Okay… I guess I’ll have to be more specific…
I grew up in a household that some would likely describe as wealthy. I, however, was not “given everything.” What I have, I’ve earned. The same can be said of my kids who, independent of my wife’s and my financial success, have worked hard to forge their own paths.
So, in summation.., don’t generalize other people.
I'm not talking about being given everything like say an inheritance, hard-work mentality, etc. That's all adulting. Obviously as a kid, you can't earn a living and being completely dependent so everything a kid gets is "given". But the whole point is that today's kids are given a lot more. I.e., hey, you're my kid here's a brand new Xbox at age 7 "just because".
As a kid, you as a wealthy member probably had a lot more of the things than first generation of immigrants in the 80s - early 2000s. And it's the smaller things like going to local events, having cable tv, etc. We did not, because that mindset our parents didn't have. Go watch any standup comic, they all have similar stories no matter where they're from. But the 2nd and 3rd generations are getting everything and is becoming more common.
For example, a local news reporter shared that she had a birthday party for her 2 year old. Which had a TACO BAR. At a 2-year olds birthday party. The best part of my bday parties was the birthday cake from Sam's Club. The small one. Again we weren't poor. 100% middle class.
Obviously I have all the luxuries today, I just think about all the 1st gen immigrants and their environment growing up vs. how the current gen gets so much more.
Am I the only one totally confused with the motivation of this thread?
I work with a vast diversity of people who are pilots and we all worked equally as hard. Some had better timing than others due to national economics.
So what?
Well if you didn't grow up in that environment, its hard to understand. And it has nothing to do with diversity or adult working life. It's about growing up, specifically 1st generation American-born kids from immigrant families in modern times. My parents worked their butts off, and gave me that mentality too, but I still wasn't given freebie fun things as a kid.
This is something I've noticed, that the kids today have so much more given to them for no reason, including the eventual offspring of the 1st gen, than we ever did. Parents pull their kids out DURING the school year to do fun stuff. What? That's just wild to me. My generation's parents couldn't even think it. Weddings were scheduled in the hot ass summer because of that. Ha.
My paternal Grandmother immigrated with her parents/sibling in 1925 from England. The Great Depression hit a couple of years later and so I don't know if it was being an immigrant or a 1930's survivor, but my Grandmother was a food hoarder. Years after even when my Grandpa had died, she bought WAY too much food that had to be frozen. We had pallets of soda that had to be dumped after she died.
I always wondered if there was a starving time for her and she resolved to never be hungry again.
So from that, you are 2nd generation, and subsequently if you have grandchildren that are 4th generation, who in their upbringing is vastly different than 1st gen immigrant kids because they have been established into the US. So by the time your grandchildren and my generation went to school together, it was vastly different childhood experiences. I.e...
Going to baseball games in the summer vs. Kumon
Staying in actual hotels vs. the Budget Inn
Going out of town to a waterpark vs. discount day at the local rinky dink skate world.
Buying a vhs tape vs. recording it when it came on tv (Jurassic Park lol)
I am fascinated by the early immigrants from the early 1900s, though. I couldn't even imagine what it would've been like.