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.
 
God, when I get off my ass to get a job then that's something I'd be delighted to have. Seems piss easy.

Wouldn't they have to do shit like that at College anyways? Unless you yanks have completely different degrees in which you get it for sitting on your ass and saying the right buzz words.
 
Welcome to reality.

Now, I will offer this small measure of comfort: Do not ever, ever feel bound to stay at a job you hate. Do not stay at a job that affects your health (and I mean your health, not 'it gives me bad fee fees').

Adopt a mercenary mindset. You are trading hours of your time, your life, for funds; so do not feel guilty in the slightest about squeezing for a little more juice out of that orange. Similarly, if someone offers you a better deal, look at it. If it IS a better deal? Take it.

The company is not your friend, not your family. You are in it for the paycheck, nothing more.
 

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?'​

if you want a decent high paying job, you're gonna have to eat shit along the way. that's life babygirl

“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.
oh no, i work 40+ a week to put food on the table and bills paid. you think i like doing that shit?
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.
where the fuck are you getting this information from? even mcdonalds offers benefits like health care, tuition, 401k, and parental leave. it's not mcdonalds fault that the economy sucks, blame the government
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.
oh no! somebody has to work a job that they don't like? damn, if only that was an experience only few people have

i think the funniest takeaway i've gotten from this, is that. even in this utopian hypothetical, you would still have to work a shitty job. you know, the job itself isn't always the issue. people fucking suck and that's how life is. we live in a time where even places like fast food offer benefits when there was a point in time where that wasn't common place

i am a firm believer in never staying at a job you hate, however, you have to realize no matter where you go, you will deal with shit
 
I continue to maintain that food scarcity is what kept society together. The moment you could go to a store and buy something, or God forbid pull up in your car and get a burger and fries within 5 minutes; most of the people turned to navel gazing instead of a higher process. It doesn't help that higher education and the labor market has become a fucking scheme as opposed to something worthwhile.

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.
Welcome to life; not even a hundred years ago it was "Work or starve." It's why the term "starving artist" exists; they'd rather paint or sculpt or whatever than labor.

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.
I unironically agree with this statement; however everything else about it, like how we'd go about getting that change, is probably at odds with each other.

Before the Evils of Capitalism, man lived in a state of communistic paradise. If we could only end capitalism, no one would ever have to work for anything ever again, as it's super duper unfair that capitalism invented that. What do you mean, where does food come from? It comes from the Whole Foods, chud.
I said it in another thread; but all these wannabe commies all want to be artists or politibureau. Not a single one would use free college to learn ethical animal husbandry or forestry or anything like that.
 
Welcome to life; not even a hundred years ago it was "Work or starve." It's why the term "starving artist" exists; they'd rather paint or sculpt or whatever than labor.
wouldn't you?
*cough* Feminists *cough*
As much as I do wish the every woman a housewife thing was real, they've always worked, mostly part time. It's just they didn't have careers or major jobs because that would get in the way of child rearing. Women pursuing careers and them getting propped over men for high-paying positions has murdered their dating prospects and our replacement rate along with it.
 
The average person under 30 has been dealt such a coal black, Congo nigger shit sandwich that it's quite astounding any of them manage to function at all.

I'd rather be homeless scurrying around in the woods than produce for the sole benefit of ( thankfully, finally ) dying boomers, niggers, the mentally ill and the gorillionaire oligarchs running the ZOG-empire.
 
Fucking zoomers. People from every generation live through the cultural shock of starting their first jobs. Then they simply get used to working and life goes on.
Get your first job, "Okay so I earn X-per hour, and I work Y-hours per week, so the two week pay period means I'll make Z-dollars. FUCK YES!"

*two weeks pass*

"THE FUCK ARE ALL THESE TAXES?!"
 
To be fair, Gen Z is currently one of the most pozzed generations there are. They grew up in a molly-coddled environment and now forced to face the harsh reality prepared for them by selfishly malicious people in power. So yes, they're pretty soft.

Well, all I got to offer for advice is to grow thicker skin and learn when to quit.
 
provide basic social services, like access to healthcare, paid parental leave, or childcare
Are these services provided by robots? Angela? Xenu?

The shear fucking hubris of calling for services that will require employees while complaining about needing to work.

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
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This is a septic tank technician. His job every day is to drive to rural and semi rural properties, get a waft of people's shit and piss when he uncovers the tank, get people's shit on his body and clothes, then go home smelling like such. He can work in hot environments with the sun beating down on him or even work with snow and wind chill.

All the while this bitch is in her air conditioning office...
 
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.
 
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