follow the traditional models and thus don't have models to follow?

  • @andiralosh2173

    @andiralosh2173

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Allison_Hart Thanks! As a demisexual lesbian, I'm vibing with you here. The idea that the best way to raise children is to make them the property of two people who at least once had sex... IDK about that model 😬 maybe just no General too, normative measures of success in a culture of exploitation and hate... gonna pass thx so much

  • @arareanddifferenttune3130

    @arareanddifferenttune3130

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Allison_Hartooooh that is very interesting! Bout to grab my bong and jump down this rabbit hole

  • @Sentientmatter8

    @Sentientmatter8

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm a 36 year old millennial (mostly female presenting) and I am called young by everyone and treated as if I am a young kid in college.

  • @nataliaivonica3488
    @nataliaivonica348810 ай бұрын

    seeing the overall excitement surrounding the barbie movie awakened something in me that was asleep since i was probably ten years old. i missed celebrating traditionally girly things, like fairies, pink, and glitter. i realized other women around me were feeling the same and we automatically were creating a comfortable environment for us to exist in. the movie itself was amazing and i’ve been a massive greta gerwig fan for years, but the cultural reaction to it has been by far my favorite thing surrounding it. since it happened, i’ve become so mindful of every decision i make, prioritizing the feeling of safety and being embraced over every other out there. i only have one life, i will spend it not overcomplicating joy.

  • @janeelovely
    @janeelovely10 ай бұрын

    I was born in 97 and consider myself on the "cusp" between millennial and gen z, and I also had a lot of trauma growing up so I learned to become an adult very quickly to escape my childhood, while I watched many of my peers go the opposite way and sink into their childhoods instead. I've blamed the "helicopter parenting" phenomenon for this, but there's so many cultural aspects at play as well. Fascinating video, well done!!!

  • @nyxlocke1229

    @nyxlocke1229

    5 ай бұрын

    I am in the same boat, and feel like sometimes I am teetering on a cliff and got a bit lucky as a 97' baby, because my sister is 2 years younger and has been hit a lot harder by these very issues coupled with a lot of trauma and by how COVID interrupted her development and access to opportunities.

  • @ccw2312
    @ccw231211 ай бұрын

    As a single woman, I have identified with "single woman dinner" way longer than "girl dinner". Because if I want a pb&j for dinner, I don't have a man expecting "meat & potatoes". 🎶Single Woman Dinner🎶 But over the past few years I've tried really hard to identify a grown woman as a woman instead of "girl", because it's always been "that girl who works at the bank with the brown hair". Then I realized, that "girl" is 25 with kids...she's not a girl!

  • @emilyfeagin2673

    @emilyfeagin2673

    11 ай бұрын

    I have had chocolate peanut butter ice cream for dinner once. I was in a relationship. It was the end of a long hot day. I did not feel like cooking for myself let alone another adult who had two hands and decent culinary skills himself So I had ice cream. I don’t remember what he had.

  • @kaedatiger

    @kaedatiger

    10 ай бұрын

    Relatable, I try to treat women as women rather than girls because of how I feel when (usually elder) people tell me I'm "too young" to know pain. I'm 32 years old and still talked to like a teenager by the customers at my retail job. I've only been able-bodied since recovering from major surgery in 2020, I own two walkers, three walking sticks, and at least four canes because I had mobility issues for 15 years that got progressively worse, but the fact that I couldn't stand up without being in tremendous pain didn't stop old ladies from speaking disrespectfully to me because I dared to sit down on a bus. I've learned to avoid older people because it's maddening how little empathy they can have for someone "young".

  • @ardenalexa94

    @ardenalexa94

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kaedatigerI have chronic pain and can relate to a lot of what you’re saying. I get judged at times for not “doing enough” by people who don’t know me well enough to judge me. Thinking because I’m young that I’m just making excuses to not do much. But some days, I can’t do much more than take care of my pets, cook my food and brush my teeth.

  • @brieoshiro

    @brieoshiro

    10 ай бұрын

    @@emilyfeagin2673 In my house we have "free for all" dinners sometimes. It's leftovers or whatever we want to make or buy. My kid is 13 and is capable of feeding himself if necessary. My husband is also a grown man and capable. If I don't want to cook (I enjoy it usually) I tell them they're on their own and we all have at it lol

  • @Rainbowssugar

    @Rainbowssugar

    10 ай бұрын

    Yo! I resonate with this! Even in my own mind, I’ve had to start reframing how I see myself from “girl” to woman. I still do girly things though ❤

  • @gooseazul
    @gooseazul11 ай бұрын

    So my life changed 2 years ago when I decided I'm allowed to feel grown despite the fact I've no husband or kids. Because despite my best efforts to be lovable and despite my responsibility and success in other parts of my life, my family doesn't see you as autonomous and grown until you've got a ring and a baby bump. -add to that I'm autistic and have a young face. The wife and mother aspects of adulthood are out of my reach and I often feel like a feral goblin child working all the overtime at the hospital pharmacy and then coming home to this empty house. Am I an adult because I cook a delicious turkey dinner for a table of friends? Or am I a child because I've got no family around the table? Last year, my parents came to my friendsgiving. And I'm not mad, but my mom actually really hurt my heart. Near the end, she hugged me and broke down sobbing. "You're grown. You're gonna be ok. I can feel ok leaving you and you're gonna be alright. You have friends and you can host and your turkey was as good as mine and now I can rest easy knowing you'll be alright when we move." They moved to Arizona 5 months later. I was 28. I've lived on my own since 20. Got the hospital job at 21. Bought the house at 22. Every time I've dreamed of marriage and babies she's rained on my parade. The fact she sobbed on my shoulder, years after I'd decided I'm grown and declared me finally grown? My lord it was a profound insult. I love my parents, but they infantalize and they can be brutal.

  • @MintyDragonfly

    @MintyDragonfly

    11 ай бұрын

    A lot of parents of people around our age have been parents since they were very young themselves, their “maturity” has been linked to their being parents since they only just entered adulthood themselves. A lot of parents cling to that idea of protectiveness and parenting because that is how they have defined themselves as adults for as long as they can remember and as such infantilise their adult children because they can’t let go of that identity. That isn’t to forgive her for not recognising you and your maturity until that moment, far from it - it’s a level of self-involvement and an inability to see outside of themselves that often typifies the generations before ours - they were never encouraged nor expected to look outside themselves because the importance in their youth was directly focused on hitting those milestones, so they often haven’t taken the time to do so.

  • @tuttochiaramentechiaro

    @tuttochiaramentechiaro

    11 ай бұрын

    THIS.

  • @chilanya

    @chilanya

    11 ай бұрын

    my mum had similar 'compliments' for me (single woman, probably ace) when i was was about 40. it didn't feel like a compliment.

  • @wandaruth3833

    @wandaruth3833

    11 ай бұрын

    Tbh I have been feeling lately like if you are a woman you just can’t win in this world. Like…okay I don’t have a degree (yay controlling parents and a mother who didn’t want me to outshine her!) but I ended up marrying someone who I swear has got to be either a benevolent extraterrestrial or a very kind robot because ain’t NO man so good as him, and we own our own house outright, and we don’t have debt…but guess what people still treat me like I am two years old. It doesn’t matter how much you succeed. It doesn’t matter if you break the rules or if you stick to them. It doesn’t matter what you do. If you are AFAB or you are a woman you will never win, and you will always be treated like a baby by a large portion of society. No matter how mature you are, no matter how much money you earn, even if you completely follow the stupid patriarchal rules to the letter you’re STILL going to lose. So make sure you have as much fun in life as possible.

  • @sarcodonblue2876

    @sarcodonblue2876

    11 ай бұрын

    Having children doesn't make a person mature and there are planty of parents who pass their trauma and dysfunction on to their kids and never get therapy. I am autistic and don't have a house or a job and so I think you are doing well.

  • @zombiezed4927
    @zombiezed49276 ай бұрын

    Speaking as a disabled person apart of the LGBTQ+ community thank you for bringing up how much disabled women are infantalized, it is something I do not see enough people talking about. Disabled people are often pushed to the side or forgotten about in discussions like this even if it is important to include us. I am someone who is highly unlikely to ever have an independent life due to the nature of my disabilities, as of this moment I am dependent on my parents as if I were still a child, and I am grateful to them for taking care of me while not infantalizing me. It is still hard to come to terms with, I do not feel as connected with my peers as most, and the way I am having to live is frequently demonized. Even though I know my circumstances are different than those experiencing that demonization I cannot help but to feel ashamed at times. On top of it all, the infantalization of people like me does not help with those feelings of shame and inadequacy, we live in a world built around able-bodied people, we are often fighting just to have the most basic accomodations, and being ignored when we are upset because those accommodations are frequently taken away from us. Our voices are tuned out because many people take us as seriously as they would a child, not at all. In short, it's incredibly frustrating, exhausting, and depressing to constantly feel as if you will never be up to par with what society wants from you so it doesn't take you seriously all because of circumstances that were beyond your control so thank you for speaking up about it. Your video was amazing and very well worded (definitely better than how my comment is worded)! I hope you and anyone reading my comment has a wonderful day wherever you may be! Much love!💜💜💜

  • @NattsumiGaming
    @NattsumiGaming10 ай бұрын

    Your transition from Girl Dinner to Adulting back to Girl Dinner at 15:10 is so smooth. Great video~

  • @sparrow.6392
    @sparrow.639211 ай бұрын

    Over the past year I’ve felt more “womanly” than I ever have. In this journey I rejected every single “womanly” thing I was pushed onto. I accepted I didn’t want to date, marry, have children, or even have sex. I changed my space to be for ME, not for whatever imaginary maybe one day boyfriend I might bring over and show him “look, I’m so wife material, look how catering and feminine my space is for you”. I put aside the literally impossible self grooming of my very coarse hair that felt unacceptable to let grow anywhere on my entire body that made me feel disgusting before, even though to this point I am the only one who has ever seen it. Do my parents approve? Nope. Do they keep saying “you will find someone one day”? Yes. But they can’t grasp that I don’t care about that anymore. They think I lack it but in reality I simply don’t WANT it. I’ve never been happier pushing these pressures off of me and doing as ‘adults’ to in ‘making my own decisions’, even if these decisions don’t seem ‘adult’.

  • @luciaradonic5520

    @luciaradonic5520

    11 ай бұрын

    Good for you!! You are the one who knows what's the best for yourself.. keep in mind your ideas may also change and that's ok too.. whatever you decide must be respected.. enjoy your life!

  • @stillfangirlingtoday1468

    @stillfangirlingtoday1468

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@Weyland_Punani How you take care of your own space is a direct reflection of who you are as a person and women are expected to be just feminine enough but not "girly" or, god forbid, "offensive". Her statement has many layers, but it means literally what she said: catering to male expectation of what a woman should be by, for example, making conscious choices to remove their favorite boy band poster or their most prized stuffed toys so that any potential male partner doesn't freak out over it instead of claiming their hobbies and interests. Maybe even choosing an unassuming colour palette to give off a "sweet and kind" impression. The fact you were unable to understand the deph of her statement shows how unaware and privileged you're as a man. While we are expected to ignore and even expect a trashy and smelly room, women can't afford being that careless, even mildly.

  • @nadinees.4002

    @nadinees.4002

    11 ай бұрын

    Oh my! I can relate to you in so many levels

  • @wintersprite

    @wintersprite

    11 ай бұрын

    If I ever found a guy to be in a relationship with, he would have to be supportive of my large doll and stuffed animal collection. I’m 37 and I’ve never stopped loving them.

  • @michellestoaevertsson3830

    @michellestoaevertsson3830

    11 ай бұрын

    @@wintersprite Fr, it you're going to spend that much time with someone, they have to be supportive of what you're into.

  • @perfectlyhopeless
    @perfectlyhopeless11 ай бұрын

    I'm 25, live with my dad and grandparents, have yet to finish my college education thanks to ADHD + Pandemic, and barely make enough money to cover my own bills, let alone contribute to the household. By the time my dad was my age, I was a two year old infant and he had a stable job and had bought a house. Thinking about how it was just in the 90s that such things were capable is truly baffling to me

  • @donkeytime4263

    @donkeytime4263

    11 ай бұрын

    They probably counted Pennie’s and didn’t go out to eat or get Starbucks everyday

  • @saged1513

    @saged1513

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm 25, just moved back in with parents and am still struggling to get a associates degree(ADHD is fuuuun). I feel ya...

  • @firelordoregano5632

    @firelordoregano5632

    11 ай бұрын

    @@donkeytime4263they probably weren’t living through one of of the worst economic recessions in history, entering an extremely oversaturated labor market, or going into life long debt to get a college degree. but no, i’m sure all young adults are just all collectively eating out all the time despite the fact that their full paycheck barely covers rent.

  • @ellaizcool

    @ellaizcool

    11 ай бұрын

    @@donkeytime4263and you probably know nothing about the way the economy works at all

  • @rubyrootless7324

    @rubyrootless7324

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@donkeytime4263Look, some people may be like that because dumb people exist, but the majority of people who struggle with money aren't gonna buy a lot of expensive things. You know that. It's just easier to find something to put poor people down with that feels like a moral failure to say they are lesser, than to help them.

  • @emily94762
    @emily9476210 ай бұрын

    I'm a disabled woman. I'm 25, on government disability where I get less than minimum wage per month, and I can't even cohabitate with my boyfriend because my income will be cut by roughly 30% if we live together. The things that you've said I see even more within the disabled community than my abled-bodied peers (and, of course, the intersection between being queer, being disabled, and being a woman). I always joke with one of my close friends that we're basically glorified teenagers because we both live our parents, neither of us can drive due to medication or disability, and we're still reliant on our families. It feels like there is no attainable adulthood for me at all, no path forward.

  • @beckyginger3432

    @beckyginger3432

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm in a really similar position but due to having an abusive family I live alone. But I feel stuck as an endless teenager watching my peers out match me

  • @bisexualantigone

    @bisexualantigone

    9 ай бұрын

    there is, being an adult while disabled is still adulthood, you're being an adult cos u are biologically, being behind isn't immature, relying of family isn't immature, i wish u and ur bf the best

  • @kiterafrey
    @kiterafrey10 ай бұрын

    As someone who grew up in poverty with a disabled parent, these markers of adulthood (aside from children and marriage) were never things I would've gotten. So, me having finished college and get a job in law, just living in an apartment married with no children is a perfect adulthood for me. However, I married someone from a different income class who isn't living up to his family's mile markers and I now I see those expectations to get a house, multiple cars, have kids, & me (the breadwinner) become a SAHM are overwhelming. I have no intention to be that, and neither does he (why I love him).

  • @courtneybermack
    @courtneybermack10 ай бұрын

    I'm GenX and I remember when "adulting" first happened -- because it finally gave a word to my flailing. I had jobs, I was renting and nominally paying my bills, but routine life maintenance tasks like going to the post office, unpacking, or getting an oil change were overwhelming. Hyperbole and a Half was my spirit animal! Many of my friends were doing fine, though; this was people starting to recognize the effects of disability, mental health, and executive functioning on life. Even accounting for everything that happened to millennials as a cohort -- and young adults out of college aren't millennials, millennials are in their 30s at least, people keep forgetting that, people with master's degrees were born after 9/11 -- the age of "adulthood" keeps getting pushed back. Not just as defined by hitting all the social markers as you mentioned, but by gaining power and authority in society. Old people with power and money aren't retiring and making space for younger people. They seem to have contempt for younger people for not having what they have - in the environments they've shaped for their own preferences and power. Young people can't buy houses -- because older people and conglomerations buy investment property and drive up prices, and prevent cheap housing from being built. Young people can't get long-term stable jobs -- because older people have changed companies to cut wages and benefits, to convert jobs to gig work, to cut benefits, and to lay people off for funsies. Young people are drowning in student debt that older people didn't have -- because older people had *tons of free money from the government* for state schools on top of much, much cheaper tuition. People do talk about kids these days, and they mean fully grown adults. The absolute nerve. Release your hoarded wealth, you punks. Pay for free school lunch like your kids got. Sell your extra houses. Lower the rent you charge. Retire. Retire. Retire.

  • @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    @user-oj5bw7sl8p

    9 ай бұрын

    Indeed!

  • @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    9 ай бұрын

    Double indeed!

  • @Crouteceleste

    @Crouteceleste

    9 ай бұрын

    exactly !!

  • @aliendeathrocker

    @aliendeathrocker

    8 ай бұрын

    👏👏

  • @Nick-qo8jw
    @Nick-qo8jw7 ай бұрын

    Oh God, I never heard someone talk so much without actually saying anything. Just live your life.

  • @sapphire8644
    @sapphire86447 ай бұрын

    For me personally being enlightened has made me consider feeling ‘adult’ but still allowing myself to access my inner child as well.

  • @jefferyjones8399
    @jefferyjones839911 ай бұрын

    One of the absolute things I love about my generation is how we don't discard our love for things like comics, toys, video games, etc. I know people my age who share these things that make them happy with their own children too. Those of us who don't have kids still buy plushies, watch cartoons, etc. and there's nothing wrong with it.

  • @cbpd89

    @cbpd89

    11 ай бұрын

    There is nothing wrong with it at all! Having kids just gives you an added justification for buying those cute plushies and sharing your favorite games and movies with a new human, but ultimately we still like those things and that's why we do it. People with kids just *only* get to do those things, so they are always longing to watch the movies and do activities that are for adults because they don't get to do those things as much.

  • @jeseAudio

    @jeseAudio

    11 ай бұрын

    There is nothing positive in hedonistic consumption as means of fillimg the void inside

  • @ripwednesdayadams
    @ripwednesdayadams11 ай бұрын

    “I think the use of girl isn't necessarily about the banishment of womanhood but potentially the feeling of not being worthy of it. Women are adults with their shit together. They’re mature, powerful and a lot of young women- particularly millennial women, don't feel like they can claim that title as their own.” This was a gut punch. This is how I feel although I wasn’t able to verbalize it. Like Britney said- “I’m not a girl, not yet a woman.” I haven’t accomplished much in my life although not for lack of trying. I had just started college when my parents lost their jobs on the same day in 2008. The US didn’t fully recover from the recession until 2016. Then Covid happened in 2020. All of these events impacted millennials in a different way than the other generations. I have never known financial security. My entire adult life has been solely about survival. I don’t think I’ll be able to buy a home. I’m an adult woman but I don’t feel like a woman. Or at least how I imagined womanhood. Thank you for discussing this topic with nuance and care. So many people just assume millennial women are trying to appear younger which is disingenuous at best. I’m not saying it doesn’t happen but many people wouldn’t bother digging deeper.

  • @hannabeth151

    @hannabeth151

    10 ай бұрын

    I almost feel like this is the same with families and children, like I'd love to have a kid! But I'm economically child free because there's no way I could probably ever buy a house, give the promise of college when i couldn't get there myself, also, hesitant to marry because of financial strain and the fear of failure. And I'm almost 30!

  • @theinkyspoon

    @theinkyspoon

    10 ай бұрын

    I recently read somewhere about millenials not actually *knowing* what adult, in our time, means and actually looks like. because all we have is expectations of what it means to be adult from earlier generations, but that doesnt apply anymore. The world has changed so much that there is no role model for what becoming an adult looks like now.

  • @ligeialovelace

    @ligeialovelace

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@theinkyspoon That makes a lot of sense. The world is changing so quickly, especially now with the Internet, that there is no blueprint anymore

  • @rebeccaanne3083

    @rebeccaanne3083

    10 ай бұрын

    @@theinkyspoonsuch a great point. Needs a redefinition

  • @blobyeol27i72

    @blobyeol27i72

    10 ай бұрын

    it's because we're young that we don't feel "worthy" or "I haven't accomplished much yet" 🤷‍♀ every generation of young women felt that in their 20s, 30s and that's fine. My grandmother (she's not a babyboomer, she's older than that since she was born at the end of WWII !) even though she was working and had kids at a young age (18) and a "home" with my grandpa (a tiny and broken trailer before they could rent a tiny and old appartment, they bought a house *much later*), didn't feel like a "woman" in her 20s and that's ok

  • @shoppertattoo
    @shoppertattoo10 ай бұрын

    I agreed with most everything you said in this vid. I’m 29 and will turn 30 at the end of the year. I have been dreading it as I have almost none of the “adult stuff” that I thought I was suppose to have at this age. I feel just like I did at 18. I have my dream job, but I’m not rich from it. I have a boyfriend and we live together but we don’t want to get married and we definitely don’t want to have kids. As a millennial I have come to terms that I’ll never own a home. Renting is awful especially not being able to make my home a real home. I hate that I can’t even paint the walls a color I like. Looking around at the state of the world especially post Covid is just depressing. The only things that make me happy are silly “girly” things like mini Bratz dolls and coloring my hair a fun color. So I do think I relate more to being a girl than being a woman. I wouldn’t be able to afford the life my parents had even if I wanted it. The worst part is how much crap millennials get as if it’s our fault that we can’t afford to live life. We’re not the ones who brought on all this inflation and made houses cost 100x their value. Even the idea that “millennials get participation trophies” umm we didn’t give ourselves these trophies?!!! It was gen X and boomers who did that. And they ruined the economy for us too. I do feel worse for gen Z because they are worse off than us and they never even got to have a simple childhood with minimum tech. They’re mostly all chronically online and take themselves too seriously so at least we’re not them 😂

  • @misskarinaleigh

    @misskarinaleigh

    5 ай бұрын

    This 🫶🏼

  • @rosemastinwood1606
    @rosemastinwood160610 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this Rowan! and thank you thank you thank you for talking about the infantilization of disability. Being disabled means that a lot of the agency that is a hallmark of adulthood is off-limits, as I may always need to be taken care of, and my body makes decisions for me that I don't have choices in. I've found that I feel like an adult on "good days", when I feel like I have still make a life that is happy and fulfilling regardless, and on the days where I don't feel like I need help to function "as an adult". But it can be so hard to have that vision of agency pulled away from you, even if you've tried to be as careful as possible and it feels like you've done everything right.

  • @mrswjr4061
    @mrswjr406110 ай бұрын

    As a Gen X’er girl I can tell you that when I first left home at 17, my roommates and I ate what you call “girl dinners” (ramen, pb & crackers, anything wrapped in a tortilla, frozen pizza) because we were BROKE af, we weren’t trying to recapture our girlhood or “deviate from societal standards”, we were just trying to ease the hunger pains🤣

  • @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    @-._.-KRiS-._.-

    9 ай бұрын

    Xennial here...and the only reason we ate like that is because we weren't told how cheap rice, beans, and frozen vegetables were for stir frying with a little soy sauce. I could have eaten like a queen back when I only had $5.00 a month to spend on food instead of spending it all on ramen noodles and only having one package a day to make it last all month.

  • @SpaceTrashCrash

    @SpaceTrashCrash

    9 ай бұрын

    @@-._.-KRiS-._.- - I'm also a xennial, and I believe we all knew about bean, rice, and stir fry in our youth. $5/month could not have purchased 30 packages of ramen nor a month's worth of beans and rice. I was counting change to buy the most inexpensive food, and $5 could stretch a week of food, eating very little. You're exaggerating financially, and wrongfully acting as if we had no knowledge of healthy food.

  • @SpaceTrashCrash

    @SpaceTrashCrash

    9 ай бұрын

    Crackers, tortillas, and frozen pizza were expensive luxury foods, not for the broke. I was buying dry beans, rice, oats, and discounted produce. Prepared foods are too expensive for actually broke people. People ate junk food, because they wanted to, even though it costed much more money.

  • @mrswjr4061

    @mrswjr4061

    9 ай бұрын

    @@SpaceTrashCrash good for you if you had time to make a pot of beans when you were a teenager. in the ‘80s, Totino frozen pizzas were normally 2/$1…4/$1 on sale, ramen was 20/$1 on sale, frozen pot pies could be found at 4/$1. Mac and cheese was pretty cheap but we couldn’t always buy milk and butter. Cheese and tortillas were a splurge. Sure it is all processed foods but as teenagers we didn’t care, plus no one talked about the evils of processed foods back then.

  • @harleyloraine7699

    @harleyloraine7699

    9 ай бұрын

    About to be 21 and I have this thought every time I see a girl dinner tiktok. I'm not reclaiming my childhood I'm just trying to survive by throwing together whatevers in my kitchen

  • @chestersnap
    @chestersnap11 ай бұрын

    I accidentally chose to watch this while eating a huge bowl of popcorn for dinner. I'm very pleased with the coincidence

  • @blondbraid7986

    @blondbraid7986

    11 ай бұрын

    And you can eat just popcorn for dinner and not be hungry again 10 minutes later?!

  • @lanagustafson1700

    @lanagustafson1700

    11 ай бұрын

    A huge bowl of popcorn is my go to backup plan when I haven’t gone to the grocery store for 3 weeks

  • @SaerBear5

    @SaerBear5

    11 ай бұрын

    I watched it while eating a bag of chips for lunch!

  • @missybarbour6885
    @missybarbour68859 ай бұрын

    "If growing up means it would be Beneath my dignity to climb a tree I'll never grow up! Never grow up! Never grow up! Not Me!"

  • @spyrothetimelord
    @spyrothetimelord10 ай бұрын

    tbh I say this as a person who was considered Gen z growing up, then right after university I was considered a millennial because they changed stuff around, but I really liked this video and how you touched on all aspects. The thing you mentioned at the end too kind of highlights it: it's crazy to me to see posts about how "cringe" it is to be 30 and writing fanfic, or going to conventions, collecting merch, etc, as if our interests have an expiry date. Especially when the backbone of the younger generation's ability to enjoy those same things comes from those "cringe" adults spending money in those interests or writing/creating fanwork for them. I've also been struggling recently with the identity of my actual age. I'm only 27, but the lack of those milestones as well as something akin to a generational mentality still has me feeling very distinctly like I'm 24. Very insightful video ♥︎

  • @morticiahavisham
    @morticiahavisham11 ай бұрын

    mom: [consistent “what’re you doing with your life” comments] me: [gets married] mom: I’m glad you’ve found your path. 😊 me: literally nothing in my life is different then when he was just my boyfriend but a’ight cool glad I’m an Adult™ in your eyes now 🙃

  • @cerebrumexcrement

    @cerebrumexcrement

    11 ай бұрын

    thats my mom too, but im still looking for a rich husband.

  • @S3nCh4n

    @S3nCh4n

    11 ай бұрын

    To be fair what can you really achieve in life as a woman than have kids? Unless you are already in a promising career that is...

  • @fossilfighters101

    @fossilfighters101

    11 ай бұрын

    @@S3nCh4n have gay sex, for one

  • @fossilfighters101

    @fossilfighters101

    11 ай бұрын

    @@S3nCh4n kiss girls, for two

  • @fossilfighters101

    @fossilfighters101

    11 ай бұрын

    @@S3nCh4n protest, vote, call your representatives, consume as ethically as possible, for 3, 4, and 5

  • @gemstonerose4648
    @gemstonerose464811 ай бұрын

    I'm a 30-year-old woman on the brink of getting her PhD and am still sometimes surprised when I'm referred to as a woman. I make it a point of calling myself a woman, specifically in professional settings to not unconsciously dismiss my own standing.

  • @wowlookatthathugestringof8s

    @wowlookatthathugestringof8s

    11 ай бұрын

    Right. One thing that's absent from this discussion is that people call themselves "girl" no matter their age, but they CLEARLY have an internal concept of what "girl" means socially because they'd never talk about other adult female people (I know that descriptor is bulky sorry) that way. Like, I don't think you would ever refer to a middle-aged woman as "that girl over there" if you had to point her out to someone. You would definitely never use it to introduce or describe another person in formal situations because when you apply it to another person it's condescending. Congratulations on nearing the completion of your PhD!

  • @cbpd89

    @cbpd89

    11 ай бұрын

    Right on!

  • @Gambole

    @Gambole

    11 ай бұрын

    We have an admin team who are exclusively female and the almost exclusively male management team refer to them as the girls in the office. As one of the management team I find this cringey and condescending. It feels like they’re implying their jobs are less important and therefore it’s just a bunch of girlies working them. I always refer to them collectively as the admin team or something similar. The term woman to me, infers adulthood, independence and autonomy. You can be a woman any way you want to be.

  • @gemstonerose4648

    @gemstonerose4648

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Gambole Kinda opposite of that, the team that manages our research centre is all woman. And it's just blanketly accepted (by men and women in every level) that they are the only reason why things get done at all, and that they're all beyond exceptional. One of the team is retiring next month and seems they're going to need at least 2 people to even try to replace her

  • @jordanabasham
    @jordanabasham9 ай бұрын

    As a 21 y/o girl who is disabled and often mistaken for a kid because of my appearance, this is so accurate. Always being underestimated by society I feel like I have to work extra hard to be at the same level as most adults. Working 7 days a week for months and still can’t afford to live on my own is outrageous! As well as the feeling of not doing enough compared to adults in the past, not being seen as mature enough, not being able to get out and live the “normal adult life.” So to hear that other women in general are struggling the same is really comforting. I hope our generation manages to take the power back and get over all of our addictions and giving up and go back to the gen z everyone hyped us up to be. I hope we can make society give us more room because it’s becoming too much to handle all at once!

  • @weeaboh
    @weeaboh7 ай бұрын

    I am 30 years old. i have a full time office job. i pay for health insurance. i do my taxes. i live alone and pay my own rent. I have checked off enough boxes to categorize myself as a fully grown adult, and yet i still feel uncomfortable calling myself a "woman" and instead fall back to "girl" every time. ive known on some sort of abstract level why i feel this way, but this video finally puts it into words.

  • @kavehsankles
    @kavehsankles11 ай бұрын

    Yeah it can be really hard as a disabled woman to have access to a lot of the markers of adulthood. I also think I'm neurodivergent which compounds the problem. Even though I'm in my late 20s I don't feel like a real adult. I've seen some of my friends reach different milestones like getting a mortgage or having children, and even though I think I've done really well by getting married and being able to rent somewhere and cook and clean (sometimes), all that other stuff is terrifying to me lmao. I've been hyperfixating on Barbie recently with the film coming out, and our flat is full of Pokémon plushes, but I'm just fully embracing my childish side, it's very freeing! Anyway, love the video as usual Rowan! 💙

  • @maplepainttube8158

    @maplepainttube8158

    11 ай бұрын

    And it can be very easy to move the goal posts on yourself and compare ourselves to others. Like even in my eyes, you are so much more a successful adult to me because you have moved out and gotten married, where I still live with my parents. And for a while thanks to mental health I struggled to find a job and used to view that as adulthood, but now that I have one, I just moved the markers on myself and still don't feel like I'm an adult since I do still live with my parents.

  • @kavehsankles

    @kavehsankles

    11 ай бұрын

    @@maplepainttube8158 aww, yeah it's so easy to see what someone else does as being better than what we ourselves can do, and there will always be things that we see other people do and think "why can't I do that?", Like I don't think I'll ever be able to work, so to me that's a big thing and I think it's great that you're able to do that. It's good to have goals, but I think we often downplay the things we've achieved, so maybe we should both give ourselves more credit! 💕

  • @CampingforCool41

    @CampingforCool41

    11 ай бұрын

    I’m in my late 20’s and never even been on a date so I’d say you are doing fine

  • @nerdycurls6253

    @nerdycurls6253

    11 ай бұрын

    I completely understand what you mean and I just want to say you're doing amazing in my eyes. My current goal is to be able to afford my own place so I can proudly display my "childish" likes, I'm also in my late 20s and feel so trapped. For me adulthood has always been about freedom to be who you want.

  • @elleofmusic
    @elleofmusic11 ай бұрын

    There really is so much open nastiness towards women 30+ coming from younger women these days, and it's truly bizarre. "Pay your taxes, go feed your children!" the 18 year-old girls shout at us, indistinguishable from the "get back in the kitchen and make me a sandwich" lines we grew up expecting from men. They don't care when I point out that I'm a disabled lesbian who couldn't have kids if I wanted them, they just call me a hag and tell me to get out of *checks notes* the House of the Dragon fandom. 😐 Just what are they going to do when they're my age?? Another aspect of this self-infantilization is the way teens/20s cling to the idea of being minors as a way to avoid any and all accountability. The whole myth of "your brain isn't done developing until 25" has certainly become popular with this crowd. I can of course sympathize with feeling like you're not an adult regardless of age. I've been disabled since I was teen, I've never lived away from my mother, I didn't have my own income until I was 29, and I'll never be able to afford a car, let alone a house. But some of these young people are weaponizing their feelings and demanding that the whole world spoil them like their parents must have. It's exhausting to have to deal with.

  • @brunaschroeder7517

    @brunaschroeder7517

    10 ай бұрын

    You just described kpop fans...

  • @dmb1745

    @dmb1745

    10 ай бұрын

    Gen Zs are nowhere near as progressive as the stereotypes make them out to be. They're just as misogynistic and ageist as older generations.

  • @bellamango6708

    @bellamango6708

    10 ай бұрын

    Then stop reinforcing it even as a joke. It's not funny, and it doesn't make your arguments any better.

  • @bonelia8370

    @bonelia8370

    10 ай бұрын

    I mean at latest your brain finishes developing at 30 its not really a myth theres just a huge variance for it That being said its pretty disrespectful how people have spoken to you, i can gladly say ive never patronised a stranger who is older than me Youre allowed to have hobbies, the internet belonged to gen X before anyone and youre damn right my dad in his mid 40s still plays wow lol, hobbies are reflective of our youth more than anything and as we get older i truly believe we never lose love for those hobbies, theyre ours.

  • @kevoiscreepy
    @kevoiscreepy10 ай бұрын

    The way you take all these things and connect the dots while telling us in a super focused and easy to follow way is impressive!

  • @MillieBee11
    @MillieBee119 ай бұрын

    I've been side-eyeing this video in my recommendeds for days now because I thought it was going to be a tirade complaining about millennials daring to act childish and silly and frivolous (because how dare women have fun?) and instead I'm now mashing the Like button. I think you hit the nail on the head. Thank you for sharing and enjoy your girl dinner. ❤️

  • @AlleenLoveHope

    @AlleenLoveHope

    8 ай бұрын

    same! i was open to hearing a different perspective but am sure glad the direction it took

  • @CalmClamFam

    @CalmClamFam

    2 ай бұрын

    Yeah the thumbnail was a bit misleading but thankfully I watched another video on this channel and knew that the message would be different

  • @KeshiaWarren
    @KeshiaWarren11 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate your take! As a disabled 32 year old woman, I've been struggling with feeling incredibly worthless and behind. I love the idea of making my own milestones. Day of treatment beginning, day of treatment ending, first outdoor adventure since years of bed-ridden sickness, first time I forgot it wasnt long ago when I couldn't do stairs! I am still gaining my strength, but I get up every single day! For over a decade, I could not. Yeah, I think I'm adult enough in my own experiences. Thank you :)

  • @gluckbibor2839

    @gluckbibor2839

    10 ай бұрын

    I am so happy you're getting better ❤️ I'm rooting for you. I'm recovering from something different, but I totally agree with the "my own milestones" take, and if you will allow this: We got this!

  • @KeshiaWarren

    @KeshiaWarren

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gluckbibor2839 I'm rooting for you right back! We *have* got this! I appreciate you

  • @victoriajankowski1197
    @victoriajankowski119711 ай бұрын

    As a 41 year old who still doesn't know what I want to be when I grow up this video is enlightening... It's not just me

  • @eg4441

    @eg4441

    11 ай бұрын

    i'm only 21 but what i've learned from various adults is that everyone's a fucking liar trying their best, acting like they have their shit together when they never do. i wish more of us could whole heartedly say fuck it, because clearly we all know nothing but we lie about it and belittle others and make up bullshit to gauge our life experience. each day i despise more and more letting anyone but myself and my loved ones tell me how to live my life or how i should feel about where i am. we could die from a frea accident at any moment, we could lose our loved ones to anything at anytime. spending time letting other lost souls that are confused as we are influence how we feel about our own lives isn't worth it. FUCK IT

  • @MizJaniceResinArt

    @MizJaniceResinArt

    11 ай бұрын

    Lol. I'll be 55 in a few weeks...I always looked forward to being 50, cuz then I'd have it all figured out 😂 I'm Just starting to scratch the surface

  • @Tijggie82

    @Tijggie82

    11 ай бұрын

    same (41 year old)!!! wonder what I'll be doing in the future...

  • @HaleyMary

    @HaleyMary

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm 38 and I still don't have it all figured out. Honestly, it's performance art of bust. Besides, life is short enough as it is, we all should live our passions in life. If you have a dream, go for it!

  • @laurenwalker1048

    @laurenwalker1048

    11 ай бұрын

    I’m 33 and I want to be a space cowboy.

  • @natsmith303
    @natsmith3037 ай бұрын

    "There's no point in being grown-up if you can't be childish sometimes." -Doctor Who

  • @john.dough.
    @john.dough.10 ай бұрын

    this is a fantastic video essay. Every point you've made is very well supported. Fantastic work.

  • @martianpudding9522
    @martianpudding952211 ай бұрын

    As a rehabilitated NLOG I find something kind of empowering in using girl as an adjective in this way. Like I didn't feel like I could celebrate girlhood when I was one so it can feel freeing to do it now even though it doesn't literally apply to me anymore

  • @ellaizcool

    @ellaizcool

    11 ай бұрын

    exactly !!!!!!!! the milennials literally shamed all forms of stereotypical femininity the last 15 years so people are now calling everything “girl” because they are making up for lost time. idk why it has to be considered infantilization when it is very clearly about being happy and comfortable in femininity, even if it doesn’t look how it’s “supposed to”. it’s a way for feminine people to enjoy the little mundane things by embracing the “dumb girl” stuff that we were always shamed for

  • @miriam7192

    @miriam7192

    11 ай бұрын

    i am having the time of my life reclaiming and enjoying all the things i thought i was 'above' when i was NLOG, i'm just happy i get to be a girl.

  • @ruckly1241
    @ruckly124111 ай бұрын

    Recently, I was visiting my in-laws and randomly thought "I hope they go easy on me, because I clearly don't know what I'm doing." Now, my in-laws haven't given me any reason to worry about their judgment; they are lovely people and I know they think highly of me. The thought was less about external judgment and more about internal uncertainty. I'm an elder millennial. I'm already in my 40's. I have a job. I have kids. Unlike many of my generation, I'm a homeowner. And yet I still don't feel like I know what I'm doing. Whatever certainty or security society told me was suppose to accompany being an adult, well, it just didn't happen. I feel just as uncertain and insecure as I did in my early 20's. It seems to go hand-in-hand with the weird cultural stasis that has happened over the last twenty years. Our political and cultural leaders have been the same, so we are still living under the world they created, a world we can't change. The 60 year-olds who used to rule over us are now 80 year-olds who still rule over us. Our position in society hasn't changed. We've all just gotten older.

  • @dorian417

    @dorian417

    10 ай бұрын

    Wow, the last paragraph is so true especially.

  • @kulaniwarner7262

    @kulaniwarner7262

    10 ай бұрын

    No one knows exactly what they're doing.

  • @JehanineMelmoth

    @JehanineMelmoth

    10 ай бұрын

    Isn’t this the human condition?

  • @greatedges

    @greatedges

    10 ай бұрын

    @@JehanineMelmothYes!

  • @axewalk

    @axewalk

    10 ай бұрын

    I so feel this as another older millenial

  • @elinebrouwer3259
    @elinebrouwer325910 ай бұрын

    I don't fear being an adult. What's really diffucult though is that I've spent the majority of my life struggling with mental health issues, being abused by my supposed-to-become husband for 10 years leading to CPTSD. It was impossible for me to even finish school so I'm 35 and finishing up on the things I was aupposed to do 15 years ago. I've spent the last 5 years trying to enjoy the things I should've done when I was much younger. My body is deteriorating before I even reach traditional adulthood markers. It's depressing and frustrating

  • @JJ-yn4cj
    @JJ-yn4cj9 ай бұрын

    There is a huge difference between being able to do what makes you happy vs being irresponsible. As long as you are paying your own bills and you don't have your momma clean your home, no one should care.

  • @rararasputin1847
    @rararasputin184710 ай бұрын

    speaking on the queer experience delaying adolescence, I think this is something I struggle with a lot. I'm 100% aro/ace, and I feel like an alien a lot because most people consider crushes, first kisses, relationships, s*x, marriage, and sometimes children essential parts of growing up. I have never had a crush, kiss, or anything and I cannot see myself living in a future where that is part of my life. it makes accepting the fact that I'm growing up harder, because I feel like I'm stuck in such a childlike way of thinking about sex/relationships.

  • @lemurlover7975

    @lemurlover7975

    10 ай бұрын

    Don't worry. You are not alone. I am asexual too. I feel mostly like a grown up but it can be hard even as a 40 year old for people to tell me that I am not truly a woman until I have had sex, gotten married and had children. They are sometimes thinking of me as adult with my masters degrees but sometimes to even with those because they have not resulted in jobs despite all of my efforts. They also tell me that I ought to do it in that order if they are not evangelical Christians even though I believe in abstinence and I am content to practice abstinence and celibacy as I feel heteroromantic feelings at times that may or may not eventually lead to some sort of grey heterosexual marriage. Mostly without sex but might have it sometimes like once per year if we feel like it, or maybe not at all. I do not know because I never did it before. But they will tell me how my sex drive is going to go way up once I am married and I am going to want sex 5 times a day which sounds horrible and something I wouldn't want to happen to me as an asexual girl. I have a hard time imagining kissing, crushes etc in my future too. It sounds gross to me usually. Although I have developed feelings for people at times and wanted to kiss them which I mentioned and then rather than slowly develop a relationship with me, they attacked me violently by rape with no kissing. Then I had seizures, bled a lot and felt like I was dying or tried to commit suicide after the rape and seizures and paralysis. Fortunately I survived each of those times but I think it makes me mostly feel like kissing is either gross or dangerous for me, an activity that could kill me or make me sick from the germs in people's mouths. I just have to accept that other people do this, and it's important for them. But that has nothing to do with me and my academic career and stuff I am trying to publish as an asexual celibate woman on a mission to take care of my health and get the medical insurance I need to handle my seizure disorder while continuing to try to get into PhD programs in the Environmental Sciences. I think I get infantilized a lot from things like she said, being female, being disabled, and being seen as Hispanic even though my DNA says I am mostly White with Hispanic and Asian heritage mixed in which is also really cool. People over emphasize my Hispanic stuff and my Hispanic - sounding name, and expect me to speak Spanish when I was raised as a White person, which means I can't really speak Spanish. Anyway I have been waiting my entire life to have the money and the resources to go to a specialist to get a doctor to diagnose me with an EEG for my seizures which is about to happen in a few weeks. Then I have to move to another state to see another doctor because my doctor is leaving the practice and I was denied Medicaid 3 times and I need to move to a state that has expanded Medicaid to include single adults living in poverty and not just those who the state has decided are disabled enough to not work. So I will technically be homeless and qualify under the government as living in poverty and renting in Airbnbs as I go to grad school online as I continue to look for work and try to get myself health care in this other state. During that time I can also apply for PhDs which will pay me to teach undergraduate classes and will give me health care and insurance. My current college does not automatically give students health insurance and I can't afford theirs or any other insurance for sale out there in my state. I live in a state that limited Medicaid rather than expanding it. I am paying for my EEG with donations I got on GoFundMe. I did Instagram live fees about how I survived human trafficking in my childhood and what I did for my thesis for my past masters degree in Sustainability. Then I asked for donations, through a friend's Instagram account because she offered to help and I was unable to raise money through my own campaign on my own Instagram. So that is how adulting is for me. Pretty hard to survive. But I get better at it every day. Locking the door to your bedroom and barricading it is very important because people will try to rape and murder you for your entire life as a single celibate asexual woman. You will get badly hurt if the rape does happen, and no one will provide you with any support. Most people won't believe anything bad has happened to you. The very people who you go to for support may scream at you, beat you, grope or rape you themselves or get a guy they know to rape you so they receive benefits for themselves (women will do all this too, not just men). You will struggle to heal from all the torture. So I hope that you get a good door lock like the ones you can put into the door frame wherever you travel to. You can find them on Amazon. Look up fork lock. You can make a lock out of a fork. Using a big piece of furniture like a desk is a good barricade. A backpack can be knocked over easily. Even if there is a glass of water sitting on the backpack that smashes on the floor when they try to break in your room to rape you, it's still not as good as a lock. I also got a pole from Brinks which fits into the doorknob of the door and has a foot to create a block. Plus, don't forget doorstops. And go to bed with a knife tucked under your pillow and/or a pepper spray within easy reach. I haven't used the pepper spray on the rapists and I got conned out of using it and then got raped anyway. I haven't used a taser pen in my bed but maybe it could work. It just looks scary to them so I use it to scare men off in the day time if they want to rape me. I worry if I put it in my bed, I might accidentally tase myself and that would not help with all of my sleep related seizures and nightmares and flashbacks from PTSD. But knives are easier to use, if someone climbs in your bed to rape you before you can get out of your bed and run away, and they are effective to stop a rape if you stab someone in the shoulder. I just used a pocket knife with a 1 inch blade. Just don't cut a major artery and you shouldn't get into any trouble and put in jail for use of excessive force. My friend got arrested for defending herself from a rapist and then the police abused her and they killed her baby in the prison which is fetus homicide. Police brutality is severe against us. You have to talk your way out of a lot of situations without the use of any type of force so it's good to learn persuasion and practicing at home how to stick up for yourself. But with rapists who are in the process of trying to rape you, you have to use force. I tried talking but it definitely doesn't work at all. Just know that the police might try to arrest you for defending yourself from a rapist because they want you to be a weak pushover or be the property of some man. They will actually ask you whose property you are, and who you belong to, as if you are a slave. They don't want to see you as a human being in your own right. I found the best answer to this is, "I belong to God and I am the property of God." They hate that. Then if they ask for another answer I say, "I belong to myself and I am the property of myself." But since I am Christian, I say, "God made me, and decided I should be embodied in this body but my soul was made by Him and belongs to Him and will return to Him when I die and leave the body behind on the Earth. This body is the property of my soul, temporarily, until it turns to dust and then it belongs to God again once it's dust and my soul has left it." But campus police are less misogynistic and male dominated heirarchy than city police, so you'd better get to a campus and stay there as long as possible, living there if you can. Campus police try to protect all the students equally without preferring to protect men more than women, or letting women get tortured or molesting women themselves. The campus police may have another problem, though, which is racism. Stay away from Palmer College of Chiropractic because it is full of rapists and even child molesters based on my experience there in California. Avoid work trades, world wide opportunities on organic farms, camping or park hosting alone in a tent, women's shelters, homeless shelters, churches that pretend to help homeless women but actually just want to rape homeless women, Catholic male clergy, and so on because these will all lead to rape, like they did with me. You can stay in safe Airbnbs with 5 star ratings from other women to avoid rapists. If only men stayed there, you don't know if it will be safe for you. I only met one host who tried to rape me in the Airbnb but he failed because I locked myself in the bathroom. Then I reported him and they banned him from Airbnb. If you stay in backpacker hostels, please stay in the all girl dorms only and immediately report to staff if you hear that guys in the mixed gender dorms are trying to have an orgy and you hear women saying no because someone is about to get raped and you need to throw then out. If a rapist in the backpacker hostel starts to stalk you and wants sex, tell the staff. If staff refuse to help, lock yourself in the bathroom and call police to arrest them. Here is the domestic violence hotline I use to recover from all my trauma. I hope it helps you. :) CARDV 1-541-754-0110. Open 24-7 in Oregon, USA.

  • @rararasputin1847

    @rararasputin1847

    10 ай бұрын

    @@lemurlover7975 Wow. That's such a crazy story. I'm so sorry to hear about all the horrible experiences you've been through, it's so sad that nowhere on Earth is safe from such archaic crimes, even the richest country in the world. It's so annoying how much more aro/ace people have to do to be perceived the same as an allo person. It sounds like you are very well educated and on your way to getting a PhD and people still don't even respect you just because you don't follow the "expected" route of a woman (marriage, kids). It's crazy just how many hoops you have to jump through just to survive and live as a single, childless person in America. And how many hoops women have to jump through just to not be taken advantage of. I really wish there were better systems for this but it only seems like it's getting worse. I wish you the best of luck on your EEG. Thanks for all your advice and for sharing your story, it was very courageous of you

  • @EmeraldAshesAudio

    @EmeraldAshesAudio

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm a lesbian, and I just sort of assumed I was bi in my teens & early 20s. My dating history is practically non-existent, since I would date a guy for like 2 weeks and then lose all interest without understanding why. It definitely leads to a feeling that I'm immature and behind in some ways.

  • @Nyctophora

    @Nyctophora

    9 ай бұрын

    @@lemurlover7975 Thank you for sharing your story. I am so sorry for the horror you have gone through. I don't know you personally, but I wanted to say how much I admire your strength. I hope one day we will be able to live our lives without needing to share such matter of fact advice that is, in fact, the embodiment of the horror of being female in this world. Thank you for your help on how to stay safe. I wish we did not need it, but we do. I believe I am probably asexual. But I don't have a life in academia, though it has often appealed. But even if these things weren't true, I feel that we share a commonality in life as women. Thank you, sister.

  • @squarepegfb
    @squarepegfb11 ай бұрын

    Late Gen X here and I still felt like a girl even when I'd got married and bought a home in my 20s. I still felt like a girl when I started my own business, bought a home on my own or achieved substantial goals in my 30s. It was only when I found purpose for my life (in my 40s) that I have felt comfortable recognising myself as and calling myself a woman. Like my adulthood was perpetually postponed until I felt like I knew what I was doing.

  • @faycoleman9023

    @faycoleman9023

    10 ай бұрын

    This is very comforting thank you.

  • @maryschmidt3030

    @maryschmidt3030

    10 ай бұрын

    I think people have always felt like this. They just didn’t realize that everyone else does as well because there was no social media to be constantly pointing it out.

  • @aprilmichel7816
    @aprilmichel78169 ай бұрын

    I noticed two large groups surrounding this whole debate (a bit of a generalisation, but I think it holds water): the people who were forced to grow up too quickly, who look back at the little childhood they had (or the childhood they didn't get to have) with longing, who find adulting hard because they might be thirty but they have effectively been adults for like eighteen years already - those people love this 'girl ___' trend (if I can call it that) and love being a part of it and the people that were held back and infantilised by their family, who absolutely shudder at the thought of being a kid again because it's not really good now but at least they have autonomy and personal responsibility and _they can be independent, goddamnit_ - those people are very uncomfortable with being lumped into this trend I think that both are, in a way, equally sad, and equally understandable. I can only speak for myself, as I have not experienced the opposite - I find myself firmly in the second group, because that word and what it symbolised was held against me - implicitly, but firmly enough I could feel it. I was the youngest of the whole extended family we talked to, and especially the second youngest, my cousin (who is only two years older btw), really weaponised it against me - being refused the 'privilege' of equality and instead being considered of same maturity as kids four, five years younger than me really messed me up at the age of twelve. I absolutely was coddled, which kinda set me up for failure, and my thoughts and ideas and plans were often dismissed in a way I can't really describe, but it just _reeked_ of "what do you know, you're just a kid" or even better, "your opinion doesn't matter, you are just a kid". "Oh look at her eating her "girl dinner", she's not an adult, she's still a little girl, she's dumb and stupid and useless" - like I say that to myself on regular basis, I don't need another justification. The 'girl dinner' is, for me, just taking a break from being a _proper_ adult. I am still an adult, just one that doesn't have the energy to bother with a nutritionally balanced meal after sitting at work for twelve hours. I know this may seem overblown, but my mother still looks and talks to me like I am twelve sometimes. Doesn't help that I have a baby face, too. It gets exhausting. On the other hand, I feel for the women that may be afraid of advancing to womanhood because honestly, what is there to look for? Very often we have been taught that adulthood sucks, and womanhood also comes with the expectation of securing a husband, birthing and caring for children, being the homemaker - very likely _while_ working full time, because not many families can afford to live off of one paycheck in today's economy. Kids are expensive, yo. Like, no thanks, and this is what has been communicated to me when I was growing up - that this is what I should be. I don't want to be that, and I absolutely understand why others don't want to be that, although I feel like my reasons are probably slightly different.

  • @cleonawallace376
    @cleonawallace3768 ай бұрын

    First time I came across your channel, and really interesting, thanks! I'm 47 so not really part of the millennial generation, but I definitely feel like my life has been shaped by changing demographics and financial crises. I was made redundant age 25 in the wake of 9/11 and that really made me realise how little security there was in career. I moved to Rome and chose a different path with little 'adult' responsibility, and although I got married in 2007, we then delayed having kids due to the financial crash. We were finally able to buy a home when I was 41 years old. I'm now looking towards the crone archetype, but still feel that I am not the best at 'adulting'! I agree that having kids changed how adult I felt, probably just because you have to subsume so much of your own desires into keeping a small person alive. At the end of the day I feel like we're in a period of dramatic societal change, and while I'm totally biased towards creation of an ecosocialist solarpunk future, I do hope that whatever, we can create an entirely new and inclusive set of markers for adulthood.

  • @laynemartin7914
    @laynemartin791411 ай бұрын

    I think the reason for adulting becoming a thing was that we were basically told that when we graduated school we would be adults, but we weren't. we were either unqualified and told we were failing or wasting our potential or unqualified and in debt being told we should have it so much easier than out parents. There was no standard of what we should know by the time we were thrown out into the real world so each of us figured out by failing. It wasn't till we started sharing all the ways we were failing we realized we were failed by our schools and parents and the society that was supposed to be raising us. All those grades and trophies that our parents could show off and blame us for getting didn't actually teach us anything. The Adulting verb is more a blueprint for us to teach eachother and to keep in mind the important things our kids need to know before they are out in the real world. I'm a millenial and my 11yo and 9yo are learning to cook this summer... and my 11yo knows how to do their own laundry and has been doing it for a year now. We are also learning gardening together.

  • @alisonjane7068

    @alisonjane7068

    11 ай бұрын

    i really relate to this. i was a high achiever in school, but my parents didn't teach me how to take care of myself at all, then didn't help me once i was out on my own.

  • @laynemartin7914

    @laynemartin7914

    11 ай бұрын

    @@alisonjane7068 I learned a lot by taking home economics. I took sewing and cooking classes, but I married someone who had a car hyperfixatio. So between the two of us we could take care of a lot of tasks most kids were never taught. But we still had a lot of stumbling. I wish that before becoming adults kids learned the laws they are expected to follow. We don't even have drivers education anymore to learn traffic laws. 😒

  • @elizabeth184
    @elizabeth18411 ай бұрын

    I once jokingly said "adulting is hard" to a man who had been describing his list of basic life things he had to pay for, and he called me condescending for it. It felt harsh to me, but it really highlighted the different experiences of men & women. I'm absolutely sure that he'd never used the word 'adulting' nor thought of his life efforts as being practice or pretending. I think women are just perpetually put down and belittled, even when just trying to live... we're conditioned to think that things are difficult or unattainable: try too hard and you're a bossy ball breaker, try too little and you're an incessant child who can't do things properly.

  • @avematthew

    @avematthew

    11 ай бұрын

    This was my takeaway from this video from the other side. I've had women I've dated or been friends with talk about adulting, and I never understood it. I'm not sure when I became a man, but I did at some point. I sometimes struggle with boyish things, but they never make me question if I am a man. Since masculinity and adulthood are social constructs, if I do it, it definitionally is something a man does. The only times I can think of when people use "boy" for men are contexts with a pretty sexist connotation, that I don't want to be associated with. Like "old boy's club" or "boy's night". I can certainly see how someone would take that as condescending instead of empathetic. Especially given that an important (and toxic) part of growing up for some men is deliberately denying empathy from others, and refusing to show weakness.

  • @emmanarotzky6565

    @emmanarotzky6565

    11 ай бұрын

    That’s weird that he would call it condescending when he’s the one who brought it up by talking about all the ‘adulting’ things he had to do… I think “guy” is more common than “boy”, as an unmarked term for the gender, but for me if I use “guys” instead of “boys” it’s mostly because it’s easier to say. Boy is a weird bouncy sproingy awkward word! But I do still say boy sometimes because it fits with girl and is technically more neutral than guy.

  • @elizabeth184

    @elizabeth184

    11 ай бұрын

    @@avematthew that's really interesting. I've also found that men do resist having empathy quite often .....we don't half have some strange things to deal with in our society 😬

  • @LC-wv7tz

    @LC-wv7tz

    11 ай бұрын

    I think it's just kind of narcissistic and myopic. Literally everyone struggles with not knowing what they are doing or how to make it. That's life. You just force yourself through it. Suffer. Learn and try your best. There's no light switch that happens where things change. At some point, you have to take up the reins of your own life and accept you have complete control and responsibility for it. Do I feel "like an adult"? I don't have any conception of that means as a category. It's not useful or interesting. I'm just me. Get busy with life. I don't understand the millennial woman obsession with labeling themselves and social media trends, marketing and consumer culture. It's very bizarre to me. Everyone is suffering. We're chained to the world and we've all got to pull. You have to learn everything. Every skill, every process, whatever. It's always been that way. It's very stressful and difficult. I don't know what else to say. By what other process do you expect to be able to learn new skills and ways of living other than... going through the uncertainty and stress of navigating a novel scenario? That's literally just life. It's not unique, special, it's not "adulting". It comes off more as an excuse to not try. really don't get it.

  • @Disentropic1

    @Disentropic1

    11 ай бұрын

    As a guy I sort of relate to his reaction. When I moved into my first apartment, my cousin - a young woman around my age - came to visit. I set some water to boil for tea. We sat for maybe 20 minutes and talked and it never occurred to me that the water wasn't boiling. When it did, I went to investigate what was going on. I hadn't realized that I'd needed to set the oven to the highest heat setting to get the water to boil on this stovetop (unlike my old one). When she realized I was having trouble figuring out how to boil water, she laughed in my face. It seemed intended to be in good humour, but honestly I felt a little infantilized. She's the only person I recall ever using the word 'adulting.' Perhaps some of the women who understandably feel insecure about 'adulting' perpetuate and extend the problem by applying that judgement to others. The term 'manchild' comes to mind.

  • @hootiemcboob6332
    @hootiemcboob63329 ай бұрын

    This was an intelligent well thought through piece. I've not seen your stuff before, but I will now! I'm 35 and I'm mostly happy, but every now and then the dread seeps in and I wonder if I'll ever achieve anything or if I'm doomed to the monotonous grind of the working class in the UK.

  • @jennykettle845
    @jennykettle84510 ай бұрын

    Oh my goodness thank you for the work and insight you've brought to this topic. It spoke to me on SO many levels!! As someone who grew up in a poor/working class family (my Mum actually couldn't work) and also as a young carer in my teens having to help out with all the 'adult' responsibilities at home I know that while I had to 'grow up' a lot younger than a lot of my peers, I have still struggled with feeling like an adult to this day (I am currently 31). While watching I was reflecting on this, and realised that it's a combination of the trauma and struggles I dealt with while I was growing up/missing out on some of my childhood and lack of support from adults etc, and also subconsciously the media and social media trending towards talking about 'adulting' in this way. The last study that said about reclaiming and rebuilding an identity and sense of self, whew that got me in the feels! I have spent the past decade since my Mum died, and a good deal of time before, trying to do just that. Finally, slowly I feel like I'm getting there recently. The funny thing is I am married - got married last year at 30, but we are still renting and all the other markers of adulthood are feeling out of reach. I was made redundant (for the second time since the pandemic started) earlier this year, and am still looking for a new job. I am wholeheartedly embracing girl dinner while also working to put the foundations in place for myself to feel like a 'proper adult'!!

  • @JD-fx9ly
    @JD-fx9ly11 ай бұрын

    I'm 21, I consider myself an adult. I wasn't really given the choice to grow up or not, my mother died when I was 15. I paid rent as soon as I was 16. I live with my two roommates and have five pets, I have no parental support. I still have much to learn but I feel confident in my abilities and want to go pursue a trade.

  • @MiniNymph
    @MiniNymph11 ай бұрын

    I call myself a girl, and cringe at being labelled woman. For me, it is about the social expectation that comes with the label of woman - I am demand avoidant, so of course I hate that. It is also a bit about the idea of sexual maturity. I don't feel comfortable around sexualised environments, and though I know that is a valid response as an adult, I find it easier to carve my safe space under the identity of girl.

  • @MiniNymph

    @MiniNymph

    11 ай бұрын

    @@superparamagnetism I agree that woman is not, inherently, a sexual word. However, it has been used with those connotations throughout my life. I was told growing older would come with wants/needs/desires - I came out as ace when I was 10 and that caused my family to panic and push sexual ideas onto me as a must. It would be nice not to have that association, but I do. It is not an intellectual decision to reject "woman", it is an emotional one. No amount of clever thinking will fix that, and it's not my priority in therapy. "Woman" is only neutral until it's seasoned by society, and it is no longer to my taste. I laughingly use "lady" if I must be an adult. If I must playact a role, it shall be one that pleases me.

  • @ugh3309

    @ugh3309

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@marcia7622 except, "woman" is not a neutral descriptor (just like most things aren't). Woman, just like Lindsey herself said in the video, implies maturity. That includes sexual maturity, maybe not mental but physical and saying that seeing the descriptor "woman" as opposed to girl as inherently sexual being a personal thing, I think, Ignores many factors and pressures put on women, as well as language used around the topic. For example a boy becomes a "Man" when he reaches certain milestones and often being psychological and life related as opposed to physical. When a boy is seen as a man he is usually given more responsibility for his newly earned title. while a girl, is often seen biologically as a woman before she feels like one. And with that perception of ones womanhood comes a lot of attention of sexual nature, often unwanted. But it is only one example of the things I mentioned earlier.

  • @ugh3309

    @ugh3309

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@superparamagnetismokay but so, that's literally what the video you're commenting under is for. What I described was one example, it's more complicated than simply misogyny (not to imply that itself is simple), and for different people it will be a different set of reasons not to use that term but I think we're on the same page there. I replied to your first comment only to correct that "woman" is not a neutral term and explain why, from here on I don't think we're in disagreement, have a good day :)

  • @cactus2260

    @cactus2260

    11 ай бұрын

    This kind of reminds me of how some trans women were fine with being boys, since it is less strict and less dysphoria inducing than growing to be men. The same thing for trans men who as girls were allowed certain tomboy traits, that would not be allowed to them as women. I think that those terms socially do feel more restrictive than girl/boy. Could also be part of why femboys, eboys, softboys are a thing but not femmen for example.

  • @valliedollx

    @valliedollx

    11 ай бұрын

    I am nearly 40 and I still don't feel like a "woman." I agree with every word you've said. ❤

  • @silkenrustle
    @silkenrustle9 ай бұрын

    For me, my favourite genre has always been 'Coming of age' movies.. I loved your comments about crafting an identity, I think of my adulthood being when I said to my parents I no longer identify with their religion and the religion i was raised in. My life as my true self started then. This took tremendous courage, and risk of abandonment and rejection similar to something like coming out, at the time my mental health was in the trash and I ~didn't know why~. Only ten years later through lots of therapy am I understanding just how much this shift alone affected me and my life then, and how much that upbringing shaped my identity. I loved your comments about queer time.

  • @TheRABIDdude
    @TheRABIDdude10 ай бұрын

    This is such a brilliant, insightful and well-articulated spoken essay! Very well done -- you should be proud!

  • @cors3401
    @cors340111 ай бұрын

    This video made me cry--almost multiple times. I didn't realize how ashamed I felt of not being "adult" enough, and it gave me so much comfort to see you breaking down adult milestones into made-up standards that aren't attainable or applicable to everyone anyway

  • @kerry687

    @kerry687

    11 ай бұрын

    You should be crying. Being a man/womanchild is not cute

  • @concretedaisies
    @concretedaisies10 ай бұрын

    Thankyou, this video actually made me cry, I feel so seen. I'm 32, queer single and feel like I have failed at whatever it is that I am supposed to do in life (despite having a professional career and having traveled around the world). Yesterday I told my mum that I was looking at buying a house, thinking that she would be relieved - instead she tried to convince me to travel more instead and get a 'fun' job. I think some women in the generation before us who were trapped in social expectations are actually revelling in the chaos of millenial women. I know the carefree self-acceptance of queer gen-zs makes me so crazy happy.

  • @bonelia8370

    @bonelia8370

    10 ай бұрын

    Being carefree and self expressive shouldnt belong to us gen z and i hope anyone of any age can feel more comfortable being themselves now that its becoming more normal. Youre not too old to be who you are, and you certainly dont have to live your life the way your mum wants you to! Its your life and if anyone has a problem with you trying to be happy then damn then.

  • @vlo4829

    @vlo4829

    10 ай бұрын

    I think a lot of the older generation don't view millenials as "adults" either, though. It's not that they feel "trapped" or miserable. Many of them are quite happy and content. It's that they think we're still "so young" when we're not, and if we spend all of our time on fleeting passions rather than buying a house, saving for retirement, etc., we are not setting ourselves up for success later on. We are too miopic and don't plan enough for the future...

  • @high-bi-password

    @high-bi-password

    9 ай бұрын

    Do whatever you want!! Buy that house! It’s so messed up when you share something that for you is good news and your parent hijacks it and turns it into a criticism of you, that’s gross and you don’t deserve to be treated that way, especially by your own mom.

  • @rosemargriffith

    @rosemargriffith

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for putting this feeling into words. I'm a queer 42-year old introvert single person who lives by myself. I love my life as it is, but I also have occasional moments of looking around me and feeling like an alien because I have missed all the societal markers of being a "proper person" - marriage, kids, mortgage, constant busyness, or even some sort of aspirational/creative/humanitarian achievement. Some things I remind myself of at that point. Other people may seem to have it worked out, but everyone has their own hidden struggles and is muddling their way through life. In reality, nobody thinks about or cares what I am doing or not doing - they are focussed on their own stuff, and that is very freeing. There are pros and cons to every way of living life. It doesn't actually matter.

  • @Learning_or_dead

    @Learning_or_dead

    8 ай бұрын

    If you are in a situation where you can see yourself saving for a house - do it. Vacations will come and go, and you will have opportunity to travel. But many many people are not able to purchase a home anymore. Home ownership is getting more difficult, but a mortgage is usually far less than rent. Home prices will only go up, and more corporations are buying them up.

Келесі