Sunday Times

I’m proud to be part of ‘Generation Sensible’

If young people are turning their noses up at sex and alcohol, it’s because it’s cool to be boring these days, says Scarlet Katz Roberts

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Nothing beats that feeling when you’re on your way back from a night out and know your cosy bed is waiting for you. You ventured out to the pub with some friends, put in a couple of hours being sociable, ducked out at 11pm and are heading home, thinking: “Perfect, I’m going to get a really good night’s sleep, and I haven’t even drunk much, so tomorrow will be fine.” If this sounds familiar, chances are you are either an overtired mum of four, or — like me — part of Generation Sensible.

According to a survey of 1 000 teenagers aged 16 to 18, young people like me are far less rebellious than our parents’ generation. We’re having less sex, we drink less (24% of the teenagers surveyed had never even drunk alcohol) and we much prefer to spend time with our families than go out.

The British Pregnancy Advisory Service found the current generation of teenagers appeared to be more focused on their education and future careers than their social lives, all of which may explain the sharp fall in teen pregnancie­s in the past decade. I am coming to the end of my gap year — a much-needed break after going through the stress of A-levels — and can relate to this. I’m about to go travelling in Canada and the US, before going to read English at Oxford.

Going to bed early

At first, my gap year was great. A group of friends would meet up most evenings in the pub, where we would spend all our money from our hospitalit­y jobs on food and alcohol. But it wasn’t long before we started focusing again, took on multiple jobs and stopped hanging out. I took several jobs, including roles as an English helper in a school in Brixton, London, and as support for children with special educationa­l needs. Both were hard work. I had to get up at 7am, which meant going to bed early.

It wasn’t always this way. Most teenagers go through a stage of rebellion, and I remember a few hairy nights, like a house party a couple of years ago at which three out of the five of my then friendship group were puking by 9pm. I remember the sticky floor and a general feeling that people were out of control. But I had a great time.

I wasn’t necessaril­y the most diligent student at that point. There was an attitude among us that “not trying” was cool. But then something changed. The pressure ramped up. People started to drop that default attitude. “Drunk” was once the buzzword, but it was replaced with “stressed” or “tired”. People started taking school work more seriously as exams loomed, and going out and having stories to tell afterwards was no longer the priority.

Today I still don’t drink much; I go out even less. I don’t like the feeling of waking up after a night out when you’ve not looked after yourself. I’ll happily go to the pub, but rarely go clubbing, and if I do, I don’t tend to drink much. I would rather feel healthy than hungover.

Home is a haven

And I’m not alone. Most of my peers would say the same — that over the past couple of years our priorities have shifted as the pressure has piled on. So many of my friends have struggled with anxiety-related problems. Home is a haven during those periods.

I know my relationsh­ip with my parents improved hugely when I began to rely on them more, and talk to them about my anxieties. I think that, as a generation, we are closer to our families than older generation­s have been. Maybe it’s because we are under so much more pressure, and need our parents’ support.

But I also think home is generally a nicer place to be than it was for generation­s gone by. I have always watched football with my mum (she supports Liverpool, I support Arsenal), and my dad and I share favourite podcasts and books. He got me into podcasts like This American Life and The

New Yorker. And we often read the same book at the same time and compare notes. We have more in common and more to talk about than my parents did with my grandparen­ts.

And in many ways there is simply less to rebel against. I imagine my parents’ generation drank far more and took far more drugs than my friends do now.

Home is also a haven in this social-media age we live in. Our family relationsh­ips are, if nothing else, authentic. In a digital world, which is inauthenti­c to its very core, perhaps it is a craving for genuine interactio­ns that sees young people seeking comfort in their home life. It’s a place where they feel safe and loved, where they can take a break from plugging their own personal brand.

Relationsh­ips offline

But I’m not convinced by this narrative that young people don’t know how to interact in the real world. I certainly start to feel vapid if I spend too much time on Instagram, and I only use apps like Messenger to make plans to meet up. So I think there is perhaps a slight misconcept­ion that young people are desperate to avoid IRL [in real life] interactio­ns.

Our most important relationsh­ips are offline. They just might be more likely to be with our parents than with a boyfriend. But that’s fine by me. I am a lot happier when I do a good day’s work and get a good night’s sleep. We’re not lazy and narcissist­ic, we’re energetic go-getters. Yes, we’re deeply anxious and under huge amounts of pressure. But we’re also engaged and reenfranch­ised.

And to all the adults who think we’re Generation Boring — isn’t it your fault? Sorry we’re so needy, and probably spend a good deal more time at home eating your food than you ever did. But if we were out getting drunk all the time, you’d complain then, too. My idea of a top night? It’s still (and possibly always will be) a movie on the sofa with my mum.

If that makes me a member of Generation Sensible, I’m happy to be in the club.

 ?? Picture: 123rf.com/rawpixel ?? The millennial­s of Generation Sensible are not always on social media. Sometimes they switch off their laptops and smartphone­s and go offline to be with family and at home.
Picture: 123rf.com/rawpixel The millennial­s of Generation Sensible are not always on social media. Sometimes they switch off their laptops and smartphone­s and go offline to be with family and at home.
 ?? Picture: Archive Photos/Getty Images ?? Many millennial­s, according to a study, are not as rebellious as their parents’ generation, which partied at festivals, like this one at Woodstock.
Picture: Archive Photos/Getty Images Many millennial­s, according to a study, are not as rebellious as their parents’ generation, which partied at festivals, like this one at Woodstock.

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