Monday, August 24, 2015

Why Millennials Struggle with Consistency and Emotional Decision Making

By: Pritesh Patel

As Millennials, a lot of the challenges we face today come down to filling a gap between 2 phenomena.

Before I introduce the phenomena.  Let’s talk for a moment about what is “consistency” and “emotional decisions”.

I think we all can agree that consistency is a very important ingredient in reaching any goal, objective, building a relationship, etc.  When we were in school, we had to be consistent in studying to meet deadlines and pass exams.  At work, we have to consistently go in and produce results so that we can keep the job and/or get promoted. When building an emotional connection with someone to grow a relationship, consistent communication/effort is required. If we go up an escalator that is going in the opposite direction, you have to be consistently moving forward or else we don’t get anywhere. (Yes I did this just 2 days ago … )

But you get the point. Consistency is important to achieving anything.

Now lets talk about “emotional decision” making.  Or in other words, making decisions out of “haste”.  We all know that making decisions out of “haste” are not always good decisions.  Unless you are some sort of Buddhist monk or spiritual guru, we normal humans have emotions that fluctuate on a daily basis (maybe we can learn to control our emotions better … lessons from Nelson Mandela, Dalai Lama, classical spiritual rituals, etc but thats possibly another blog post later … I got lots to say on that).  So if our emotions fluctuate daily and we make decisions based on them, our decisions will fluctuate daily as well.  That can be contradictory to achieving something longterm.  In fact emotional decision making produces inconsistency … links back to the first point.  In other words, wheels spin, but no forward progress is made.

Now to the 2 phenomena that produce a gap for Millennials. 

Phenomena 1:  We are called Generation Me.  Look it up.  Generation Me is the generation that has been told “follow your dreams”, “do what makes you happy”, “you can do anything you put your mind to”, “find your passion”, etc.  This message (which I think is a good message) has manifested itself in our generation having grand visions for our lives.  Grand visions of what we want to achieve in our careers.  Grand visions in what type of relationships we want to be in and the type of partner we want.  It has trained us to think very introspectively about the decisions we make.  All this introspection has a tendency to make us over thinkers. When we think “what will make me happy” is by nature thinking about decisions emotionally. 

Phenomena 2: We live in an era where there is more information floating in and out of our heads than ever before. We live in the age of the the internet, apps, Facebook, etc.  How many of us pick up our phones first thing in the morning and browse Facebook even before we brush our teeth or recall the dream we just had.  Do we even have time to question the the credibility of all the information that we let in our heads that we potentially use to make decisions and influence our emotions?  We are overall tremendously distracted by all this information.  

So in essence, we millennials have grand visions for our lives but we are too distracted to put consistent effort into those visions and when we do make decisions we either overthink it or make an emotional decision because it’s all based on how we feel in that moment.

Let me elaborate with an example. 

Example 1:  A common thread in a lot of our minds is likely personal relationships.  It is no secret that the Millennial Generation is getting married later than ever before compared to other generations. 

When pursuing a relationship, the age of the internet and the latest and greatest swipe right/left app gives us too many options.  Some of us get so so distracted with options that we forget that really building and maintaining a relationship takes consistent effort with one person.  Too many options and divided attention doesn't build anything. 

A lot of us also commonly say “it doesn’t click” or “I’m not feeling it”, “Its not you, its me”, etc.  In essence these are emotional decisions. Now I’m not saying emotions are a bad thing in this process.  A personal relationship requires feelings … thats obvious.  But lets break apart the concept of “attraction”.  “Attraction” itself is an emotion.  To build and maintain attraction requires “consistent” effort to progressing that feeling to new levels of attachment/connection.  Just like going up that escalator, if you aren’t consistently putting effort into maintaining your position and pushing forward, you won’t get anywhere.  

We won’t click with everybody but I think we sometimes forget that to “feel it” requires “consistent” effort to maintain it and progress it.  Its not going to be there magically without effort.  Again, emotions fluctuate daily.  If we make decisions based on those fluctuating emotions without putting enough effort into it, we could be missing out on connections that are good for us longterm and are right under our nose.

There you have it.  In conclusion, a lot of us are having a hard time bridging the gap between high expectations for ourselves while being highly distracted.  Sometimes too distracted with introspection to notice what is in front of you. We become inconsistent with our emotional decision making while doing too much introspection.  That ends up being contradictory to our goals.  

Add your thoughts and comments.  Maybe we figure this out together as a community while supporting and sharing knowledge with each other. What else, what do you think about all this?

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Passing Feelings

by Kiera Anselme

Eyes shut tight,
the moment was real for me.
Your presence was comforting,
reassuring.
How was I to know that
you were an actor resting in the flesh of the man I thought I wanted?
I was sure of your need for my existence until you yanked back,
causing me to stumble to the ground.
And as I hit, my pride would not let me make a single sound,
but inside the pain screamed.
How was I to know,
you could never love as I was willing to love you.
Left rethinking the actuality of your affections toward me –
no, I must have understood wrong,
I must have let my day dreams exaggerate his actions and words.

“God damn you are so beautiful.
And I want you so badly.
I want to write you poetry and sing you songs.”

Re-reading, rethinking,
how strange to see the illusion behind all words spoken and written.
They are merely left from the lips of one with certain meaning,
to find the ears of another and perceived completely differently.
What helps me to forget you is to walk,
walk away thinking you had not meant what I heard.


Tuesday, July 21, 2015

The search for a significant other….

by Varun Gandhi

We all – whatever your current relationship status is - at some point in our lives have had this lonely feeling. For me, it usually comes about when I see happy couples, enjoying each other’s company, walking hand-in-hand at the park, or indulging in PDA (a strategy devised by married couples to evoke jealousy in us single folk, damn YOU, it works all the time), so well essentially, being all coupley with each other all the damn time.

That’s when two thoughts come about (usually in this particular order): why the hell is this hot chic with THAT guy and gosh I miss having that go to person in my life. The first thought comes and goes in passing. But that second one sticks for hours on end, which usually triggers a texting frenzy. Click, click, click…on my Nokia brick phone. Oh wait, let me come back to this century…on my iPhone. I search for all the single girls (at least to the last of my knowledge; I last met Harmony 5 years ago and she was single then, she has to be single now too, right) in my contact list and send a barrage of messages, along these lines:

Hi sexy, how are you doing?
                                                                        -No response-
Wanna hang?
                                                                        -No response-
I could use a massage
                                                                        -No response-
I have a bachelor party gig for you
                                                                        How much?
**Blocked**

Sigh, NEXT!!!

5 hours later, no luck. I’m still companionless.

The deeper question here is why do we have this tendency to search for a companion? Why are we actively pursuing this person?

It could be that you feel your life is incomplete without a significant other, it could be that this person would make your life easier, it could be that joy in life increases when shared, or just the fear of being forever lonely.

Whatever your reason may be, I think we set ourselves up for disappointment when we meet every potential significant other with these massive expectations.

What if instead, we enrich our lives by practicing skills that interest us, or by picking up that one new skill – playing the guitar – that you’ve always wanted to possess. The activity exposes us to people in a setting comfortable for everyone, where we learn to play the guitar together, which could set up something beautiful for the future.

What if instead, we learn to be happy internally, learn to be happy with ourselves, with who we are. I’ve heard quite a few people complain about being alone, “One day is fine, but after that I’ll go insane”. But isn’t this the perfect time to learn about the stuff you are made of, what drives you and what ticks you, what uplifts you and what brings you down.

What if instead, we transform ourselves to spiritual beings, transform the inner workings of our heart, mind and soul through mediation; through introspection, focusing on your thoughts, who they are directed to, are they positive or negative, supportive or destructive.

But what I learned from my search is instead, we let the other person waltz (or salsa their way) into our lives at the right time, the right moment, when both are ready to embark on this magical experience that I’d like to call…LIFE.