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Abigail Radnor

ByAbigail Radnor, Abigail Radnor

Opinion

Talking about their generation

I was wrong about the young. And that is great, writes Abigail Radnor.

June 15, 2017 12:18
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2 min read

Until recently, I had been quite concerned about “the young”. Firstly, there was the consternation that came with realising that I myself, well and truly in my thirties, could no longer be considered a young person (this hit home firmly when I had to put my glasses on to try to understand Snapchat, the youth’s social media network of choice). But once I had come to terms with my looming middle age, I was more worried about the “next generation”.

I feared, like an old person would, that they wore too much make up, ate too little/too much depending on which scaremongering headline I read that day and held Kim Kardashian, a professional bottom, in far too high esteem. I shuddered at the idea of being a teenager today, having to cope with the pressures of social media where everyone seems to be having a better time than you and where bullies can wreak unrelenting havoc, unbeknownst to any teacher or parent. And I got the impression that the “yoof” were entirely blase about their future. That while seismic changes rocked our world, they reacted with a “meh” and a shrug, caring only about voting for Simon Cowell-ish dross on TV.

But during these past few weeks, I’ve realised I was wrong about the young. And that is great.

I am not entirely out of touch, so I had heard of Ariana Grande before May 22, but I couldn’t have told you much about her. And probably, without giving her much thought, I assumed she was an averagely talented starlet who pranced around wearing far too little clothing (because, lest you forget, I am old). And then an unfathomable evil struck her concert in Manchester and the world knew Grande’s name for all the wrong reasons. In the aftermath, again I did not give her too much thought. I could not stop thinking about the families affected, haunted by parents’ pleas over the airwaves that dark Tuesday morning, and the fact that Manchester was on the lips of the world, my hometown a byword for horror.