Culture Gen Z seeks safety above all else as the generation grows up amid constant crisis and existential threat

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Gen Z seeks safety above all else as the generation grows up amid constant crisis and existential threat
Yalda T. Uhls / Jan 30, 2025

After many years of partisan politics, increasingly divisive language, finger-pointing and inflammatory speech have contributed to an environment of fear and uncertainty, affecting not just political dynamics but also the priorities and perceptions of young people.

As a developmental psychologist who studies the intersection of media and adolescent mental health, and as a mother of two Gen Z kids, I have seen firsthand how external societal factors can profoundly shape young people’s emotional well-being.

This was brought into sharp relief through the results of a recent survey my colleagues and I conducted with 1,644 young people across the U.S., ages 10 to 24. The study was not designed as a political poll but rather as a window into what truly matters to adolescents. We asked participants to rate the importance of 14 personal goals. These included classic teenage desires such as “being popular,” “having fun” and “being kind.”

None of these ranked as the top priority. Instead, the No. 1 answer was “to be safe.”

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It lurks everywhere: Gen Z’s perception of danger is further shaped by events like the recent fires devastating Los Angeles.

What was once taken for granted
The findings are both illuminating and heartbreaking. As a teenager, I did countless unsafe things. My peers and I didn’t dwell on harm; we chased fun and freedom.

Whereas previous generations may have taken safety for granted, today’s youth are growing up in an era of compounded crises — school shootings, a worsening climate crisis, financial uncertainty and the lingering trauma of a global pandemic. Even though our research did not pinpoint the specific causes of adolescent fears, the constant exposure to crises, amplified by social media, likely plays a significant role in fostering a pervasive sense of worry.

Despite data showing that many aspects of life are safer now than in previous generations, young people just don’t feel it. Their perception of danger is further shaped by events like the recent fires that devastated Los Angeles, reinforcing a belief that danger, possibly caused by global crises like climate change, lurks everywhere.

This shift in perspective has profound implications for the future of this generation and those to come.

Especially vulnerable time
Adolescence, like early childhood, is a pivotal period for brain development. Young people are particularly sensitive to their surroundings as their brains evaluate the environment to prepare them for independence.

This developmental stage – when the capacity to regulate emotions and critically assess information is still maturing – makes them especially vulnerable to enduring impacts.

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Studies show that adolescents struggle to put threats into context. This makes them particularly vulnerable to fear-driven messaging prevalent in both traditional and social media, which is further amplified by political rhetoric and blame-shifting. This vulnerability has implications for their mental health, as prolonged exposure to fear and uncertainty has been linked to increased rates of anxiety, depression and even physical health issues.

So when the media that Gen Z consumes are dominated by fear – be it through headlines, social media posts, political rhetoric or even storylines in movies and TV – it could shape their worldview in ways that may reverberate for generations to come.

Enduring generational impact
Historical events have long been shown to shape the worldview of entire generations.

For instance, the Great Depression primarily impacted the daily lives of the Silent Generation, those born between 1928 and 1945. Moreover, its long-term effects on financial attitudes and security concerns echoed into the Baby Boomer generation, influencing how those born between 1946 and 1964 approached money, stability and risk throughout their lives.

Similarly, today’s adolescents, growing up amid a series of compounded global crises, will likely carry the imprint of this period of heightened fear and uncertainty well into adulthood. This formative experience could shape their mental health, decision-making and even their collective identity and values for decades to come.

In addition, feelings of insecurity and instability can make people more responsive to fear-based messaging, which could potentially influence their political and social choices. In an era marked by the rise of authoritarian governments, this susceptibility could have far-reaching implications because fear often drives individuals to prioritize immediate safety over moral or ideological ideals.

As such, these dynamics may profoundly shape how this generation engages with the world, the causes they champion and the leaders they choose to follow.

Room for optimism?
Interestingly, “being kind” was rated No. 2 in our survey, irrespective of other demographics. While safety dominates their priorities, adolescents still value qualities that foster connection and community.

This finding indicates a duality in their aspirations: While they feel a pervasive sense of danger, they also recognize the importance of interpersonal relationships and emotional well-being.

Our findings are a call to look at the broader societal context shaping adolescent development. For instance, the rise in school-based safety drills, while intended to provide a sense of preparedness, may unintentionally reinforce feelings of insecurity. Similarly, the apocalyptic narrative around climate change may create a sense of powerlessness that could further compound their fears and leave them wanting to bury their heads in the sand.

Understanding how these perceptions are formed and their implications for mental health, decision-making and behavior is essential for parents, storytellers, policymakers and researchers.

I believe we must also consider how societal systems contribute to the pervasive sense of uncertainty and fear among youth. Further research can help untangle the complex relationship between external stressors, media consumption and youth well-being, shedding light on how to best support adolescents during this formative stage of life.
 
It's such a broad age rage too. 10 year olds should not even understand the idea of not 'feelings safe'. They think that it's something they should be worried about but if they were pressed on exactly what they're not feeling safe about they will have no answer for you. The bigger issue here is they're terminally online at 10 years old. That is a failure of parents and tragically the grandparents that are raising kids today. There should be more public awareness about how much adult content that young children are consuming. I'm not talking about porno, I'm talking about big feelings, death, money, violence...

it's all so fucking sad.

Let Kids Be Kids Again TM
Zoomers are not even 10. The youngest are in their last couple years of high school.
 
>constant crisis and existential threat
>school shootings, a worsening climate crisis, financial uncertainty and the lingering trauma of a global pandemic
>our research did not pinpoint the specific causes of adolescent fear
>As the American-born child of Iranian immigrants, Yalda cares passionately about diversity, inclusion and equity and looks to educate youth and adults about myriad ways that explicit and implicit biases affect development.

It is not the spoon that bends, it is only yourself.
 
this, as a Gen Zer myself I blame the whole situation on a shit education system and Capitalists hiring third-worlders for even the most menial of jobs because their faggots who wanna cost-cut, otherwise we still have a standard of living far better then a medieval peasant living in 7th century Europe for example, I fear for younger people especially the Women are just going to exist in a coddled society with AI taking over even more jobs, forcing the governments hand and we slowly decay from that.
Stop Capitalizing random non-Proper nouns like A nigger.
 
Quite literally what you're suggesting.
I'm suggesting keeping these things at arms length, not to be constantly inundating yourself with doomerism, and make more impactful use of their time in personal, familial, and local ways.

You can know what's happening in the world without drawn-out exposure and editorialism. You're going to absorb it anyways, mostly through cultural osmosis just be talking to people. And if you don't hear about it, it's likely something that isn't going to affect you or the people around you significantly enough to be discussed.
 
Do GenZers have it worse than silent era = great depression + dying by the millions in ww2?

almost too different to compare. too much information, too much awareness and conceivably nothing worth fighting for other than making sure your brown replacement has a great life.
 
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I think there’s this whole mental health crisis because no one has a purpose. A lot of people struggle to find an actual job and even when they do half if not more of their paycheck goes to taxes. Then people also aren’t having families anymore and instead “living the good life” and consooming. And people wonder why they feel so sad…
 
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lol, look at this millennial complaining that he isn't a CEO before he turns 25! You just need to work your way up from the bottom like I did at my first job at the car factory. You know how I got that job? I went up to the manager and gave him a firm handshake. I was hired that day. Yeah, I didn't make a lot of money at first but I was able to buy my first house before I was 30. So if you stop eating avocado toasts and drinking those frilly-girly "coffees" from Starbucks you could own a house too. Stop being a cry-baby and GET A JOB!
To the defense of 'avocado toast', food is 10x shittier than it was 50 years ago. If you're not spending a decent chunk of money on good products you probably eat shit.
 
Millennials are neurotic and dysfunctional, but I feel like we at least had a reason to be. We grew up in a world where we were told things were costantly getting better. We weren't involved in any major wars, the Soviet Union had collapsed, and with the internet entering people's houses we were able to connect with people all over the world! Sure, you had whack jobs like Timothy Mcveigh, and there was the horrors in Rawanda, but we were entering the tech age and the whole world was going to have it's problems solved!

Then the morning of 9/11 happens and you wake up to the news showing people throwing themselves off the top of the World Trade Center (which you didn't even know existed because you're 9) in New York, 3,000 are dead and the country is attacked completely out of the blue with absolutely no warning because of things that happened 10-30 years before you were born, Israel, and because Clinton got a blow job. Suddenly the country is in 2 wars, one of which is extremely devisive, and your older cousins are going off to get blown up in the middle east. Fast Forward to highschool or early college and suddenly the economy collapses. You can't get a part time job like your parents expect because there ARE NO JOBS, period. People are losing their homes, your friends end up losing their home and living with their parents out of a car. Your parents tell you you HAVE to go to college and get your degree(or finish if you're already in it), but your bombarded with horror stories about people graduating with hundreds of thousands of dollars of student loan debt and sending out hundreds of applications but still being rejected for even cashier jobs. This continues for more than a decade until Trump is elected.
Huh... I guess in that regard then I may be more similar to an average american millenial, despite me being a zoomer.

For context, I was born in Eastern Europe, so events like 9/11 or war in Afghanistan held little to no relevance in my society, besides as gags on shows like South Park. Even the subprime mortgage crisis didn't have much of a lasting impact, since my country wasn't that much affluent to begin with and we hadn't adopted the euro yet, so we weren't as effected by the eurozone crisis, especially in comparison to places like Greece.

So it wasn't until 2014 that shit actually started to change. That's when the refugee crisis begins and Crimea becomes part of Russia (oh, there was also gamergate, but I was completely and utterly oblivious to it, so I refuse as counting that as having any notable influence in my development). Surprisingly, the refugee stuff was less influential than the latter. I recall seeing a few people that very clearly came from far away lands, but they never stayed for long, as their main destinations were more developed and liberal places like Sweden or Germany. My country was effectively just a gas station stop for them.

That Crimea situation meanwhile was seen as a HUGE deal, despite us not being Ukrainian, which eventually led to the formation of compulsory military training for nearly all males, even before the full scale "military operation". What disturbs me is how frequently people used to dismiss this reaction by the media as paranoid overreaction, heavily ridiculing and satirizing it... now they're all silent... After it escalated to a full-scale invasion, all those jokes stopped, even among people who are still supportive of Russia, as there isn't a month that doesn't pass with some warmongering schizoid on Russian tv claiming multiple eastern European countries as Russian clay that are run by western fascist regimes. That never made sense to me.

But I am getting slightly ahead of myself, the first major event that I recall having strong influence on my life directly was covid. I had to finish high school through the pandemic, which is a shame, since that's when I recall my social skills gaining most significant improvement and me getting along with my classmates the most, only for everyone to grow a lot more distant after the quarantines and pandemics and stuff. Not long after the pandemic started dying down, I got drafted for training for 9 months, just as Russia's war with Ukraine properly started.

So I had my university education delayed by 2 years due to covid and military, due to factors entirely beyond my control, and I've probably forever internalized how all of my plans can be just dashed aside and me having no say in the matter. I also have to contend with the fact that me partaking in elections or political activism within my country might as well mean jack shit, if the fate of a country's sovereignty can be entirely decided by a few politicians in Washington and Kremlin, turning international rules and regulations into a complete sham. Thank god the Z propaganda turned out to be wrong and Trump isn't cow-towing to Putin. I still don't anticipate Trump in ending this war any time soon, but I hope that I am wrong.

Now, in this instance, I do not care who do you think is at fault in this situation, the point is... I don't want to see the same bullshit that's occurring there to reach the rest of Europe. I don't want to see my friends and family dying or my childhood home getting blown to bits by rockets. I don't want to go fight and die in a war, which nobody even knows how or when it started. I don't want to shoot and kill people with whom I had friendly chats with on this very website.

So yeah, I suppose I do match the category of zoomers that have saftety as a number one concern, even if culturally I may be more millennial, but I don't see how logging off the internet is anything but a band-aid solution to a much more deeper existential dread, of realizing how all of my life, all of my rights can just be snatched away by me being drafted to become a soldier, me becoming nothing else but a number for a paper sheet that bureaucrats get to look over in their warm, cozy offices, while I'd be in the open trenches during cold winter, coughing up blood from my lungs.

I guess the word that would best describe the current young generations is the untranslatable Russian term Toska. It's not the same as depression, it's this sense of melancholy, despair or anguish that arises for no discernable reason and doesn't go away, even when you are happy. Even when you are happy, it is this bleak, melancholic joy of relief, when for a few brief moments or hours, these thoughts and concerns you have in your head stop bothering you as much, while you're simultaneously are fully aware that this moment of joy isn't meant to last.

One guy put it best - "In November 2009, I and my band were traveling back home after doing a show in St. Petersburg and suddenly got stuck in a railroad traffic jam – it happened because the high-speed rail between Moscow and St. Petersburg had been bombed by terrorists. So our train went the long way around, and the route was constantly changing, because of the other trains, so nobody, not even the train crew, knew when and where we were going. We ran out of food, money and things to do and talk about and just listlessly sat there. For me, toska is being hung out to dry in the middle of uncertainty.”

So I feel the same way. Passenger on a train that has changed directions so many times, I'm left with no idea where it is heading, how much longer will it last, and not even the drivers seem to know where the hell are we going. It is utter toska.

Song to "Kino - Trolley", with english lyrics bellow

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Which is why they’re voting against rapists en masse.
 
All by design,
You create a constant sense of fear. Constant crises, and you change the rules constantly. That’s racist now, we use equity not equality, men are women, up is down. The constant rule changing is important, it stops people finding a set point got right and wrong.
Then you take those kids, with an unstable sense of self and you make them put every thought in social media. Then you change the rules again and you pick put a few to make examples of. The fear and instability gets worse.
Then take those kids and put them in college or school and bombard them with A Message. Trans right, the resistance, free Palestine, BLM. Give them an Other to fight. They cling to the sense of purpose.
They’ve been told ideas are harmful. They can’t read or concentrate. They are shattered shells filled with confusion and fear, easy to control, easy to sic on whatever target you like. But they’ll never truly rebel - they don’t have the strength or fortitude and their fear makes them totally controllable
All by design. Perfect attack dogs/slaves for the system.
 
Don't be a cuck like the plumber from Nintendo, be a chad like the hedgehog from Sega. Also lay off tiktok and the fattening goyslop.
 
Safety is a lie. Life is inherently unsafe and will always end in death 100% of the time. The pursuit of safety above all else is misguided and leads to complacency and a generation of retards that lack common sense and self preservation instincts.
 
Safety is a lie. Life is inherently unsafe and will always end in death 100% of the time. The pursuit of safety above all else is misguided and leads to complacency and a generation of retards that lack common sense and self preservation instincts.

Safety is an illusion and the biggest risk you could ever take in life is constantly playing it safe.
 
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