Global Feed Post Login
Replying to Avatar HoloKat

While I certainly don’t advocate for victim mentality, I can’t judge all 30+ somethings living with their parents for their situation. This generation didn’t get many breaks: lack of employment opportunities post 08 crisis (their prime years to get started on a professional path), rising costs of living, unaffordable housing, lack of long term employment security, bleak climate outlook, growing totalitarianism and lack of hope, Covid, rising cost of education, unpayble student loans, ever-growing skillset required for good positions, more inflation.

Ya, you could pull yourself through all of these and be fine if you worked hard enough, made smart decisions and were ahead of the curve, but previous generations had it much easier.

You’ve got to play the hand you’re dealt, but we can still have some sympathy and reserve judgment at an individual level. Not everyone is a lazy couch potato. nostr:note1qhf6zdqsqncsq89vnjfpfr9vw4s6jnmj0xasxrxsq8cnca8fn5aq0eu8hl

Avatar
Chad Lupkes 1y ago

My son is 26, and he has been working steady since he graduated from high school. he pays 40% of his paycheck to the household expenses, and saves 50% into his investments. He is further along the path of retirement than I am.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

No replies yet.