“I can attest to the fact that not every 80s and early-90s kid is a precocious arsehole at work.”
A little while ago, in a piece for Sunday Life, columnist, author and ex-Vogue editor Kirstie Clements penned an oft-repeated argument: that Gen-Yers are an overly-confident, entitled, I-want-everything-yesterday bunch of upstarts.
Sigh.
If you buy into the common rhetoric about Gen Y, you’ll be believe us to be politically apathetic, self-entitled little shits who have no sense of our real place in the word. It’s a view held by many of the Gen Xers I know and work with, nothing in Clements’ piece was news to me: 40-something women want 20-something women to stop demanding pay rises after 37 seconds in a job, they want us to have better manners, to cool it on the attitude and be grateful for what we’re dealt.
And you know what? As a hard-working 28-year-old, I’m up to here (*dramatically waves hand way above her head*) with the women above me, who I respect and aspire to be like, telling me I think “hard work and respect for seniority are optional” – Clements’ words, not mine.
LISTEN: The Mamamia Out Loud team debate the ongoing generational dilemma. Post continues after audio.
I don’t actually… I think that hard work is mandatory if you want to be successful and I have a deep respect for my superiors, I use every chance to soak up knowledge from them.
Being smack bang in the middle of the Gen Y generation (1980-1995), and also having managed a bunch of millennials peers, I can categorically attest to the fact that not every 80s and early-90s kid is a precocious arsehole at work. Nope, not even close.
Top Comments
Dear Generation Y,
Stop BEING precocious, entitled, rude, disrespectful, self-absorbed arseholes, and we will stop telling you that that's what you are being.
Sincerely,
Over your whiny, lazy shit.
Nothing wrong with ambitious Gen Y's. Oh how I dream of ambitious Gen Y's. You have no idea how much I'd love to be surrounded at work by ambitious Gen Y's. Because then maybe they'd turn up on time. And they might wear a belt that is properly fastened so I don't have to look at their underwear all day. And they wouldn't try to avoid work. And they'd wipe that petulant look off their face when someone finally manages to tie them to their station and get some of said work out of them. And they wouldn't tack on extra minutes to their lunch break. And they'd put their goddamn phone away. And they wouldn't sneak out ten minutes early come home time. And they wouldn't take frequent and predictable sickies.
I work with six Gen Y's at my work place. All bar one are some of the laziest, most arrogant and useless people I've ever met. Granted, the one exception is fantastic and puts the rest of us to shame, but a ratio of 1 in 6 is pretty pathetic. I've worked with a couple of lazy sods from my own Gen X at times too but they've always been the minority in an otherwise great team. Ambition isn't the problem. Hell, I'd even tolerate precocious so long as they're not so effing lazy!
Predictable comment of stereotypes. I've worked my butt off running my own business from the moment I left university to now. Ive been told by Gen X'ers that I don't know what I'm talking about because I'm young, that I should just take what I get and not be picky, and that I need to settle down. Glad I didn't listen as we are now pulling in well over six figures and working less.
Don't get me started on a Gen X'er telling me they had a house by my age...
It's just truth.