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their lives lack meaning or purpose....Young adults in the United States are experiencing anxiety and depression at twice the rate of teens, with more than half reporting that their lives lack meaning or purpose, according to a new report from Harvard University. The report, called "On Edge: Understanding and Preventing Young Adults' Mental Health Challenges," was released Tuesday by the Harvard Graduate School of Education's Making Caring Common project.
Gen Z young adults face double the depression and anxiety of teens, Harvard report finds October 24, 2023
WBUR is a nonprofit news organization. Our coverage relies on your financial support. If you value articles like the one you're reading right now, give today. It's based on a national survey the researchers conducted in December 2022, with responses from 709 young adults aged 18 to 25 years old, nearly 400 teens between 14 and 17 years old, and almost 750 parents and caregivers. Calling the findings about the emotional struggles of Generation Z young adults "alarming," the researchers said 29% of them reported experiencing depression, versus 15% of teens; 36% of young adults reported anxiety, compared to 18% of teens. In the survey, 58% of young adults reported experiencing little or no purpose or meaning in their lives in the previous month. More than half reported that financial worries and pressure to achieve negatively affect their mental health. Researchers also found loneliness and a "sense of not mattering to others" were factors among more than one-third of young adult respondents. The report's lead author, Richard Weissbourd, said the survey found higher rates of depression and anxiety among Black and Hispanic young adults and those in under-resourced communities than among white and Asian young adults. "[For] young people in low-income communities who have been dealing with classism or racism or lack of opportunity — who are cut off from health care, from high quality schools — lack of meaning and purpose is high in those communities because people are contending with those things. "I think what's going on in affluent communities can be quite different," he said. "I think it can be this sort of single, narrow-minded focus on selective colleges, on high-status internships. These things can squeeze out meaning and purpose." The survey also examined how larger societal and world issues impact young adults' mental health. It found close to half of respondents reported a general "sense that things are falling apart." About one-third or more reported gun violence in schools, climate change and corruption or incompetence among political leaders as having a negative impact on their mental health. "I do think there is this feeling like things are spinning out of control," said Weissbourd. "And young adults express — and this was hopeful — quite a lot of faith in each other to combat some of the problems, the pressing problems that this country is facing. They express significantly less faith in older adults to do that." Dr. Christine Crawford, an adult, child and adolescent psychiatrist at Boston Medical Center, said the report's findings correspond with what she sees in her practice. "This transitional period [to adulthood] has always been the same, but young people [now] are consistently being inundated by messages of what's happening to the world, the environment, and that's further fueling some of the mood-related symptoms they're experiencing," she said. She added that heightened anxiety among parents and the trend in recent decades of an "all hands on deck, micromanaging" style of parenting have led to young people not being as well prepared to enter adulthood. Crawford said she sits on an outside advisory committee, made up of health care providers and others, that Harvard's Making Caring Common project consults once a year to hear about the trends they're seeing. She was not involved in the report or any of the project's other research. Weissbourd stressed that the findings shouldn't lessen anyone's concern surrounding younger teens' mental health. The survey found significant rates of depression and anxiety among teens aged 14 to 17. But that age group has been studied a lot and was a focus of public conversation, particularly in the pandemic. Despite the concerning findings, there are reasons for hope, Weissbourd said. "The positive side is that teens and young adults may be more psychologically aware and articulate than any generation in history, and more open about talking about emotional problems," he said. "For decades, people have suffered silently and terribly who have experienced depression and anxiety, and this is the generation that's talking about it." Building connections can help young people fend off mental health challenges, according to the report. Young adults said they've found meaning in strong relationships — 40% reported becoming closer to one of their parents during the pandemic — and through serving others. Weissbourd said he hopes the report will refocus attention on young adulthood as a "precarious" stage of development and the different ways colleges, employers and others can engage young adults and provide support to them. https://www.wbur.org/news/2023/10/24/young-adults-mental-health-harvard-report
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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motivational meaninglessing.....
The Unbearable Pressures of the Peer Perfect Life
Yawar Iqbal examines the anxieties that lurk behind the social media screen.
YAWAR IQBAL
On any given day, a quick browse through LinkedIn, Instagram or TikTok will help one see the way Gen Z is engaged in so many fantastic opportunities. They are constantly creating and seeking. They are deciding their own working hours and breaking the drudgery of a typical nine-to-five mould. They are widely understood to be the most brilliant and the most desired by brands, organisations and recruiters. Every boardroom wants to be embellished by these magnificent creatures. They are the horses everyone is betting on…
Yet, behind this great array of achievements, what is the barter they are making? A study by the Harvard Medical Journal suggests that Gen Z has reported twice the rates of anxiety and depression compared to the preceding generation. Why is a generation of overachievers battling with so much? According to an article in the Guardian, “there is something different happening with Gen Z.” The article reports how one in three 18 to 24-year-olds indicate mental health struggles, such as depression or anxiety disorders, compared to one in four in 2000.
In the context of the flourishing of social media, we are all witnessing an excess of achievements, promotions, success stories – ‘20 under 20’, ‘30 under 30’ lists and start-up success stories – as well as elaborate posts of accomplishments decorated with confetti.
On LinkedIn, in particular, most posts are either about winning or how to win through motivational tips and tricks. Have we, in promoting this kind of dangerous hustle culture, somehow erased the word ‘failure’ from the vocabulary of young people? All anyone is chasing is how to win in the least amount of time possible. This is all well and good until an individual slips and fails – which is an ordinary part of real life. Everyone fails and it’s normal. What is not normal is believing that everyone around us is constantly winning, so we should too. So, although the job of a social media site is to help recruit and inspire, it has turned into a wall of fame for overachievers, who are doing mighty things daily and getting thousands of likes and comments.
If it is always so sunny in the life of a Gen Z-er, why are depression, anxiety and fatigue kicking in? Well, the pressure of constantly being the best, smartest and most productive achievers has its flip side. In the world of sports, all great athletes have a therapist who will help them overcome defeat. Similarly, the biggest movie stars also tend to keep their therapists on speed dial to get them through periods of failure. Unfortunately, since social media platforms tend to project stories of success and brilliance, the people consuming them begin to believe this constructed reality to be authentic, so when reality hits them hard, they collapse.
Even brands that address Gen Z as their target group end up creating the most frivolous communication, where the Gen Z individual is either running a successful start-up, playing PUBG on a swanky smartphone or partying at the beach or up in the mountains in Western attire. There is no trace of failure, depression, trauma or anything even remotely representative of their mental health.
The problem is that when a society fails to normalise losing, the result is a high rate of young adult suicides. According to WHO data, in Pakistan alone in 2019, 8.9 suicides occurred for every group of 100,000 people (male 13.3% and women 4.3%), and between 15 and 35 people died by suicide every day – which almost equates to one person ending their life every hour.
Most companies that recruit Gen Z are banking on miracles by expecting them to have fresh perspectives along with ample experience, which is an oxymoron. Experience comes with age and time, and it teaches one how to deal with and react in tough circumstances. By learning how to navigate the different stages of success, one also learns how to process failure and rejection, which are part and parcel of any job. In advertising, most agency heads will talk about recruiting issues among young creatives, as most graduates from art and film schools often choose to launch their own ventures rather than working for an ad agency in a traditional setting, and when a Gen Z person joins such an organisation, they don’t view long-term commitment as a positive. Their fragile minds are already dealing with a lot and a toxic work environment certainly does not help.
Perhaps brands and organisations should spend some time putting together a study on Gen Z. This may help us all be more efficient in understanding them and their mindsets, beyond the idea of representing them with neon lights and catchy rap songs. Perhaps brands could take up Gen Z’s mental health and make it part of their brand purpose. I look forward to collaborating with such empathetic brands to help fight the mental health issues of Gen Z and beyond.
https://aurora.dawn.com/news/1145402/the-unbearable-pressures-of-the-peer-perfect-life?utm_source=www.dawn.com
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.