Who is actually surprised by this? I would be more surprised if young Americans felt it was a great place to live.
Millennials killing yet one more thing I guess. Really though, you can’t blame them, given the state of affairs, we should really be placing blame where it’s due, on the people who are driving up house prices, rents, and general prices overall. A friend’s rent just went up $150 this year (~10% increase), and it’s the exact same removed it’s been for the past year. Meanwhile, annual raises are typically only 2-4% if you’re lucky…
“Rich Elites Cause U.S. to Drop in Global Happiness Ranking” is a more apt title.
Yeah.
I struggled with panic attacks in the military and during an aid mission we brought a bunch of medical staff from other countries with us.
So I talked with a German psychiatrist.
His advice was basically:
Yeah, you’re in an incredibly stressful situation, obviously you’re going to be stressed, it’s completely normal
Which helped a lot more than it sounds like would have.
He didn’t try to pill me up or anything or say it was my fault for how I’m handling it.
Just very simple matter of fact told me my response was 100% rational.
What the fuck does the average American have to be happy about right now? Millennials being unhappy is because life sucks for lots of us.
I’m just a normal civvie software engineer, but this is actually a thought process that I have struggled with mightily, and continue to do so: as a conscientious human who has a strong interest in history, is it reasonable and ethical for me to medicate myself into quiescence, when my anxiety and distress is directly caused by the fact that I care about the world and happen to know a good deal about current events?
Or, if you’re more neurotypical / are better at compartmentalization: is it ethically ok to just straight up ignore all the systematic, horrifyingly bad shit going on in the world?