Latest news with #Millennials


The Hill
2 hours ago
- Business
- The Hill
1 in 3 baby boomers say they'll never sell home: Redfin
About a third of baby boomers who own their homes don't expect to ever part with them, according to a new poll. The survey, which was conducted by Ipsos last month for nationwide real estate company Redfin, found that another 30 percent of the post-World War II generation said they might sell at some point — just not within the next decade. Comparatively, about a quarter of homeowners who are part of Gen X — loosely defined as people born between 1965 and 1980 — say they will never sell their homes. About 20 percent of Millennials and the Gen Z cohort who own homes said they will never sell. According to Redfin, the tendency among older Americans to stay in the homes they own is putting additional stress on the housing market and making it more difficult for younger people to find affordable places to buy that are fit to raise families. Nearly 90 percent of the boomer-owned dwellings are single-family homes. 'While inventory is improving, supply is tight for young house hunters looking for family homes, especially in suburban areas where homes priced like starter homes, yet large enough for families, are scarce,' Redfin chief economist Daryl Fairweather said in an analysis of the poll's findings. 'With baby boomers opting to age in place rather than sell, it's challenging for younger buyers to find affordable options that fit their lifestyle.' 'But it's worth noting that even though many older Americans say they're not planning to sell their homes, many are likely to eventually part ways as it becomes harder to live independently and/or keep up with home maintenance,' he added. The survey included responses from about 4,000 U.S. residents across the country.


Metro
6 hours ago
- Health
- Metro
The weird and wonderful ways you can cure a Glastonbury hangover
Glastonbury begins in a few days – are you fully prepared? (Picture: Shutterstock) Festival season is in full swing, with Britain's most famous festival set to kick off later this week. Glastonbury begins Wednesday, June 25 and wraps up on Sunday, June 29 at Worthy Farm in Somerset. As thousands prepare to reach the farm and millions of others prepare plans for other festivals, new research has revealed some of the weird post-festival fatigue cures attendees are using. Remedies range from an old-fashioned fry-up to hair of the dog to other more spiritual solutions. 27% of Millennials and Gen Z said they've tried aromatherapy and essential oils to recover after the music festival. Sign up for all of the latest stories Start your day informed with Metro's News Updates newsletter or get Breaking News alerts the moment it happens. Another 21% admitted to trying raw eggs, and 17% swear by crystal healing for a 'quick fix'. Despite trying some rather unusual tactics, 59% of those surveyed by Just Eat found the methods didn't always succeed. But what works? Some festival goers swear by raw eggs (Picture: Getty) Dr Amos Ogunkoya has helped launch 'Festival Aid Kits' to help Brits recover effectively, delivered to their door. He explained: 'After festivals, our bodies need a lot of conscious recovery, repair, and TLC. 'It's all about prioritising self-care after days of late nights, too much sun, and non-stop socialising, but many of us struggle to find solutions that actually stick.' Nearly half of all festival-goers admitted they've never felt worse than the day after their return – and the average festival recovery time is two days. Just Eat has partnered with Boots and Co-op to create Festival SOS aisles on the app. Items include Dr Amos' elite recovery aid – a tin of baked beans. Time is truly the only thing to heal a hangover (Picture: Shutterstock) Festival fiends are starting to realise the benefits too, as 14% of Brits voted baked beans as an absolute staple when returning home. Whilst the humble store-cupboard staple might not seem like it has healing powers, according to Dr Amos, the high-fibre, plant protein-rich nature of baked beans helps with slow energy release, which is great for combating fatigue, as well as supporting gut health. Another ingredient? Pickled beetroot. Besides being packed with vitamins and minerals, the fermentation process behind pickling produces probiotics to help boost the immune system and gut health recovery. Though beetroot itself is healthy, the juice it is pickled in can also reduce fatigue – 18% of Brits admitted to drinking pickle juice for a post-festival fix. Other hero recovery hacks in the kit include Lemon & Ginger Tea – a secret weapon in combatting feelings of nausea post-festival, DioraHydrate Effervescent Tablets to help replenish lost electrolytes after heat exposure. Back & Muscle Pain Relief Gel – an essential after trekking around with heavy rucksacks and sleeping on uneven campsite ground, and a Moisture Bomb Revitalising Tissue Mask also help bring a moment of self-care calm after the festival chaos. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. Arrow MORE: 10 of London's best rooftop bars for summer Arrow MORE: Does drinking alcohol in the sun really get you drunk faster? A doctor shares their verdict Arrow MORE: 'I'm walking 192 miles to Glastonbury 25 years after going with my famous parents'
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Boomers Refuse To Believe These Things About The Generational Divide
The generational divide is real, and it's as wide as the Grand Canyon. You see it in how you communicate, work, and even grocery shop. Yet, boomers often dismiss the idea that such differences even exist. It's as if admitting the gap means acknowledging they might not have all the answers. So, let's break it down a bit. Here are 13 things boomers refuse to believe about the generational chasm—things you deal with every day. Boomers grew up in a world where job loyalty was everything. They'd clock in and out, day after day, year after year, expecting a gold watch at retirement. You, however, crave work-life balance—maybe even more life than work. The idea that you're not willing to sacrifice everything for a job feels alien to them. But according to a study by the Harvard Business Review, you're not alone in this mindset. In fact, millennials and Gen Z are driving the "gig economy," creating a landscape where flexibility is king. Still, boomers might roll their eyes and chalk it up to laziness. What they fail to grasp is that for you, it's not about shirking responsibility, it's about living a fuller, more rounded life. The white picket fence dream doesn't hold the allure it once did. You see homeownership as a ball-and-chain, tying you to one spot, one job, one way of life. Boomers might see it as a rite of passage into adulthood, but you see it as a financial burden. Renting offers you the freedom to pack up and go where opportunity knocks. Sure, owning a home can be a solid investment, but you weigh it against student debt, economic instability, and the desire for flexibility. Your life is more about experiences than assets. The freedom to travel, to switch careers, even to move for love, feels more valuable than a mortgage. And that's a concept many boomers struggle to accept. Boomers grew up with evening news broadcasts and daily papers as their lifeline to the world. You, on the other hand, get your news from Twitter, Instagram, or TikTok. To them, this seems like a chaotic and unreliable method of staying informed. But your newsfeed is tailored to your interests, giving you a wider, albeit sometimes narrower, scope of the world. According to Pew Research Center, younger generations are consuming news mainly through these platforms. This doesn't mean you're uninformed; it means you choose immediacy and relevance. Boomers may see this as superficial, but you see it as efficient. It's not that you don't care—it's that you care in a different way. For boomers, therapy was often a last resort, a sign that something was "really wrong." You, however, see it as maintenance, like going to the gym, but for your mental health. The stigma that kept older generations away from therapy is fading fast, but many boomers still see it as a weakness. For you, it's about self-awareness and growth. Conversations about mental health are frequent among your peers, and therapy is often just a normal Tuesday activity. You're not waiting for a crisis to seek help; you're being proactive. Boomers might view this as indulgent, but you're far more concerned with your own peace of mind than their opinions. It's about living your best life, not just surviving it. Marriage was once a given, a step you took without question. Boomers might still see it as a must-do, a cornerstone of adulthood. But for you, marriage is just one option among many. Whether it's marrying later, not at all, or embracing alternative relationship structures, you're writing your own rules. A report from the National Center for Family & Marriage Research shows that marriage rates are declining, especially among younger generations. You're choosing to define relationships on your terms. It's not about rejecting tradition for the sake of it; it's about finding what truly works for you. And love, after all, doesn't have to be confined to a legal contract. Boomers lived in an era where gender roles were clearly defined. Men were the breadwinners; women were the homemakers. But you reject this binary worldview. Gender fluidity and non-binary identities are part of your everyday vocabulary, reshaping how you approach life. You celebrate diversity and personal expression, even if it means challenging the status quo. It's not about erasing gender; it's about expanding its possibilities. Boomers may find this unsettling, clinging to their black-and-white distinctions. But for you, the world is a beautiful tapestry of identities, and you're not interested in limiting yourself to old frameworks. In a time when "don't ask, don't tell" was the norm, boomers learned to keep things close to the vest. You, however, are all about transparency—whether it's in relationships, work, or politics. You want to know where people stand, even if it's uncomfortable. To boomers, this candor can seem reckless. Transparency builds trust, and research from the Edelman Trust Barometer shows that millennials and Gen Z demand it now more than ever. Whether it's in brand loyalty or friendships, you want authenticity. Boomers might call it oversharing, but for you, it's about cutting through the noise. You crave genuineness in a world that often feels fake. Change isn't just inevitable; it's exhilarating. While boomers might cling to the familiar, you're diving headfirst into the new. Whether it's technology, new social norms, or career paths, you're adapting and evolving. You see change as a chance to grow, not something to fear. For boomers, change often equates to uncertainty. For you, it means opportunity. Each shift is a chance to redefine who you are and what you want. Boomers might see you as flighty, but you're committed to the journey, not just the destination. The concept of a 9-to-5 grind feels outdated to you. Boomers might see it as a steady, reliable way to live, but you see it as confining. Remote work, freelancing, and flexible schedules align more with your values. The future of work is here, and you're fully embracing it. Time is your most valuable currency, and you're not willing to spend it all in a cubicle. You'd rather work smarter, not harder, focusing on productivity rather than clocking hours. Boomers might view this as lackadaisical, but you've seen the benefits of a flexible lifestyle. You're defining success on your own terms, even if they don't get it. Retail therapy? Not so much. Boomers grew up in an age of consumerism, but you're all about experiences. For you, life is about collecting moments, not things. Whether it's travel, concerts, or even a quiet weekend getaway, memories matter more than material goods. Boomers might scratch their heads at this minimalist approach. They equate possessions with success, but you see clutter as a burden. Your Instagram feed isn't about flaunting wealth; it's about capturing experiences. Boomers might call it frivolous, but you know the true value of a life well-lived. Boomers often view younger generations as apathetic. But you're anything but. You tweet, march, and vote with fervor, leveraging digital tools to amplify your voice. To boomers, this might look like keyboard activism, lacking the gravitas of in-person engagement. But you're building movements, making real change happen. Your activism is intersectional, embracing a wide range of issues from climate change to social justice. Boomers may dismiss it as performative, but your impact is undeniable. You're shaping the future—and you know it. For boomers, mental health was often a hush-hush topic. You, on the other hand, wear your mental health journey on your sleeve. Therapy, meditation, and self-care aren't buzzwords; they're necessities. Boomers might see this as self-indulgence, but you know it's survival. Your generation has shattered the stigma surrounding mental health, creating a culture of openness and understanding. You're not afraid to call in sick for mental health days, prioritizing your well-being over appearances. Boomers might not get it, but you're redefining what it means to be healthy. It's about being whole, not just functional. The traditional family structure isn't a one-size-fits-all for you. While boomers stick to the nuclear family model, you're redefining kinship. Friends become family, and community means everything. Your family isn't just who you're born with, but who you choose. Boomers might see this as nontraditional or even unstable. But you see it as liberating, a way to surround yourself with love and support. Blood ties are important, but they're not the sole definition of family. You're creating a tribe that reflects your values and aspirations, and that's something boomers are only beginning to understand.


Atlantic
9 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Atlantic
The New Old Sound of Adult Anxiety
The often-cited statistic that 50 percent of American marriages end in divorce has long been overstated: The divorce rate started sliding from its historical peak way back in 1980. But the myth of the modern marriage being doomed to fail endures because it was seared into the cultural consciousness—like so much else—by Baby Boomers. After the sexual revolution of the '60s and the legalization of no-fault divorce, they availed themselves of the freedom to leave their spouse—and then parlayed that experience into now-classic movies, books, and rock about going your own way. Boomers' children aren't getting hitched as easily, and those who do are less likely to split up. That's probably a result of living in an ever more individualized, ever less traditional, and ever more expensive society—and of having studied the cautionary tales of their elders. But Millennials do have their version of divorce rock: the softly grooving Los Angeles band Haim. The group's three members have never been married, but their new album, I Quit, cleverly remixes the breakup-music canon for a generation that's wary of tying the knot. Since their 2013 debut, the Haim sisters—Este (39), Danielle (36), and Alana (33)—have gained fame as pop celebrities who are fluent in TikTok and friends with Taylor Swift. Yet, as a rare band in an era of solo stars, they're also a throwback. Haim's songs blend the rollicking chemistry of Fleetwood Mac, the muscular femininity of Heart, and the mystic cheesiness of Phil Collins (with a smattering of new-jack-swing sparkle). But the sisters swap the earnest grandiosity of their influences for cheeky nonchalance, hinting that nothing they sing about is all that serious. In videos, they strut down streets like Tina Turner, except with all of Turner's outsize emoting replaced by smirks. The band's great 2013 single, 'The Wire,' is about ditching a perfectly nice partner, counseling, 'I just know, I know, I know, I know that you're gonna be okay anyway.' Though the band's lyrics have long been preoccupied with breakups, I Quit is the moment these Stevie Nicks disciples attempt their Rumours: a kaleidoscopic and questing pop epic about unraveling commitments (though made in circumstances of sibling solidarity rather than burning tension between bandmates). The three sisters were each single while recording the album, and have marketed that fact by sharing dating horror stories online. The most consequential breakup here is that of the lead singer, Danielle. In 2022, she exited a relationship of nine years with the producer Ariel Rechtshaid, who'd worked on all of the band's previous albums. The split apparently represented both a personal and an artistic unchaining. Danielle told ID magazine that Rechtshaid took a 'searching, labored' approach to recording, whereas I Quit 's lead producer, Rostam Batmanglij, is 'quick' and 'kinetic.' The album's title is meant to convey liberation: 'The exit is also the entrance,' Este said to GQ. The music does feel quite unshackled. Haim's previous and best album, 2020's Women in Music Pt. III, was a delicate jewelbox of sound, but I Quit is all surge and excess. Its songs go on longer, say more, and do more than is expected or, sometimes, advisable. The opening track's grating sample of George Michael 's 'Freedom! '90' feels like the result of a dare; a number of genre digressions—into drum and bass, industrial rock, and shoegaze—are amusing but inessential. The highlights, though, are Haim-ian in the best way: instinctual and playful. Incongruous musical styles join up through ingenious, gliding transitions. The arrangements sizzle and fizzle like Pop Rocks thanks to creative instrumentation and digital editing. The lead single, 'Relationships,' is the album's manifesto: 'I think I'm in love but I can't stand fucking relationships,' Danielle sings. Bickering and restlessness has her running a cost-benefit analysis on her beloved, and the music sounds as confused as she is, rotating from goofy hip-hop to plangent quiet storm to handclap-driven hoedown. Boomers loom in the background: 'Oh this can't just be the way it is / Or is it just the shit our parents did?' Really, it's not the shit her parents did—they're long married with three daughters. The narrator of this song, by contrast, sounds barely tethered, like a Mylar balloon on a fraying string. Which isn't to say she finds a serious relationship painless to sever. The album serves up the expected outpourings of post-breakup grief ('Cry,' whose elegant melody evokes Annie Lennox), anger ('Now It's Time,' which interpolates a pounding riff from U2's Zooropa), and horniness (the country romp 'All Over Me'). But its centerpiece tracks march from ambivalence to … a different kind of ambivalence. The excellent 'Down to Be Wrong' is the confession of someone defiantly leaving the life they've built, all the while maintaining a pit-in-the-stomach terror about the unknown. As the song builds from iciness to fieriness, Danielle conveys a belief in following your own desires—even if you don't fully understand what those desires are, much less where they'll take you. In moments like that, Haim's music attains a newfound sense of drama: the drama of experiencing life as a purely internal, self-directed struggle. The narrators of these songs don't worry about betraying an oath or straying from a traditional role; friends and family figure in only as concerned characters wondering whether their newly single buddy is okay. Everyone seems to agree that happiness, or at least liberation, is the noblest goal. But that prerogative to chase self-actualization at all costs brings with it the dread of failure, as heavy as the booming drums that ground the album's otherwise spry arrangements. At one point, Danielle quotes Bob Dylan in 1965: 'How does it feel to be on your own?' She's repeating a question asked at the dawn of a social revolution whose effects, sonic and spiritual, ripple ever onward.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- General
- Yahoo
Is Talking on the Phone Dead for Gen Z? Not Quite
Fact checked by Sarah Scott I'll tell you how old I am without telling you how old I am: When I was a teenager, you had to call someone if you wanted to talk to them. We didn't yet have texting, voice notes, or video chats. Fast forward (muffled) years later, and my kids have any number of options when it comes to communicating with friends and family. Talking on the phone is usually last on many teens' list of preferred methods. As my 14-year-old told me, calling someone is 'awkward.' She's not alone: one study from Australia found awkward phone calls are one of the top three things 42% of Gen Z wants to avoid. Instead, my teen relies on video chats or voice notes to stay in (constant) touch. Traditional phone calls may not be the cool thing to do these days, but talking is actually on the rise, according to a new report from Snapchat, a social media platform the Pew Research Center found 60% of teens use. 'It's a misconception that the phone call is dead," says Ceci Mourkogiannis, VP of Product at Snap Inc. Teens are just changing what talking on the phone looks like—and there are benefits to that too. The Snapchat report, released in June 2025, says it's actually a myth that young people aren't talking on the phone. According to the data: Snapchatters, made up of Gen Z and Millennials, collectively talk for more than 1.7 billion minutes on average every day. That's 30% more than this time last year. Voice notes are a very popular way for young people to communicate. Snapchatters in the U.S. sent over 2.5 billion voice notes in the first three months of 2025 alone. That's over 650 million more voice notes than a year ago! It's important to note that, according to Snap, the data around talking includes both video and voice chats. Mourkogiannis explains meaningful connection happens when people communicate in the way that feels most natural to them—be that sending a Snap, recording a voice note, or hopping on the phone. 'We're thrilled to see our community is actually talking more than ever before,' she adds. Meanwhile, Alisha Simpson-Watt, LCSW, BCBA, LBA, the founder of Collaborative ABA Services, LLC, says she has noticed teens gravitating toward video chats and voice notes, and texting going by the wayside. 'For some, it is easier to communicate their thoughts and feelings by speaking,' Simpson-Watt explains. 'Also, voice memos add a layer of personalization to the message because it is like you're having a real-time conversation, except that you can answer when the time is more suitable.' Plus, video chats and voice notes can offer a stronger sense of connection helping to reduce feelings of loneliness which is on the rise, particularly among younger generations."Voice memos add a layer of personalization to the message because it is like you're having a real-time conversation, except that you can answer when the time is more suitable."Of course, communication is generally regarded as a positive thing. But do our kids stand to lose anything if they aren't engaging in good old-fashioned phone conversations? Simpson-Watt acknowledges that our modern world necessitates increasing reliance on technology, but points to the possibility that the lack of 'real' interaction may be feeding teens' social anxieties. 'Younger people tend to prefer to talk with people face-to-face on the phone rather than in person,' she says. Furthermore, Simpson-Watt has noticed that younger people can be more avoidant about making simple phone calls. 'For example, younger kids may be more hesitant to call and make their own doctor appointments, as it is more nerve-wracking since they don't personally know the person they are speaking to,' she elaborates. Teens excel at sending voice notes, setting up a video chat with multiple people, and ordering just about anything via app. But I can't be alone in wanting my adolescents to still be able to thrive offline in an authentic way, and without breaking into a cold sweat. According to Simpson-Watt, encouraging kids to incorporate phone and in-person conversations into their lives is key. 'Communicating with others, whether it is on the phone or in real life, is very important even with all the technology we have today, as communication allows us to bond and connect with others more personally,' she advises. Other benefits of communicating without the help of technology include: Sharpening listening skills Picking up social cues that may not come through via text or voice note Limiting screen time So, while video calls and voice memos are fun and trendy, encouraging our kids to engage in traditional calls and more in-person socializing as often as possible can go a long way. Read the original article on Parents