" It seemed little by small normal until now , all of a sudden , I ’m purchase something all the meter . "
As a millennial who writes about work and money, I often think about how my generation relates to the old idea of the “American Dream.”
As kid , we were told to bring firmly and go to college so that we ’d be able-bodied to give the house with the white picket fence and 2.5 kids . Unfortunately , thestudent debt crisisandever - rising housing costshave made it increasingly hard to make this dream a realness .
Recently, I came acrossa videoby a 38-year-old mom of two based in Nevada that perfectly voiced something that I (and many other Americans) have been struggling with.
Amber Cimiotti (@ciaoamberc) starts by saying, “As Americans, we’ve removed everything we actually need in daily life like exercise, talking to friends, connecting with people, spending time with our kids. We’ve taken all of the naturally occurring things out of life and made it so that those things can only be achieved by a therapy session, by an activity that we have to pay for.”
According to Amber, a big part of the problem is just the way that many American suburbs are designed. She says, “There’s not many places, neighborhoods, and cities where it’s super easy to walk everywhere, where you can get a lot of natural exercise, whether it’s walking to and from your house or to the grocery stores. This just doesn’t exist for most people now, so you have to wake up earlier on your lunch break or after work; you have to go to the gym so you can get in your exercise.”
Amber continues, explaining that, in her opinion, isolation and the lack of real conversations in daily life are pushing more and more people to turn to therapy who might not need it so much if they could just get their social needs met. She says, “Nowadays everybody needs a therapist. Yes, therapy is needed for some things, but most people just need to be talking to people way more, and I don’t mean like trolling on the internet.”
As one commenter noted , " capitalist economy takes aside crucial things then create a divine service for u to pay for those thing 😭 😭 . "
Amber also discusses how parents are impacted by the paywall on basic human needs in American life. “There used to be kids running around neighborhoods all the time. Parents didn’t have to pay all this extra money to do activities so their kids can be involved in things; parents didn’t have to drive all over the place… But now that doesn’t exist. So we do need to pay for activities.”
She sums it all up by saying, “When things don’t happen naturally in your day, and you need to take extra energy to achieve basic things like healthy food exercise, talking to friends, which helps regulateemotionsand things like that; when you have to build those into therapy sessions, exercise sessions, hobbies, reading 17 books — of course you’ll be tired.”
I personally can’t stop thinking about what Amber has to say, and many other commenters chimed in to agree.
Amber told BuzzFeed that marrying an Italian man made her start to see certain “normal” parts of American life in a new way. “I spend a lot of time in Italy, and I just see a lot of differences and so much feels so natural and good. They’re things like the community kind of just being together, how they still value family and relaxed time and enjoyment.”
" It ’s all inspired from just seeing how another civilisation does it and how I sense so good when I ’m there . And I consider you could say , it ’s a holiday , and yeah , sure there ’s an facial expression of that . But I also vacation in the United States , and I never finger that way … I think they include a lot of humans into their life , and there ’s not a charge for it . "