Pandemic challenging for emerging adults
The coronavirus pandemic has been hard on both kids and adults. But what about those who are in between?
Demographic shifts during the last century have given rise to a distinct developmental stage called “emerging adulthood.” Spanning the late teens and early 20s, it’s a volitional, transitional period marked by exploration of life and love, work and world views. But with the now nearly year-long pandemic disrupting education, employment, housing and more, young people who are no longer adolescents but not quite adults are struggling to find their footing.
An 18-year-old in Florida selected a college sight unseen. A 23-year-old in Texas lost his job in his ideal industry. Meanwhile, for a 24-year-old in New Hampshire, the pandemic halted hard-won social and academic gains.
“This generation is losing out on this key transition period,” said Kathryn Sabella, director of research at the University of Massachusetts Medical School’s Transitions to Adulthood Center for Research. She has been studying the pandemic’s effect on young people with mental health conditions and has found patterns of isolation, angst and uncertainty.
“We’re seeing a lot of stress about school, about finding a job in the short term, and longer
term, what does this look like?” she said. “There’s a sense of despair and hopelessness.”
Emerging adulthood is a key time to explore careers, but the pandemic is putting that on hold. While some of Sabella’s study participants have picked up more hours in service sector jobs, others are struggling to work from home or are unemployed.
• Connor Payne, 23, of Austin, Texas, got laid off from his event planning job last month. Now, he’s considering leaving that industry until the pandemic passes.
“Right now, I’m definitely sitting with the emotions and allowing myself to feel them,” he said. “But I have confidence in the future, I’m very hopeful.”
• In Redlands, Calif., 19year-old Hans Westenburg also is hopeful he can stay on track with his plans to become a physician though he worries that the quality of his education has deteriorated since classes went remote.
“It’s not awful, but I do feel sort of grounded, like I can’t really explore my ambitions,” said Westenburg, a University of California-Irvine sophomore.
• Augustus Bayard, meanwhile, is just eager to start his college career. He arrived at Brown University from Anna Maria Island, Fla., this month — a delayed start for the freshman class that wasn’t announced until July.
“It’s an awkward point in your life to suddenly have to put your life on pause,” he said.
At Boston University, Hyeouk Chris Hahm is researching how the pandemic is playing out among young people who make up a significant chunk of the current and future workforce. Nearly half of her survey participants report depression, anxiety and loneliness, and an openended question that allowed participants to express anything on their minds produced a surprising torrent of negativity.
“People really needed to vent someplace or somewhere,” she said. “They want to be heard.”
Jeffrey Arnett, the psychologist who coined the term “emerging adulthood” two decades ago, predicts this population will bounce back. While emerging adults tend to be pessimistic about society, they often are quite optimistic about their individual situations, he says.
“I wouldn’t diminish the difficulty of it,” said Arnett, a visiting professor at Tufts University. “I just want to emphasize that they are resilient, and they’re at a point in life where you can recover from a year or even a two-year delay.”
Bryleigh McCarty, 21, says her life in Longmont, got “10 times more stressful” when the pandemic hit, but therapy helped her discover inner strength as she switched from managing a yarn shop to working in a kindergarten class.
“It’s really easy to get caught up in those emotions of ‘Oh my god, everything sucks, I feel so discouraged.’ But I’m also really relishing my ability to sit back and laugh at everything that is going on,” she said. “I’ve learned that I am much stronger than I thought I was.”
Rates of mental health problems increase during this period, conditions become more complex and the most serious disorders emerge, yet this age group is less likely to seek and receive help. Maryann Davis, director of the Transitions to Adulthood Center for Research, surveyed state mental health systems between 2003 and 2005 about services for transition age youth, including mental health treatment, vocational support and help with housing.
Back then, any one service was available in at most in 20% of states. But by 2019, that percentage increased to 50%, according to a survey conducted by The Associated Press.
“Systems are finally seeing that the transition to adulthood is a critical developmental stage, that this is a real make-or-break period of life, and if we abandon young people right at the threshold of adulthood, they’re much more likely to fail,” Davis said.