Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

The truth about 20-Somethings

- By Jill Ebstein

For a long time now, baby boomers have lived with some broad generaliza­tions about what makes millennial­s tick. The story goes that they are social-media obsessed, impatient and narcissist­ic people who lack the stick-to-itiveness to cross a finish line. They want to have fun, travel and rain on our parade because they know better.

After working on a project that allowed me to probe the experience­s and aspiration­s of 29 millennial­s, I now challenge these views. As with all generaliza­tions, we can always find some case that supports the story, but the overall take is misguided. Just like my children’s view of me — yes, I like a clean house, my work completed, and a happy volunteer for the dog walk, but no, that is not the only thing I think about. The baby-boomer view on millennial­s is incomplete.

“At My Pace: Twenty Somethings Finding Their Way” is a result of this project where men and women in their 20s wrote candid pieces that revealed their comings of age and the lessons they have absorbed along the way. I also administer­ed a survey so that I could profile the group’s attitudes and preference­s. I am going to knock down just a few of our stereotype­s:

Misguided Stereotype #1: I just want to have fun

In story after story, contributo­rs share a longing to improve the world. Purposeful living drives them — whether it is teaching in underserve­d communitie­s, using a law degree to advocate for immigratio­n and sex worker rights, or using yoga and meditation as a way to heal. This group was not as focused on “me” as we typically think. Even contributo­rs who were doing more mainstream work were searching for ways to extend its effect. My survey findings support purpose as far more important than fun.

Misguided Stereotype #2: They lack stick-to-itiveness

It is true that these contributo­rs have done a fair bit of wandering, but often it is because they are in search of the path that will combine meaning with an ability to support themselves. Finding paying work that matches their interests is the most commonly identified challenge, and they wander to see how close they can get. Many 20-somethings still need to pay back student loans, so some pragmatism drives them. Bottom line: They can be restless wanderers but not because they lack the ability to make a commitment.

Misguided Steretotyp­e #3: Strong managers and more education can right the ship

Because many of us come with a fix-it mentality in terms of how to help our 20-somethings find their groove, we frequently veer to what helped us — good managers and more education. I am of the generation that still believes that there is gold in those hills, and I owe a significan­t debt of gratitude to a few managers who patiently invested in me.

Yet this group’s experience­s tell a different story. They believe they can learn at least as much from their peers as their managers. They hold that peers understand them better, and that managers are not very available and are often selfservin­g. As for education, while this group is college-educated, they maintain that their best source of learning is life itself (9.2 rating on a scale of 1 to 10) where academic courses only rate 6.6. They prefer to place themselves in challengin­g environmen­ts and figure out how to make the lemonade.

Interestin­gly, many do anticipate further schooling because they believe advanced degrees are necessary to hold the positions they seek. Education is viewed as a means to an end.

Despite the turbulence of their 20s decade, this group sports a very positive outlook on the future. They are resilient and have found a way to stay emotionall­y healthy. Whether it is their families, religion, community or a creative well inside, they have discovered how to stay anchored and embrace an uncertain world. They are looking forward to planting a stake, and will no doubt lead the world quite differentl­y.

My hope? That with an open mind, we can abandon our old stereotype­s and seek a real understand­ing, making “generation gap” a phrase that stays in the ’60s when it was created.

Jill Ebstein is the editor of the “At My Pace” series of books. She’s the founder of Sized Right Marketing, a Newton, Mass., consulting firm. She wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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