米兰体育

Skip to content
NOWCAST 米兰体育 13 Morning News
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

Young Adults Failing to Take Flight Amid the Pandemic

Young Adults Failing to Take Flight Amid the Pandemic
I鈥橫 SOLEDAD O鈥橞RIEN. WELCOME TO 鈥淢ATTER OF FACT.鈥� GRADUATION SEASON HERE.IS AND IT LOOKS MORE LIKE WHAT WE鈥橰E USED TO. BUT GRADUATES ARE FACING BIG CHALLENGES CREATED BY A STALLED ECONOMY, THE RESULOFT COVID-19. MORE THAN HALF OF YOUNG AMERICANS AGES 18 TO 29 NOW VELI WITH THEIR PARENTS. IS IT A FAILURE TO LAUNCH? OR A SIGN OF THE TIMES? WE START WITH ONE YOUNG WOMAN鈥橲 STORY. >> I鈥橫 ANDY KANARAS, AND I鈥橫 A FREELANCE WRITER AND ETODIR. I MOVED BACK HOME BEFORE SPRING BREAK OF COLLEGE MY SENIOR YR,EA AND I鈥橵E BEEN HERE SINCE MARCH OF 20.02 NOW I LIVE WITH MY TWO SIBLINGS, MY PARENTS AND MY GRANDPARENTS. THE HARDEST PART ABOUT LIVING IN A MULTIGENERATIONAL HOUSEHOLD IS THE CONFLICTING PERSONALITIES, DAY TO DAY NEEDS AND PRIVA,CY I鈥橠 SAY. I THINK THERE鈥橲 SOME DAYS WHEN I WANT TO GET OUT AND START LIVING MY LIFE IN A SENSE, WHAT PEOEPL EXPECT YOUNG ADULTHOOD TO LOOK LIKE, BUT AT THE SAME TIME, I鈥橫 NOT NECESSARILY IN A RUSTOH MOVE OUT. I鈥橵E REALLY APPRECIATED THIS TIME THAT I鈥橵E HAD WITH MY FAMILY, ESPECIALLY MY GRANDPARENTS. THRIE SE OF MULTIGENERATIONAL LIVING, IT鈥橲 A STRENGTH IN PART BECAUSE WE鈥橰E MOVING AWAY FROM AN INDIVIDUALIST CULTURE TO MORE COLLECTIVIST WHERE WE APPRECIATE OTHER PEOPLE鈥橲 PERSPECTIVES. AND WE鈥橰E NOT AS ISOLATED PEOPLE EXPECT THE FIRST YEAR OUT OF COLLEGE TO BE A TIME OF GROWTH, A TIME OF EXCITENTME WHERE THEY LEARN ABOUT THEMSELVES, AND THEY GO OUT IN THE WORLD, AND THEY DO THEIR OWN THING. I THINK I鈥橵E GROWN MORE THIS PAST YEAR THAN I COULD HAVE EVER GROWN. I鈥橵E GROWN MORE CONNECTED TO MY FAMILY AND I鈥橵E GROWN SO MUCH MORE APPRECIATIVE OF THAT. NOW, I FEEL REALLY GROUNDED AND I WOUL鈥橠NT HAVE IT ANY
Advertisement
Young Adults Failing to Take Flight Amid the Pandemic
It鈥檚 graduation season and for many young Americans it represents the start of a new chapter in their lives. But, facing a tough job market and an even tougher housing market, many of them will also be moving back home. Andie Karanas, a recent graduate, describes the struggle to head out on her own amid the pandemic, and how living with parents and grandparents has changed her priorities.

It鈥檚 graduation season and for many young Americans it represents the start of a new chapter in their lives. But, facing a tough job market and an even tougher housing market, many of them will also be moving back home. Andie Karanas, a recent graduate, describes the struggle to head out on her own amid the pandemic, and how living with parents and grandparents has changed her priorities.

Advertisement