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Honored Contributor
Posts: 18,752
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@Spurt wrote:

@Abrowneyegirl wrote:

@Spurt

 

I like your example and am going to share it with the other mentors.

 

"Totally agree and to put it in another perspective...How would THEY feel if their smartphone, smartTV, or internet required repair, and the person repairing their items wasn't working and instead was playing on their phone, but charging THEM per hour???????????????????????"


@Abrowneyegirl @Noel7

 

Glad the example.....glad I could help....Woman Very Happy

 

I'm not saying that all millenials are awful people, their perspective on the real world isn't accurate though....  I'll give you an example, a friend's daughter is 24, always been a hard worker, when going to college she worked part-time jobs---she even didnt mind working nights and weekends when the rest of her friends were partying.....However, she did get fired on one for job for.....guess what....being on her cell phone (even though she finished her work).....And even now that she has graduated from college and has a good, excellent salary and benefits, she gets in trouble for taking too long lunch hours, and she has come in late to work because what was she doing ....she was up all night texting with her friends so she didn't hear the alarm.  She works hard and has to work lots of overtime during her companies businest times, and she does that well and never complains, she's a good kid, .(she even enjoys hainging out with us "crazy old ladies") but we try to mentor her and tell her to keep her phone in perspective and put her job first, good jobs are hard to find these days.....


@Spurt

 

I know you aren't saying they're all awful. SPURT, but we do see attacks on them every day on Chat.

 

I know you understand we can't judge a generation on the one or two any of us know personally.

 

A couple of decades ago, we brought a troubled young teen into our home.  We took care of her over the years and I tried to teach her many things.  She was a handful, including some drugs and incredibly lazy.  She pretty much blew every job she got because she didn't want to follow the rules.

 

Today she is a department head for a major international company and speaks several languages.  Even I wouldn't have predicted the success she was able to achieve.

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,354
Registered: ‎07-17-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@esmeraldagooch wrote:

You can have anything made up these days.

 

Esty item.

il_570xN.987802650_oenp.jpg


 

I think they also have "Ask Me About My Colonoscopy," if anyone's interested.   Smiley LOL

 

 



"Heartburn Can Cause Cancer" -- www.ecan.org
Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,919
Registered: ‎08-31-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@mistriTsquirrel wrote:

 

These days, "entry-level" jobs often require a bachelor's or master's degree.  When you think about it, the fact that one would have to attend school for 4-6 years after high school to get a job that someone out of high school used to be able to get is pretty irritating.  I think the mindset is that those 4-6 years were the "dues" they were supposed to be paying, and when will the work they put in start to pay off.

 

My mother got a job as an accountant with a high school diploma, by "working her way up" (and it didn't take 4 years).  That would never happen these days.  These days, a person would have to go to college for 4 years to even have a chance at getting that exact same job title...if they beat out 200 other applicants.

 

The gripes may seem petty, but the feeling is that the work is neverending with not much reward in sight.  In other words, "if I have to cover the amount of work that used to be done by 3 people (for the same wage), can I at least have access to Facebook?"


This is true up to a point, but I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that 50 years ago, middle schoolers knew more than today's high school and even college grads.  People used to pay for school so they really thought of how much AND what classes will really help them get ahead.  One of the creators of Common Core talked about minimizing math skills, and yet what is a huge complaint of employers?  Applicants don't have the math skills.

 

My dad taught in the technical area, and he worked closely with the needs of employers as to how the program was shaped, but the quality of students drastically declined in the 90s.  As frustrating as administrative baloney can be, every teacher I know was mostly sickened by the lack of college-ready students.  We have the most expensive education system in the world, and we get some of the worst results.  What in the heck are they teaching if reading, writing, grammar, math, civics and finance are being minimized?

 

I've found that there are a lot of employers who don't want or need a college degree, but they do demand experience.  One of the most successful people I know started working an entry-level job at 18, and if she'd stayed in that particular field, she'd be making around 60+ K just because the experience is viewed as better than a degree.  Getting out of college prepares you for flipping burgers unless the field is in demand.  Even then, it doesn't mean you'll do well on the job if you're lacking the soft skills or feel entitled.

Read it! New England Journal of Medicine—May 21, 2020
Universal Masking in Hospitals in the Covid-19 Era

“We know that wearing a mask outside health care facilities offers little, if any, protection from infection.
Honored Contributor
Posts: 33,704
Registered: ‎03-20-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@Noel7 wrote:

@Spurt wrote:

@Abrowneyegirl wrote:

@Spurt

 

I like your example and am going to share it with the other mentors.

 

"Totally agree and to put it in another perspective...How would THEY feel if their smartphone, smartTV, or internet required repair, and the person repairing their items wasn't working and instead was playing on their phone, but charging THEM per hour???????????????????????"


@Abrowneyegirl @Noel7

 

Glad the example.....glad I could help....Woman Very Happy

 

I'm not saying that all millenials are awful people, their perspective on the real world isn't accurate though....  I'll give you an example, a friend's daughter is 24, always been a hard worker, when going to college she worked part-time jobs---she even didnt mind working nights and weekends when the rest of her friends were partying.....However, she did get fired on one for job for.....guess what....being on her cell phone (even though she finished her work).....And even now that she has graduated from college and has a good, excellent salary and benefits, she gets in trouble for taking too long lunch hours, and she has come in late to work because what was she doing ....she was up all night texting with her friends so she didn't hear the alarm.  She works hard and has to work lots of overtime during her companies businest times, and she does that well and never complains, she's a good kid, .(she even enjoys hainging out with us "crazy old ladies") but we try to mentor her and tell her to keep her phone in perspective and put her job first, good jobs are hard to find these days.....


@Spurt

 

I know you aren't saying they're all awful. SPURT, but we do see attacks on them every day on Chat.

 

I know you understand we can't judge a generation on the one or two any of us know personally.

 

A couple of decades ago, we brought a troubled young teen into our home.  We took care of her over the years and I tried to teach her many things.  She was a handful, including some drugs and incredibly lazy.  She pretty much blew every job she got because she didn't want to follow the rules.

 

Today she is a department head for a major international company and speaks several languages.  Even I wouldn't have predicted the success she was able to achieve.


@Noel7

 

I understand what your saying....I'm not judging based or one or two....I'm basing this on a whole office/company's experience....and from personal experience....even a hard working yp...............

 

Given the right upbringing or in your situationa, mentorship, if an individual's is willing to listen, learn and to change then certainly success can be experienced but it requires a change in attitude and perspective on life in general.....

Animals are reliable, full of love, true in their affections, grateful. Difficult standards for people to live up to.”
Honored Contributor
Posts: 18,752
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@Spurt wrote:

@Noel7 wrote:

@Spurt wrote:

@Abrowneyegirl wrote:

@Spurt

 

I like your example and am going to share it with the other mentors.

 

"Totally agree and to put it in another perspective...How would THEY feel if their smartphone, smartTV, or internet required repair, and the person repairing their items wasn't working and instead was playing on their phone, but charging THEM per hour???????????????????????"


@Abrowneyegirl @Noel7

 

Glad the example.....glad I could help....Woman Very Happy

 

I'm not saying that all millenials are awful people, their perspective on the real world isn't accurate though....  I'll give you an example, a friend's daughter is 24, always been a hard worker, when going to college she worked part-time jobs---she even didnt mind working nights and weekends when the rest of her friends were partying.....However, she did get fired on one for job for.....guess what....being on her cell phone (even though she finished her work).....And even now that she has graduated from college and has a good, excellent salary and benefits, she gets in trouble for taking too long lunch hours, and she has come in late to work because what was she doing ....she was up all night texting with her friends so she didn't hear the alarm.  She works hard and has to work lots of overtime during her companies businest times, and she does that well and never complains, she's a good kid, .(she even enjoys hainging out with us "crazy old ladies") but we try to mentor her and tell her to keep her phone in perspective and put her job first, good jobs are hard to find these days.....


@Spurt

 

I know you aren't saying they're all awful. SPURT, but we do see attacks on them every day on Chat.

 

I know you understand we can't judge a generation on the one or two any of us know personally.

 

A couple of decades ago, we brought a troubled young teen into our home.  We took care of her over the years and I tried to teach her many things.  She was a handful, including some drugs and incredibly lazy.  She pretty much blew every job she got because she didn't want to follow the rules.

 

Today she is a department head for a major international company and speaks several languages.  Even I wouldn't have predicted the success she was able to achieve.


@Noel7

 

I understand what your saying....I'm not judging based or one or two....I'm basing this on a whole office/company's experience....and from personal experience....even a hard working yp...............

 

Given the right upbringing or in your situationa, mentorship, if an individual's is willing to listen, learn and to change then certainly success can be experienced but it requires a change in attitude and perspective on life in general.....


You're right @Spurt  It sure does!  Usually, that happens naturally.  Remember, all studies show the brain of a young person is not fully developed until age 25, give or take a little.  Obviously, some never mature, but thankfully, most young people do, including the millennials.

 

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 19,413
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?

@Spurt, where do these people who say "it's always been this way" come from? When I started my job, we followed every company policy or knew we wouldn't have a job. Even growing up on a farm, we accepted that there would be no summer vacation because that was our busiest time. To this day, I sell vacation days back to my company. My boss even attended a seminar about the generational differences because we can't get the young workers to think beyond "what's in it for me".

Honored Contributor
Posts: 33,704
Registered: ‎03-20-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@Blahblahvampemer wrote:

@mistriTsquirrel wrote:

 

These days, "entry-level" jobs often require a bachelor's or master's degree.  When you think about it, the fact that one would have to attend school for 4-6 years after high school to get a job that someone out of high school used to be able to get is pretty irritating.  I think the mindset is that those 4-6 years were the "dues" they were supposed to be paying, and when will the work they put in start to pay off.

 

My mother got a job as an accountant with a high school diploma, by "working her way up" (and it didn't take 4 years).  That would never happen these days.  These days, a person would have to go to college for 4 years to even have a chance at getting that exact same job title...if they beat out 200 other applicants.

 

The gripes may seem petty, but the feeling is that the work is neverending with not much reward in sight.  In other words, "if I have to cover the amount of work that used to be done by 3 people (for the same wage), can I at least have access to Facebook?"


This is true up to a point, but I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that 50 years ago, middle schoolers knew more than today's high school and even college grads.  People used to pay for school so they really thought of how much AND what classes will really help them get ahead.  One of the creators of Common Core talked about minimizing math skills, and yet what is a huge complaint of employers?  Applicants don't have the math skills.

 

My dad taught in the technical area, and he worked closely with the needs of employers as to how the program was shaped, but the quality of students drastically declined in the 90s.  As frustrating as administrative baloney can be, every teacher I know was mostly sickened by the lack of college-ready students.  We have the most expensive education system in the world, and we get some of the worst results.  What in the heck are they teaching if reading, writing, grammar, math, civics and finance are being minimized?

 

I've found that there are a lot of employers who don't want or need a college degree, but they do demand experience.  One of the most successful people I know started working an entry-level job at 18, and if she'd stayed in that particular field, she'd be making around 60+ K just because the experience is viewed as better than a degree.  Getting out of college prepares you for flipping burgers unless the field is in demand.  Even then, it doesn't mean you'll do well on the job if you're lacking the soft skills or feel entitled.


@Blahblahvampemer

 

Well said!  A degree isnt much worth the paper its printed on today....employers are looki for different skillsets and maturity that college doesn't teach these days!

 

Yep, math, grammar, cursive writing, ....all ditched in favor of graduating without having learned critical skills.  This may be considered ancient but one of the best classes I took in high school back in the 70's (I already had the credits needed to graduate and for college) I signed up for what I thought was an easy "A" was something called "Personal Math" what this course did was to teach how to set up a budget---bill paying, saving and investing for the future, ---a real LIFE SKILLS class, I thouht to myself this should be mandatory like civics. best class I took in high school.....I recommended it to all, but sadly they did away with it!

Animals are reliable, full of love, true in their affections, grateful. Difficult standards for people to live up to.”
Honored Contributor
Posts: 18,752
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@AuntG wrote:

@Spurt, where do these people who say "it's always been this way" come from? When I started my job, we followed every company policy or knew we wouldn't have a job. Even growing up on a farm, we accepted that there would be no summer vacation because that was our busiest time. To this day, I sell vacation days back to my company. My boss even attended a seminar about the generational differences because we can't get the young workers to think beyond "what's in it for me".


**************************

 

@AuntG

 

Since you are talking about me, you should have addressed me directly.

 

Here's where I came from:  I worked my way through the university and grad school, two jobs at once and taking a full course.  I paid my own way, every dime.  It wasn't easy because I have lupus, which strikes hard in someone's early twenties.  I struggled every day with pain and getting sick, and graduated with a 4 point and honors.

 

I worked for years in a very difficult job, and then I went into practice with a colleague.

 

That's where I came from, how about you?

Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,919
Registered: ‎08-31-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?


@Noel7 wrote:

IT'S ALWAYS BEEN THAT WAY

 

Please, stop with the incessant attacks on younger people.

 

It was that way decades ago when I got my first professional job.  People complained about not being able to use the phones for private calls, and we had a group protest so women could wear pants suits to work.

 

This is nothing new.


No, it wasn't always that way.  In the late 70s, I saw students come into my program ready to kick educational backside, no remedial courses required, and they finished on the expected timetable with multiple job offers waiting.  Now they require an average of six months remedial, and the drop-out rate has soared.  I took a one-year course that started with 17 students and ended with two.  I was one of them.  

 

It used to be common for MOST teens to have already worked before they went to college, but now we have college grads that have NEVER held a job. Scary.

Read it! New England Journal of Medicine—May 21, 2020
Universal Masking in Hospitals in the Covid-19 Era

“We know that wearing a mask outside health care facilities offers little, if any, protection from infection.
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,258
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: Where do I get a giant "Life is Not Fair" sign?

For one who grew up through and worked through the school of hard knocks, I have absolutely no tolerance for certain behaviors exhibited by Milleniels.

 

Whiney about not being able to wear opened-toed shoes?  Someone needs to educate these prima donas about Risk Management.

 

What has happened in this generation is too much tolerance; too much opened-mouthed adoration of college professors; too much "world revolves around me, even though I'm no longer 3;" too much acquiescence by parents and parties who are supposed to be involved; too little introspection; too little study of religion(s); too much indulgence in alcohol, pot and drugs; too many college loans; too little thought given to future endeavors; a near absence of knowledge regarding how we got where we are today, since the year 1900; nearly no tolerance for views which contradict one's personal views; the creation of a "living bubble," created by each individual - an incredible thing, really, which allows the creator to live, nearly unscathed and thriving, in a world which may be spinning toward who knows what around them; and, finally, all of these individuals have collectively created a world now full of "potty breaks."  These "potty breaks" are necessary for their well-being!  For, after all, who could possibly EXIST without potty breaks, better known as tech breaks, to intercourse with tech devices, REGARDLESS of personal responsibilities.  Yes, REGARDLESS.  There's the crux.

 

They don't care.

 

They have stopped caring.