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40 Painfully Relatable Truths All Millennials Can Relate To, As Shared On The 'Lost Generation' Online Group (New Pics)
Social IssuesMAY 2, 2022

40 Painfully Relatable Truths All Millennials Can Relate To, As Shared On The 'Lost Generation' Online Group (New Pics)

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Millennials are the generation born between roughly 1981 and 1996, although the actual dates can slightly vary depending on where you look.
In terms of numbers, it recently surpassed baby boomers as the most significant group in the United States, with an estimated population of 72.1 million.
But that doesn't mean the world revolves around them.
Millennials face the most uncertain economic future of any generation in America since the Great Depression—three decades of stagnant wages were followed by the Great Recession (which left more than 15% of those in their early 20s out of work), and then came the pandemic, which upended the financial and housing markets plus impacted employment across multiple sectors.
To paint you a better picture of their struggles, we at Bored Panda covered the subreddit the 'Lost Generation.' But with the Great Resignation and major geopolitical changes reshaping the world, we thought we need to release an update. So continue scrolling to check out some of the posts that recently went viral within this online community.

#1 Found On Another Sub, Another Issue Blamed On Us

Found On Another Sub, Another Issue Blamed On Us
274points

#2 Yes Right They Are The 1% In The World

Yes Right They Are The 1% In The World
273points

We managed to get in touch with Reddit user u/Adahn5, one of the moderators of 'Lost Generation,' and they agreed to tell us more about this community.

"Millennials have come of age during the later stages of development of neoliberal economic reforms that began in the 1970s. Because this led to the repeal of many worker protections and social safety net policies, along with a substantially declined rate of profit compared to post-war America, millennials simply weren't able to access the kinds of benefits and security that the Keynesian economic measures created by the New Deal had originally set up for working-class people," the mod told Bored Panda.

"Their economic opportunities have been stunted out of the gate. If we study economics, we can easily see how there is a natural tendency within capitalism toward reduced profits over time for a number of reasons, and since material costs are relatively fixed because of global value chains, the ones who pay the cost are ultimately workers. Millennials, and now Gen Z, being the most recent generations, experience the worst effects in this outcome, and we can expect the same for Gen Alpha, the generation coming after them."

#3 Absolutely

Absolutely
Report
273points

#4 Yep

Yep
Report
256points

#5 Friendly Neighborhood Preexisting Condition

Friendly Neighborhood Preexisting Condition
Report
254points

Millennials have adopted a somewhat global mindset, with factors such as social responsibility and the environment frequently playing a pivotal role in placing their money.

Thus, as a generation, millennials choose to follow either their instincts or go along with their peers regarding individual investment choices.

However, the distrust of financial advisors doesn't seem to apply to all of them. Investopedia's Affluent Millennial Investing Survey, for example, revealed that nearly two-thirds (65%) of the affluent millennials surveyed do, in fact, trust financial advisors.

#6 The Retirement Age

The Retirement Age
250points

#7 Preach

Preach
245points

#8 Everything Is F**ked

Everything Is F**ked
Report
234points

The survey gathered information from 1,405 millennials who reported a median income of $132,000 and also found that those who consider themselves knowledgeable about investing are more than twice as likely to have a financial advisor.

Interestingly, many millennials are interested in having a personal connection with those who manage their money, despite their comfort with the use of mobile and online technology to perform many investing functions.

Considering all of that, it shouldn't come as a surprise that millennials are often characterized as conscious spenders.

Sustainability and customer service are high on the list of what they buy and how they shop. Millennials spent over $4,000 on travel in 2021, and high-net-worth millennials spent upwards of $5,000 or more. According to Expedia, millennials travel 35 days per year.

#10 Here Comes The Boom!

Here Comes The Boom!
224points

However, when they're not traveling, millennials are enjoying their food and beverages.

On average, this generation spends more on dining and shopping online than previous generations. Millennials and post-millennials spent 47% of their total food spending on dining out or take-out food, according to 2018 figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Their desire to indulge themselves could be explained by the uncertainty of the future we mentioned before. If you don't know what tomorrow will bring, you might as well enjoy yourself today.

#14 Now Another Invention From Health Care Capitalism

Now Another Invention From Health Care Capitalism
202points

#15 The Big Corporation Is Our Problem

The Big Corporation Is Our Problem
197points

But u/Adahn5 doesn't think millennials are left to deal with their problems alone. The mod of the subreddit believes different generations can actually talk and, most importantly, understand each other.

"The issue at play isn't a problem of language, the impasse is ideological," they said. "Younger generations simply can't buy into the notion that capitalism as a socio-economic system is capable of bringing them well-being or moderate prosperity.

"Working-class people, whether baby boomers or millennials, live under the same system, but the latter were able to live through a period that still maintained some of the Keynesian social-democratic reforms that made their existence much easier than it is now. Lower costs and higher access to things like higher education, homeownership, and job security make them unable to empathize, which is to say put themselves in the shoes, of millennials who don't have the same economic support systems."

#18 Why No One Has Kids Anymore

Why No One Has Kids Anymore
171points
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