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Everything to my psychologist
Irvin Skidmore over 3 years ago

Some more bytes on the internet where a millennial grumbles and comments on what is happening around him? That's me, yes.

I do not know at all if it is my fault that I am a very closed person. I always saw that there is a subtle difference between "how do you do?" and "how are you?" The first is like "good morning". Something typical. An easy way to show that you are not a caveman. The second is a little more substantial and perhaps more rare. You really expect the other person to answer how he feels.

The "how are you doing?", The standard answer is "okay" or even "okay mom" or to the final "fine". In the second, things get complicated. They can start here from a "good" and end up being with a man crying on your shoulder or dancing at the bar of a restaurant 5 in the morning of an typical Wednesday. But this is not always the case.

For millennials (roughly those born between 1985 and 1995) it has become the standard answer to "how do you do?" "I try" or "sucks" or even "we will all die". From one point onwards it is done automatically. Saying "I'm perfect" automatically puts you out of the company. For the rest of the night you will sit alone: ​​You, your smartphone and your perfection. There are many reasons for this. Suffice it to say that the horizon of expectations we have in relation to our parents is inversely proportional. They saw their future in flying cars. We see it in nuclear shelters.

Where did all this misery lead? In something good. Dealing with mental health. Many millennials have a salary of several dollars and will give an amount of them to their psychologist. They will talk about their visits to him or her completely rewarded. "I can not come for coffee today, I have a psychologist." It wouldn't come anyway but you know…

Sometimes, of course, we may overdo it. Maybe we treat psychotherapy as the solution to all problems in an almost mechanical way. It is as if in 2, 3, 5 years we will find the screw that loosened, we will change it and we will start operating like new after the update.

The truth is that it does not work that way. Fortunately it does not work that way. We will carry our wounds and experiences forever.

On the other hand, I look forward to finally living in a society where everyone understands that no one belongs to anyone. It is vital (especially for men). But I confess that I am terrified in front of a world where life (or love) will not cause the slightest emotional discomfort.