Culture Gen Zer In Their First Internship Can't 'Fathom' Working For The Rest Of Their Life — 'I'm Just Supposed To Do This Forever 'Cause I Need Money?'

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Gen Zer In Their First Internship Can't 'Fathom' Working For The Rest Of Their Life — 'I'm Just Supposed To Do This Forever 'Cause I Need Money?'​

The transition from college to what everyone deems “the real world” can be a truly acute shock — to go from the bubble of campus life to working full-time and paying bills is rarely an easy move to make.

In a now-deleted post to the subreddit r/LateStageCapitalism, one young person expressed their extreme dissatisfaction with what their future held.

A Gen Zer in her first internship can’t ‘fathom’ having to work for the rest of her life.​

The short yet not entirely simple answer to her existential question is, well... yes. The Gen Zer’s commentary was reposted on the Twitter account “F–-k You I Quit,” who state in their bio, “The labor market is a mess. Here to show you why. Highlighting workers' conflict with poor management, corporate greed, bad business, and the economy.”

The Gen Zer posed the question, “Any other gen z workers finding it impossible to fathom the rest of our lives like this?” They went on to explain their harrowing experience, stating, “In the midst of my first internship and I cannot believe generation after generation has been doing this bulls–t work and it is fine with it.”
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“I sat sobbing at my laptop today trying to write some blog post about federal funding that was assigned to me today, doing the most boring s–-t of all time that drains me of all my energy and has zapped my passion for writing, and I’m just supposed to do this forever with a smile on my face ‘cause I need money?” She continued.

“F-–k each and every person who made this system and keeps it upright and acts like they’re happy about it, too,” she went on. “I’m also a full-time waitress at two restaurants and I want to be an artist and a writer but nothing that fills my cup or makes me happy will ever pay the bills.”

The young person vocalized a harsh truth that tends to surface as we grow older and join the workforce: Having a job is often exhausting and unfulfilling.​

“I feel so pissed off at the world right now and even though I know not [every day] will feel this bad, I also can’t help but fear it’s going to get worse as I have to pay for more things to survive and this bulls-–t job will be all I can rely on,” she said. “I hate it here.”

There are very valid sentiments and cultural critiques within this Gen Zer’s rant against the pitfalls of living in a late-stage capitalist system. It seems valuable to note that she maintains a certain level of professional privilege for just having access to paid work and an internship, yet that’s not to discount her concerns with the realities of the world. The truth is, she’s not wrong.

Working can be a harrowing endeavor, especially in a country that doesn’t provide basic social services, like access to healthcare, paid parental leave, or childcare. As rent increases at astronomical rates, along with the cost of food, gas, and seemingly every other resource on this planet, basic survival can feel entirely impossible.
In some ways, this woman’s manifesto against our current economic structure is nothing new. Generation after generation of young people has stepped across the threshold of a fluorescently-lit, beige-carpeted office and felt their soul leave their bodies.

Being forced to work solely to afford survival isn’t at all fair, yet, it turns out, most of life is massively unfair.

This member of Gen Z might not find a job she feels passionate about. She might have to make hard choices about how she spends her days. She’ll have to learn to balance her exhaustion with her desire to create art and carve out time to do so.

It will take complete systemic change to shift the overall poor quality of life that Americans, especially, seem to have. In the end, our jobs don’t sustain us. What makes life worth living is found far from how we pay our rent.

We make meaning from the relationships we have, from the love we give and receive. There’s resonance in breathing deeply, in looking up at the sky, and seeing that stars shine, despite it all.
 
we all had that fucking moment
when what should've been, like, 100 for our poorfag part-time wagie job be 70 or 80
Or sixty something… or even less. When I worked in a scandi country, if I got a bonus it was taxed at 55%, so I’d see LESS than half of it.
I swear the ego on these NEETs
Yeah that’s something that strikes me, they all want to be boss with no experience / ability
Sounds like she finished college and thought everyone will be so impressed they'd name her CEO second day on the job.
I worked with a guy last year who insisted that he ‘needed’ to be the level I’m at (which took me a couple of decades to get to) and that the work we were giving him was ‘beneath his ability.’
Now when I get someone like that I am open to giving them more interesting work becythe better my underlings are the easier my life is. So I talk to them and say you want to progress? Ok you have to do what you’re hired for, but I can give you a couple of other things and if you do that well you’ll get more, and after x amount of time if you’re great I’ll put you in for promotion up.
Without fail, the Eastern Europeans knuckle down, do the work, improve, want to show what they can do. The Americans and brits don’t want to do the extra stuff (and it’s not really even extra, I take a bit of work off them to not overburden them I’m that soft) but they want to be boss.
Having to explain to some broccoli headed zoomer that you don’t just get promoted ten levels without working your way through them is bizarre. Like I’m offering you a hand up, you just have to play along. And they won’t. But they want the promotion anyway
Work sucks, every job I’ve ever had I’ve hated because I’d rather be looking after family, or doing other things, but so what? I need a paycheck and i have to work for it like everyone else
 
When I was much younger and working in a fast food restaurant, I had a thought a couple years in. Had I served more fast food meals than I had purchased? It seems like a thought a lot of people just don't have anymore. 'have I taken more out of the system than I put in'.

Also, I remember my parents pushing me to get a summer job at 16 and I absolutely did not want to, I wanted to do dumb teenager things. the idea that my largely unlimited freedom was coming to an end, potentially forever, was a scary thought. looking back, I'm glad I did it. I earned money and met people I wouldn't have normally. going from earning the occasional $20 for mowing my parents or a neighbor's yard to getting over 100 dollars a week in part time pay was life changing. I didn't have any real bills so that was all mine.

It comes back to something I've said to many people: Kids need to learn to be bored, since the advent of cell phones and tablets it just dosen't happen anymore. everything from waiting quietly in a restaurant for the food you ordered to a multi-hour long road trip on a family vacation where you could read a book or play with action figures at most are actually really good for kids. those are the building blocks to being a well adjusted adult. now days, if a kid needs to wait more than 60 seconds for something they get instant entertainment put in their face so they don't make a fuss.

Off-tangent a bit though, but back in the mid 2000's there was a series of point and click adventure games called "The Blackwell legacy" one of the games centered around souls being ripped apart, something that should not be able to happen. There was a self help group in game headed by a guy who could help people 'shortcut' to success. The person would be happy and successful, but upon death (getting killed or otherwise) their soul would be very weak because it did not endure the hardship on the way to the success they were eventually supposed to have, leading to a soul that could be ripped apart. That was just something that popped into my head thinking about kids not being exposed to little things like boredom anymore and the unforseen side effects down the line.
 
This article made me feel bad for the zoomers. I know what it's like to be fed a lie your whole life only to have the rug pulled out from under you. Protecting them from how badly boomers fucked us all over isn't preparing them for the world. Now we have two maybe three generations of emotionally stunted adults. I hate to say it but the hard times are here to stay. The sooner we accept this fact the sooner we can get through it.
 
This person's parents didn't prepare them for life adequately. Working for a living is something human beings have done since tribal societies. They often didn't get breaks and they'd die if they didn't work. It's only in extremely recent history that people have been allowed to live like NEETs and it's only because the government allows them to live off the backs of the people who actually work.
Well, tugboats have something to do with it, but, ironically, most of the "blame" falls on market forces for being so efficient at delivering what people want at extremely low prices. We evolved to be motivated by the threats of privation, and we start to malfunction (good times creating weak men) when the market allows us so much prosperity.

Still better than trading your kid with another couples' kid because you can't bring yourself to kill and eat your own.
 
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Absolutely. The problem we have is the lack of competition and barriers to entry that prevent competition. It's not a coincidence the huge banks basically wrote the Dodd-Frank regulations, for example.

Corporations also need to be taxed dollar-for-dollar for any welfare funds their employees receive, no exceptions. This is nothing but a gigantic subsidy to malevolent corporations like Amazon or Walmart at the expense of small businesses. If they can't afford to pay their workers a wage that keeps them off public assistance, they need to either go under or raise prices.

That is not a free labor market, in fact it makes things worse for workers because the government is subsidizing underpayment of workers. As an added kick in the nuts these same workers pay for their welfare through their taxes...they might get the EITC and all or most of it back when they file their taxes but it's still in the government's hands for most of the year.
Those jobs aren't supposed to be for people raising families and shit, its supposed to be for highschool students. People like that used to just not survive, but we aren't allowed to cull the retarded anymore.
 
With that though I can sympathize with the malaise that can come with even easy desk jobs. I feel it sometimes too though I work in part for the benefit of my parents and church so it doesn't hit me as this soul destroying thing, I just get bored sometimes which is fine because I can fire up some podcasts or audiobooks or whatever. I think the issue isn't so much the mundanity of the work, the issue isn't "I need money" the issue is they don't need that money for anything really other than consooooming which doesn't fill a greater purpose which leads to this state of mind and soul.

I've worked office jobs and all of them would have fired your ass if they caught you listening to a podcast or an audiobook on the company dime during working hours. Besides spyware on the computer and roaming supervisors, you're lucky if you are allowed unfiltered internet access during your lunch break and can be summarily fired if they catch you surfing the internet instead of doing work on the clock.

As for the "working to consoom shit" thing, that's part and parcel with how a lot of people, especially without a spouse or kids, cope with the soul crushing nature of life in our clown world. You work to make money for the shiny things that make you actually want to get out of bed and deal with society that hates and despises you, so you can enjoy said shiny things.
 
As for the "working to consoom shit" thing, that's part and parcel with how a lot of people, especially without a spouse or kids,
yeah I don't think it is necessarily their fault on this just to be clear, the way society is structured the things that would actually prevent the soul crushing nature of the work are priced high while the band aids (funko pops, marvel, etc) are relatively cheap. Add to that how ideological and commercial propaganda has brainwashed a lot of these people to think little of family and think their coom pod lifestyle is the way to go.

Regarding audiobook I guess I lucked out at my place as long as I get stuff done they don't really care much on how I get through the work, they do have some filters but I think that's just to stop people from cooming in the office.
 
I’m just supposed to do this forever with a smile on my face ‘cause I need money?”

It's not like this is new. I think most people have that thought run through their head at some point.

The difference is that people have changed so much. There's less work ethic. Every time I go into a store I can barely get attention from the young employees chatting or using their phones. I try to find an older employee because they actually want to help you. How can you spend all that time texting when there's such a long line? No wonder the turnover rates are so crazy. I see new young employees like every other week.
 
Or sixty something… or even less. When I worked in a scandi country, if I got a bonus it was taxed at 55%, so I’d see LESS than half of it.
Yeah but you also got clean well maintained roads, all kinds of services and next to no crime.
Alot of people are willing to pay taxes in exchange for that. the Issue is that the government can no longer deliver.
 
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It's sad but true, really sucks to hear, but that's why you gotta find some meaning in life that makes it all worth it, save your money up so you can travel, maybe treat yourself to some good food every now and then, buy some courses and develop some skills, hobbies... Life is gonna get depressing if all you do is wage away and browse TikTok during your free time.

No wonder zoomers chose "influencer" and "content creator" as the number one thing they aspired to be, who wouldn't want to get thousands while putting not even a fourth of the average wagey cagey effort in while choosing your own hours and being your own boss?
 
Those jobs aren't supposed to be for people raising families and shit, its supposed to be for highschool students. People like that used to just not survive, but we aren't allowed to cull the retarded anymore.
For some positions that'll work but some just can't be filled by kids which is primarily what I was focused on. In any case that's how the law needs to change - you can have one rate for working-age minors and one rate for adults. Set the former lower and the latter higher and let companies decide how to staff.

In every case I think the companies would hire the minors vs. some shiftless adult who can't hold down a decent job.

However, if their employees get welfare they still have to repay the government for it. No excuse for underpaying someone and having us pick up the slack through our taxes.
 
The smart phones combined with bad parenting creates a clusterfuck completely new in human history. Some people would make up conspiracy theories to cope, but the inventors never planned for what the phone may do to the human caveman brain. Especially when the young users synapsis are still forming. Yes, muh socrates something something children yada yada but the old greek fags were not holding dopamine boosting drugs in their hands all the time. Life is hard and you have to adapt.
 
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