Irish Daily Mail

DIY should I? Young short on basic life skills

- By Sean Poulter news@dailymail.ie

WHEN it comes to uploading a selfie or speed-writing a text, the so-called millennial­s are streets ahead of their parents.

But asked to perform a traditiona­l skill, such as sewing on a button or bleeding a radiator, many are completely lost.

A study of household skills by the Good Housekeepi­ng Institute paints a depressing picture of the under-34s.

The survey assessed the abilities of 2,000 people in carrying out 18 once-typical domestic tasks.

And it suggests that, with many young adults living in the family home into their 20s and 30s, they have not needed to learn simple domestic skills.

Even elementary tasks once learned in cookery classes at school seem way beyond them.

Similarly, sewing, woodwork and metalwork classes have disappeare­d from some schools in more recent times.

Good Housekeepi­ng reports that the result is that many younger adults have no idea what the word ‘darning’ even means.

In an era of throwaway fashions, just one in four knew how to repair an item of clothing to give it a longer life, the UK study found.

Just one in three were confident they could shorten a hem, descale an iron and make a white sauce or roux, which is the basis of many homemade dishes.

The same small proportion of young adults were capable of doing ‘hospital corners’ – folding the bed sheets on the mattress so they do not shift in the night.

Less than half know how to bleed a radiator, a skill needed to make sure they are filling with water – rather than air – to get the most out of the heating, while only 33% can darn a hem.

Psychologi­st Dr Laura Markham said: ‘Millennial­s are living at home for longer, and that may mean they don’t need to learn about fixing fuses because someone else will do it.

‘Plus, they are a busy generation. If they’re swamped with hours of schoolwork, football practice and music lessons, you as the parent help them get their work done so they can get to bed at a reasonable hour.

‘Consequent­ly, you don’t ask them to help as much around the house as you may have done.’

Dr Markham said young adults have focused on developing other skills. They can also access video tutorials on how to perform most of these tasks through services such as YouTube.

‘Millennial­s are resourcefu­l and will learn the household skills they need as they become necessary,’ she added.

The consumer director at Good Housekeepi­ng, Caroline Bloor, who is the mother of a millennial, admitted her parents helped to save her a fortune over the years.

She said: ‘If I totted up how much money my dad saved me in DIY over the years, it would be thousands.

‘Together, we not only put up blinds and shelves, but also laid laminate flooring, put up wallpaper and even repaired flat roofs.

‘The same can be said for household tasks.

‘My mother wasn’t a brilliant cook but she did teach me how to make white sauce and gravy, wire a plug and change a tyre.’

‘Someone else will do it’

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