2

sourdoughislife:

Remember that bullshit NY Times article about “emerging adolescence”? Two rebuttals via Feministing are far more coherent than I was:

Everyone I know who did a stint of living at home while legally an adult, including myself, did so out of financial necessity.  That’s 100% of folks I’ve heard of doing so.  In a way, it’s too bad, because the notion that living with your parents after becoming an adult is some great marker of shame is a relatively new idea, born out of the prosperity of the mid-century in America that our smug Boomer seems to think is just evidence of her super-awesome-better-than-you-ness.  Throughout most of American history, family living with family wasn’t considered anything but normal, and in fact sort of the point of having a family. [Adulthood, Lack of Jobs, and Slippery Definitions]

With unemployment for those aged 20-34 up 179 percent between 2006 and 2009, the average student debt burden at $23,186, wages fairly stagnant over the last several decades, and health benefits (when they exist at all) eating up a growing percentage of workers’ incomes, is it any wonder that young adults are avoiding long-term financial commitments and depending more (when they can) on parents? [In Defense of Today’s 2-Somethings (And Our Parents)]

24 August 2010 ·

2 notes

  1. jaybushman reblogged this from meganwest
  2. meganwest reblogged this from sourdoughislife
  3. sourdoughislife posted this

About Me

Megan gets paid to create stuff on the internet. She is just as surprised about that as you are.

She lives other places online, too.

Flickr Images