Millennials, Where Are Your Manners?

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Recently, I was standing at a city intersection with a gaggle of others, waiting patiently for the light to turn green so that we chickens could cross the road. Suddenly, a young woman chatting on her phone bounced past us all and stepped into the intersection just as a car came along. One of the waiting pedestrians called out to warn her,and she swung her head around and snapped in our direction: “Do you mind? I’m on the phone.” For a moment, we all blinked in surprise,and then we started laughing.

I believe military tacticians would refer to the woman’s behaviour as showing a “lack of situational awareness.” My cat attempting to walk across the stove when I'm cooking would be another example.Or someone ambling backward towards a cliff edge while taking a selfie. But here, might I suggest we have a lack of social awareness as well? Who, exactly, is the one who should ‘mind’? Is it the huddled pedestrians who dared interrupt this person’s call to point out that she was obliviously storming into traffic? Or is it the young lady? 

I know it’s a bit of a sport to complain about how rude people have become, but the more I think aboutit, the more it strikes me that the problem with modern manners is precisely this kind of obliviousness.Millennials—that age group roughly between 25 and 40—will step on your feet and then get mad at you for existing in their space.

Once upon a time, social awareness was a given. Superficial niceties like saying “Good morning” or waving to neighbours were gestures of goodwill that kept us aware of one another in public as fellow human beings, without committing too much.

But now, some members of the younger generations wouldn’t recognize you as a human if you stood up in their soup. They’d probably think you were an eco-friendly spoon.

A 2019 study in England found that42 per cent of millen...

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