Transcript
WEBVTT
00:00:03.105 --> 00:00:07.634
I think emerging adulthood is generally a good time of life for most people.
00:00:07.634 --> 00:00:22.727
They struggle with identity questions, they struggle with loneliness, they struggle sometimes with anxiety and depression, but there's a lot of joie de vivre, there's a lot of exuberance, there's a lot of optimism.
00:00:22.727 --> 00:00:24.844
This is striking to me.
00:00:24.844 --> 00:00:36.847
It has been since I started this research 30 years ago that most of them are struggling in one way or another and hardly anybody has any money and they all struggle with that.
00:00:36.847 --> 00:00:40.121
And they struggle with a lack of relationship.
00:00:40.121 --> 00:00:45.893
They struggle with the life direction but almost without exception, they're really optimistic.
00:00:48.240 --> 00:00:51.951
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Bite your Tongue the podcast.
00:00:51.951 --> 00:00:56.771
I'm Denise and I'm here with my co-host, kirsten, and we're about ready to get started.
00:00:56.771 --> 00:00:59.243
But first I want to say I apologize.
00:00:59.243 --> 00:01:08.108
I'm on the road right now so I'm not using our fancy new mics that we were able to purchase because of all of you, so I'm just using my computer and I hope the sound is okay.
00:01:08.108 --> 00:01:11.823
I also want to let you know I'm visiting a good friend of mine, jan.
00:01:11.823 --> 00:01:16.962
She's going to say hi, hi, and she may pop in and ask a question or two.
00:01:17.164 --> 00:01:32.503
But before we get to Kirsten introducing our guest, I wanted to say that what we're really hoping is that for the end of this season we want to do a whole episode on questions from our listeners, and we've been getting a slew of them, many of you who have not sent a question yet.
00:01:32.503 --> 00:01:45.272
If you go to our website at BiteYourTonguePodcastcom and just go to the bottom right-hand corner and there's a little microphone, send us your question and we're going to try to include as many as we can in our finale episode for this season.
00:01:45.272 --> 00:01:51.153
And also, one person sent a question recently about a divorce, but I couldn't really hear what she said.
00:01:51.153 --> 00:01:55.569
So, if you're listening, is it your divorce or your adult child's divorce?
00:01:55.569 --> 00:01:56.632
Let us know.
00:01:56.632 --> 00:02:00.150
And for the rest of you that send us your questions, make sure to speak clearly.
00:02:00.150 --> 00:02:01.685
All right, let's get started.
00:02:01.685 --> 00:02:03.406
Kirsten's going to introduce our guest.
00:02:04.099 --> 00:02:07.397
Thank you so much, denise, and I'm so excited about our Q&A episode.
00:02:07.397 --> 00:02:11.949
I think it's coming together nicely, despite your travels and all the difficulty.
00:02:11.949 --> 00:02:14.641
We're very, very happy that you are here with us.
00:02:14.641 --> 00:02:20.913
Oh, and welcome, jan, I don't want to leave you out.
00:02:21.212 --> 00:02:23.203
Today we are thrilled to introduce Jeff Arnett.
00:02:23.203 --> 00:02:29.033
He is a research professor in the department of psychology at Clark University in Worcester, massachusetts.
00:02:29.033 --> 00:02:36.272
He was the first to originally propose the theory of emerging adulthood to describe the lives of today's 18 to 29 year olds.
00:02:36.272 --> 00:02:41.300
He is the founding president and executive director of the society for the study of emerging adulthood.
00:02:41.300 --> 00:02:49.193
We might note that we have an interview with one of the past presidents of the Society for the Study of Emerging Adulthood, dr Larry Nelson.
00:02:49.193 --> 00:02:50.675
Check it out if you have time.
00:02:50.675 --> 00:02:52.847
That's season one, episode nine.
00:02:53.568 --> 00:02:54.832
So back to today's guest.
00:02:54.832 --> 00:03:08.555
Among his many books is an advice book for parents of emerging adults and in honor of the 10th anniversary of the book, he's releasing an updated version of Emerging Adulthood the Winding Road from the Late Teens through the 20s.
00:03:08.555 --> 00:03:30.670
What will be interesting in this latest version is how he believes that things have changed, but also we are excited to learn how his perspective may have changed from having young children of his own when the first version was released and now how he feels, as his children are young adults and, frankly, research is research, but walking the walk is another story, so be curious to hear if there's some changes.
00:03:30.670 --> 00:03:32.002
Welcome, jeff.
00:03:32.002 --> 00:03:36.893
Is there anything that we missed in the introduction that you would like to add?
00:03:37.699 --> 00:04:02.188
Well, I'd just like to say that when I first started studying people in their 20s, I was just past my 20s myself, and so I not only learned about it as a researcher, I felt it because I was just beyond that age period, and now I'm feeling it again because I'm the parent of twin 24-year-olds.
00:04:02.188 --> 00:04:05.314
It's fascinating to see them go through it.
00:04:05.314 --> 00:04:10.211
I sympathize with all the parents who are going through it.
00:04:10.211 --> 00:04:25.286
I mean, it's wonderful in many ways for us, but it is challenging and I think the thing that makes it the most challenging is that you don't have the same authority that you used to.
00:04:25.286 --> 00:04:34.288
Your whole time that your kids are growing up, you're loving them and you're protecting them and you're arranging things for them.
00:04:35.242 --> 00:04:50.507
If you are an involved and good and conscientious parent and you feel that anxiety that I think most parents feel about making sure they're doing all right and you can protect them and kind of make things go well.
00:04:50.507 --> 00:05:12.014
But when they become emerging adults, you lose that power and they're doing so much out in the world at least if all is going well, if they're out in the world and making a life for themselves great but it's in some ways tough because you just can't protect them from the world anymore.
00:05:12.014 --> 00:05:20.098
The world can be a pretty harsh place and you never knew it was that tough when you wrote the first version.
00:05:20.098 --> 00:05:30.961
Huh no, I kind of sailed through it myself, my poor parents.
00:05:30.961 --> 00:05:43.807
But when I was 22, the summer between my junior and senior years of college, I went on a hitchhiking trip 8,000 miles from my home in Detroit to Seattle Washington, down to LA and all the way back, and I had a grand time.
00:05:43.807 --> 00:05:53.173
But it's only now that I'm a parent of kids in their 20s that I realized how excruciating that was for my mother.
00:05:53.920 --> 00:05:55.264
Now there's no cell phones.
00:05:55.264 --> 00:05:58.992
We talked about this in another episode tracking your kids.
00:05:58.992 --> 00:06:03.630
This young woman has all adult kids and she continues to track them all the time.
00:06:03.630 --> 00:06:07.144
I was shocked that she knew exactly where they were on her phone.
00:06:07.365 --> 00:06:10.951
Yeah, that's something modern technology can do.
00:06:10.951 --> 00:06:14.470
When I took my hitchhiking trip, I walked outside of the house.
00:06:14.470 --> 00:06:15.613
I stuck out my thumb.
00:06:15.613 --> 00:06:17.620
I came back a month later.
00:06:17.620 --> 00:06:21.786
I think I might have called once my poor mother again.
00:06:21.786 --> 00:06:28.495
I really I wish she were still around so I could apologize profusely.
00:06:28.740 --> 00:06:34.502
So let's talk about your new book and why you decided to do it, and what are the major things that have changed.
00:06:34.502 --> 00:06:37.067
Our audience is all parents of adult children.
00:06:37.067 --> 00:06:46.281
What kinds of things do they need to know right now to understand where their adult kid is and what they can do to be better in building that healthy relationship with them?
00:06:47.142 --> 00:06:47.964
Great question.
00:06:47.964 --> 00:06:59.230
I think the big change of the last 10 years is the changes in the rise in mental health distress, anxiety and depression.
00:06:59.230 --> 00:07:06.833
It's happened across age groups actually, but it's especially among 18 to 29-year-olds.
00:07:06.833 --> 00:07:30.362
That may surprise you, because there's a lot written about teen mental health these days adolescence, 14-year-olds, and how they're struggling and blaming it on social media and so on but it's actually highest in emerging adulthood and that's something that I'm trying to understand now.
00:07:30.362 --> 00:07:31.665
I'm doing research on it.
00:07:31.665 --> 00:07:39.264
I honestly don't feel like anybody has a good explanation for it yet.
00:07:39.264 --> 00:07:48.403
I think social media is a good boogeyman these days to blame pretty much everything on, but I'm not persuaded by the research.
00:07:48.403 --> 00:07:54.307
That's the cause, or the main cause, or certainly the only cause, of their mental health distress.
00:07:55.091 --> 00:07:58.101
Well, I want to go back to other things, but I want to ask about this mental health.
00:07:58.101 --> 00:07:59.425
What concerns me about this?
00:07:59.425 --> 00:08:03.362
When you say 18 to 29, this is after they're out of the house.
00:08:03.362 --> 00:08:06.641
So once again we go back to what you said at the beginning.
00:08:06.641 --> 00:08:10.374
You lose your authority or you're able to protect them.
00:08:10.374 --> 00:08:16.447
So you've got a kid that's maybe 20, 22 in college and you can't see this happening.
00:08:17.089 --> 00:08:19.374
No, you can't, and that is a lot of it.
00:08:19.374 --> 00:08:25.973
The fact that they leave home and they don't yet have a new constellation of social relationships.
00:08:25.973 --> 00:08:30.428
It's usually in adulthood, it's a spouse or partner and it's kids.
00:08:30.428 --> 00:08:38.505
And they don't have that yet, at least for most of their 20s, for most of them, and maybe not until their 30s.
00:08:38.505 --> 00:08:42.770
So it's no surprise that they have high rates of loneliness.
00:08:42.770 --> 00:08:45.970
They report more loneliness than other age groups.
00:08:46.059 --> 00:09:03.907
Well, of course you leave your family of origin and if you had a good relationship with your parents, you leave that cozy cocoon of love and now you're out into the rough and tumble of the world and hopefully you have friends.
00:09:03.907 --> 00:09:07.563
But friends come and go at this age period.
00:09:07.563 --> 00:09:11.211
This is the age period 18 to 29.
00:09:11.211 --> 00:09:15.104
It's the age period with the highest rate of residential change.
00:09:15.104 --> 00:09:28.335
So in a given year they move more than any other age group and that means they're constantly making and breaking friendships because they move away.
00:09:28.335 --> 00:09:37.471
They have to start all over whatever new place they go, and I think that's a substantial reason for their anxiety and depression.
00:09:37.471 --> 00:09:40.649
But it doesn't explain why it's gone up in the last 10 years.
00:09:40.649 --> 00:09:45.011
That was true 10 years ago too, and 20 years ago and 30 years ago.
00:09:45.659 --> 00:09:46.822
Well, what can parents do?
00:09:46.822 --> 00:09:47.905
Are there questions?
00:09:47.905 --> 00:09:49.812
And, kirsten, I know you have a question.
00:09:49.812 --> 00:09:51.846
You go first and then I'll ask.
00:09:51.846 --> 00:09:55.707
Well, I was going to ask in relation to your own kids.
00:09:55.768 --> 00:09:59.322
You've got a set of twins that are in this age range.
00:09:59.322 --> 00:10:04.572
Have they been able to provide any insight as to what they see?
00:10:04.572 --> 00:10:08.224
I would think you might use them as research material from time to time.
00:10:09.005 --> 00:10:12.173
Well, they are not having these issues.
00:10:12.173 --> 00:10:18.991
They are in this age period, but at least so far they're not having much of this.
00:10:18.991 --> 00:10:24.509
My son has always had a very buoyant temperament, and still does.
00:10:24.509 --> 00:10:30.727
He's in graduate school and having a grand time living in Philadelphia on his own.
00:10:30.727 --> 00:10:32.634
My daughter there's some of it.
00:10:32.634 --> 00:10:41.418
They both graduated from college about a year and a half ago and she's now just roaming the world.
00:10:41.418 --> 00:10:45.850
She's doing this thing called woofing, where you can work on an organic farm.
00:10:45.870 --> 00:10:46.491
I've heard of this.
00:10:46.700 --> 00:10:55.009
And you don't get paid but you get room and board so you can choose some cool place in the world that you want to live for a while and see what it's like.
00:10:55.009 --> 00:10:57.120
You work 20 hours a week on the farm.
00:10:57.120 --> 00:11:00.822
She's been doing this for most of the last year and right now she's in New Zealand.
00:11:00.822 --> 00:11:01.984
Right now she's in New Zealand.
00:11:01.984 --> 00:11:10.249
She's having a great time, but she's definitely experiencing some anxiety about her future.
00:11:10.249 --> 00:11:14.731
She doesn't know what she wants to do.
00:11:14.731 --> 00:11:16.874
That's a big issue in this age period.
00:11:16.874 --> 00:11:22.037
I talk a lot about it as identity issues, identity struggles.
00:11:22.037 --> 00:11:22.837
Who am I?
00:11:22.837 --> 00:11:28.240
How do I fit into the world?
00:11:28.240 --> 00:11:30.404
This is very much a question on my daughter's mind, didn't we do that?
00:11:30.465 --> 00:11:31.365
the same thing though?
00:11:32.168 --> 00:11:38.565
Did, but not for as long, and things were not as wide open.
00:11:38.565 --> 00:11:41.772
I mean, for my generation at least, I'm 66.
00:11:41.772 --> 00:11:43.403
So I'm at the height of the baby boom.
00:11:43.403 --> 00:11:47.220
I graduated from high school in 1975.
00:11:47.220 --> 00:11:50.686
I got my college degree in 1980.
00:11:50.686 --> 00:11:58.482
At that time the median marriage age for women was 22, and for men it was 24.
00:11:58.482 --> 00:12:20.134
You may have had a year or two after college, or maybe you didn't go to college and you had a few years of different jobs, but by the time people got to 25, most people had the stable structure of an adult life.
00:12:20.134 --> 00:12:22.243
That's no longer true.
00:12:22.243 --> 00:12:22.722
Now.
00:12:22.722 --> 00:12:30.582
It's 30, 30 at least for most people or more or more, and it makes it makes it different.
00:12:31.104 --> 00:12:32.486
It makes it a lot different.
00:12:32.486 --> 00:12:34.871
It's not just a brief transition.
00:12:34.871 --> 00:12:43.110
That's why I decided to declare it a new life stage, because I feel like it's not just a transition to adulthood anymore.
00:12:43.110 --> 00:12:50.859
It can last, and usually does last, 10 years or more, so it's longer than any childhood life stage.
00:12:50.859 --> 00:12:52.368
It's longer than adolescence.
00:12:52.861 --> 00:12:53.846
I never thought about that.
00:12:55.480 --> 00:13:02.948
It really helps, I think, to recognize it as a new life stage in between adolescence and a more established adulthood, and a more established adulthood.
00:13:02.948 --> 00:13:20.110
During that time they have fewer responsibilities to others, fewer commitments to others, but fewer supportive social ties than they ever did before or will ever have again.
00:13:20.129 --> 00:13:22.518
Are there anything that parents of these young adults are?
00:13:22.518 --> 00:13:28.629
There questions they can ask in a non-threatening way to see how their kid's doing?
00:13:28.629 --> 00:13:34.346
A lot of kids aren't going to call and say I'm really lonely or I'm really depressed or I can't seem to make friends.
00:13:34.346 --> 00:13:40.005
They may be embarrassed of it or they might feel uncomfortable about it or don't even know they're feeling these things.
00:13:40.005 --> 00:13:42.261
What can parents of these kids do?
00:13:43.042 --> 00:13:49.006
I think you can listen and I think you can respond to the child that you know.
00:13:49.006 --> 00:13:56.092
The thing is, you can't really give a blanket prescription about it, because kids differ a lot in this way.
00:13:56.092 --> 00:14:05.971
Some of them they're super close to one or both parents it's especially moms, honestly but sometimes dads.
00:14:05.971 --> 00:14:07.120
They're really close to their parents.
00:14:07.120 --> 00:14:08.583
They talk to them about everything.
00:14:08.583 --> 00:14:17.207
They have no trouble opening their hearts to them and it's something that both sides feel comfortable with.
00:14:17.207 --> 00:14:22.023
But a lot of them they don't want their parents to know.
00:14:22.023 --> 00:14:31.003
They don't want their parents to look too intently inside their heads or inside their lives.
00:14:31.504 --> 00:14:35.490
It's a big theme when I interview emerging adults.
00:14:35.490 --> 00:14:40.985
They want to protect that privacy that they have.
00:14:40.985 --> 00:14:44.993
They want to protect their autonomy, they want to protect their freedom.
00:14:44.993 --> 00:15:15.892
Even if they're suffering, Even if they know their parents could give them very good advice, they may not want to hear it, because the issue of becoming an independent and self-sufficient person is in our culture at this time, at the heart of this age period, so much so that many would rather suffer more by not confiding in their parents than confide in their parents.
00:15:16.032 --> 00:15:22.630
You have to respond to what your kids will respond to and what they want, and they will let you know.
00:15:22.630 --> 00:15:29.895
I will tell you one thing that my wife and I make a practice of doing that's worked really well is when the kids come home.
00:15:29.895 --> 00:15:38.135
If they're home for more than a couple or three days, we each take them out to a meal one-on-one.
00:15:38.135 --> 00:15:58.205
We have a great time together, the four of us, but as you know, as everybody knows, you have a different kind of conversation one-on-one than you have with just one other person at it, so that has really been beneficial in keeping us close.
00:15:58.625 --> 00:15:59.990
You decide who's going to go with who.
00:15:59.990 --> 00:16:02.043
I have a friend who does this with his four sons.
00:16:02.043 --> 00:16:10.052
He actually has a call like once a month with each of them and then does a dinner whenever they're in town or seeks them out sometimes for a dinner.
00:16:10.779 --> 00:16:11.604
Good for him.
00:16:11.604 --> 00:16:12.648
That's a great idea.
00:16:13.000 --> 00:16:29.434
One of the things your research says, and I'm going to read this in contrast to previous portrayals of emerging adults, they are particularly skilled at maintaining contradictory emotions they are confident while still being wary and optimistic in the face of large degrees of uncertainty.
00:16:29.434 --> 00:16:35.964
What exactly does that mean, and how can us, as parents, understand this in understanding their journey?
00:16:37.385 --> 00:16:50.200
Well, it's a fascinating time of life that way, isn't it that for them, many of them, I would say most of them, most of the time, it seems like anything is possible.
00:16:50.200 --> 00:16:54.475
All doors are still open, at least a crack.
00:16:54.475 --> 00:16:57.254
That's how it feels, especially in their early 20s.
00:16:57.254 --> 00:17:00.845
I could still change my mind and do something else.
00:17:00.845 --> 00:17:04.248
I could move to a different part of the country, in the world.
00:17:04.248 --> 00:17:10.824
I could pursue some kind of education I haven't pursued before.
00:17:10.824 --> 00:17:25.769
My daughter was just home, before she left for New Zealand and mulling over her different possibilities, she thought that maybe she'd get more education in environmental science, because she's always loved the environment, she's always loved science.
00:17:25.769 --> 00:17:29.778
Her college degree is in french, and so she.
00:17:29.778 --> 00:17:39.326
She took exactly one class in science astronomy so she doesn't exactly have a background in environmental science.
00:17:39.326 --> 00:17:42.094
But that's the thing it's still possible.
00:17:42.094 --> 00:17:49.298
She could go back and may go back this next year and start working on a degree in environmental science.
00:17:49.298 --> 00:17:53.251
It's still pretty easy for her to do because she's 24.
00:17:53.251 --> 00:17:57.339
She doesn't have any obligations to anybody.
00:17:57.865 --> 00:18:03.817
But it seems that so many of the students graduating really have no idea what they're going to do.
00:18:03.817 --> 00:18:13.636
Someone has paid a fair amount of money for them to go to college and they still come out and the only thing they know is they either want to move to New York or they want to move to Boston.
00:18:15.365 --> 00:18:16.229
Yes or Philly.
00:18:16.229 --> 00:18:17.693
Philly is actually cool, Philly.
00:18:23.325 --> 00:18:26.593
My mother said you are never coming home, which was cool in that I knew I wasn't coming home, so I had to earn some money.
00:18:26.593 --> 00:18:33.498
But it just seems like this realm of possibilities has put so many people that it's okay that they're drifting.
00:18:33.538 --> 00:18:38.148
Yeah Well, there's an old saying that youth is wasted on the young.
00:18:38.148 --> 00:18:43.246
I don't know if that's true, but a college education is often wasted on the young.
00:18:43.246 --> 00:18:53.790
I think expecting people to know at 18 exactly what direction they want to pursue is not realistic, honestly.
00:18:53.790 --> 00:19:04.192
I mean, it may have fit an earlier time, when people didn't look for something that was a source of fulfillment, they were just looking for a job.
00:19:04.192 --> 00:19:12.077
A man had to support a family, so you needed some kind of education or training in something that would support your family.
00:19:12.077 --> 00:19:13.830
That was true for my dad.
00:19:13.830 --> 00:19:15.151
He became an engineer.
00:19:15.151 --> 00:19:25.208
He never talked about love and engineering, but my parents had five kids and he put them all through college and got them all to adulthood.
00:19:25.208 --> 00:19:29.998
And my mom never worked a day, she was never employed a day.
00:19:30.346 --> 00:19:32.144
She worked I was going to say you better watch that.
00:19:32.484 --> 00:19:35.088
Five kids, no.
00:19:35.088 --> 00:19:38.453
So people look at work differently now.
00:19:38.453 --> 00:19:49.636
They're looking for what I call identity-based work, something that is personally rewarding and meaningful and that they look forward to doing every day.
00:19:49.636 --> 00:19:51.625
That's a new invention.
00:19:51.625 --> 00:19:57.195
It wasn't how people ever thought of work until about 50 years ago.
00:19:57.195 --> 00:20:08.451
Given that work is now identity-based, we should be giving them more time to figure out what their identity is before we expect them to go to college.
00:20:08.451 --> 00:20:22.259
In Europe, it's typical for young people to take a gap year or two or three before they go to university, and I think that's very wise.
00:20:22.259 --> 00:20:37.732
They do their woofing phase or ski bump phase or waiting tables in Paris phase before they go to university, and when they go, they have a lot better idea of what they're going to do.
00:20:37.732 --> 00:20:41.273
And they have to because they go to study one thing.
00:20:41.273 --> 00:20:55.179
It's not like here, where you got two years of general education and then you decide Across European universities, you go to study engineering or you go to study French or you go to study environmental science.
00:20:55.179 --> 00:20:57.713
But we don't do things that way.
00:20:57.733 --> 00:21:06.365
You go into medicine in Europe, you start medical school right away, so they're becoming doctors 10 years before our kids have even decided whether they're going to medical school.
00:21:06.967 --> 00:21:08.451
Yeah, it's true of all professions.
00:21:08.692 --> 00:21:11.156
Yeah, I want to talk a little about spirituality.
00:21:11.156 --> 00:21:12.387
This is close to my heart.
00:21:12.387 --> 00:21:22.605
Kids are taking a totally different route and that's hard for parents, whether it be becoming a vegetarian, not having any religion in their life, deciding I don't know lots of things.
00:21:22.605 --> 00:21:26.705
They don't want to get married, they're just going to live with their partner and have children.
00:21:26.705 --> 00:21:32.407
It goes against a lot of what we were raised with, possibly, but on the other hand, we've got to go with the flow.
00:21:32.407 --> 00:21:38.190
Any advice for parents when they're dealing with these different trajectories their kids are taking?
00:21:38.810 --> 00:21:46.351
I think you've really identified an important change over the last 10 to 20 to 30 years.
00:21:46.351 --> 00:21:49.175
It's accelerated in the last 10 years.
00:21:49.175 --> 00:21:52.226
You were asking earlier about what's changed in the last 10 years.
00:21:52.226 --> 00:21:59.114
This is a really liberal generation of emerging adults, especially the women.
00:21:59.114 --> 00:22:09.450
Compared to even their supposedly liberal Gen X or boomer parents, they're a lot more liberal.
00:22:09.450 --> 00:22:21.897
For example, they're much more accepting of diversity and sexual orientation and gender orientation in ethnic or national background.
00:22:21.897 --> 00:22:28.271
Most of them have friends who are from a wide range of different groups, like this.
00:22:28.471 --> 00:22:35.230
My son's best friend is gay and they roomed together along with a couple of other people in college.
00:22:35.230 --> 00:22:42.151
It's never something they really talked about, it was just something like you know he'd like to have pancakes for dinner sometimes.
00:22:42.151 --> 00:22:51.473
It wasn't something that it would look down on him for and both my kids when they went to high school here in Worcester Mass.
00:22:51.473 --> 00:22:59.814
They went to a high school where the kids were from families that spoke 78 different languages.
00:22:59.814 --> 00:23:03.019
I didn't even know there were 78 different languages.
00:23:03.019 --> 00:23:10.939
My son's best friends in high school were from Vietnam, albania and Kenya.
00:23:10.939 --> 00:23:15.375
I didn't even learn this until after he'd been friends with them for like a year.
00:23:15.375 --> 00:23:20.237
It was just another interesting thing about them.
00:23:20.237 --> 00:23:21.790
That's a big change.
00:23:22.185 --> 00:23:23.711
I think that's really positive.
00:23:23.711 --> 00:23:31.919
I don't think kids see sexual orientation or color in this upcoming generation as much as our generation did.
00:23:32.645 --> 00:23:36.095
I don't think they see it as much and they don't stigmatize it as much when they see it.
00:23:37.105 --> 00:23:40.926
But there are a lot of people in this country that do, obviously, but there are a lot of people in this country that do.
00:23:40.926 --> 00:23:56.597
Obviously there's been a huge backlash among older people to this change, this generational change in values, and, honestly, there's a substantial proportion of white young men who are part of that backlash.
00:23:56.597 --> 00:24:00.940
I mentioned earlier that it's the women who are especially liberal.
00:24:00.940 --> 00:24:05.002
There's a huge gap that's developed between women and men.
00:24:05.002 --> 00:24:10.327
I just saw a report on this the other day.
00:24:10.327 --> 00:24:10.868
On political orientation.
00:24:10.868 --> 00:24:16.351
They used to be very similar with women, just slightly more liberal, and now there's a huge gap.
00:24:16.351 --> 00:24:17.515
It's a huge gap.
00:24:17.515 --> 00:24:42.115
They've become much more liberal and men have been about the same over the last 30 years and it's causing tension in a lot of relationships because women will start to date a guy and they'll find that he has all these attitudes that they just find repellent because they have different political orientations and he no finds her liberalism repellent.
00:24:42.115 --> 00:24:49.157
It goes both ways, but it's making it somewhat more difficult sometimes between emerging adult couples.