From the Evening Herald:
From the moment our children are born, we feel an overwhelming desire to protect them. We don’t want anything, or anyone to impinge on their perfect world.We want, especially, to build their self esteem. So we praise them. And society concurs. Children are forever getting stars for being good; and medals not just for winning; but for taking part in sports.
And the result? We’re raising a generation of Little Emperors. Children who ‘rule’ the house. Their toys take over the living space; they choose what to watch on TV, and their first scribblings have pride of place on the walls.
... Is consumerism to blame? Watching endless MTV and being constantly online, our children believe that to consume is natural and normal. They think looking perfect will lead to success. And this rather worries Rowan Manahan, a career coach and author of Where’s my Oasis.
“A child’s sense of entitlement and their sense of privilege starts very young,” he says. “It’s a bad idea to tell someone they are great when, clearly, they are not. When praise is misplaced it turns quickly into delusion. “Take Pop Idol,” he says. “You can see the absolute conviction on a competitor's face that they have what it takes, and ‘What does Simon Cowell know?’ Even when, clearly, they haven’t an ounce of talent.”
It’s the same when they leave college. Graduates, Manahan says, have hopelessly unrealistic expectations of what any job will entail. “They think the world is a simple meritocracy, and they believe that their talent will out,” he says. “They think teams are collaborative and co-operative. They are convinced that they will have it all. Work comes as a huge culture shock.
“By the time they are 28 they may have made a series of moves. They’d say it was for more money, or for a funded MBA, but there is, I think, an unconscious thought there too. “They're thinking, ‘Work can’t be like this everywhere. It can’t be this cold and unfeeling and this callous.’ And when they hit 30 they have an early midlife crisis [a Thrisis!]. They think, ‘How can I do this for the rest of my life?’ They feel they’re not loved; they are not respected, and they are not even a number.”
- A recent production of Snow White at a primary school in Japan featured 25 Snow Whites; no dwarfs and no wicked witch. Parents had objected to one child being picked for the leading role.
- The head of HR in a leading Irish Company described Ireland’s young job seekers as ‘impossible.’ “They have totally unrealistic expectations and have a delusion in the value they will bring, and the pay packet they should receive,” he said.
- The Association of Graduate Recruiters in the UK would concur. They reported that one new recruit rang his mother to complain that he had to go to London the next day. "And they haven’t even given me a map," he whined.



2 comments:
Nice one, Rowan.
Am going to feature this shortly...
When I graduated from university I seriously considered applying for jobs in various museums, which I think I would have enjoyed greatly. There were some entry-level vacancies and I had the relevant qualifications.
I remember at the time that those vacancies were offering a starting salary of ST£8,500. This was 1986. I was disgusted. I had a BA from University College Dublin! Surely I was worth at least £10,000!
So I didn't even apply.
Five years later I was struggling to earn IR£7,000 as a part time English teacher in Dublin and I realised what an idiot I had been.
I don't believe in regrets, but speaking objectively, what the younger me needed was someone to slap me in the face and inform me that my degree meant something only to me and that once I graduated, I was no longer at the top of any ladder, but suddenly on the bottom rung of the working ladder.
On a related note, when I was 33 I joined a large IT firm as a graduate trainee. They had separate programmes for those with IT related degrees and those with other degrees. However, several managers commented that the ones with the IT degrees were harder to teach and learned more slowly because they generally came in with the attitude that they knew a thing or two.
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