The Kids Are All Right?
– Youth, Truth, and How We See Ourselves
We say it often.
Perhaps too often.
“The youth of today…”
The sentence is usually followed by a concern.
Less resilient. More anxious. Too much screen time. Too little grit.
But what if this picture isn’t true?
Or perhaps more precisely: What if it is only part of the truth?
I recently read an article in Scientific American titled “The Kids Are All Right.” It presents research pointing in a different direction than the prevailing narrative:
Today’s young people are – on average –
less violent,
less prone to risky behavior,
more tolerant,
and in many ways better at regulating themselves than previous generations.
It is a quiet, almost provocative message.
Because it does not only challenge what we think about youth.
It challenges how we form truth.
Foucault: Who Owns the Story of Youth?
Here, Michel Foucault enters the conversation.
He was not primarily concerned with what is true,
but with how something becomes true in a society.
Who has the power to define reality?
Which narratives are allowed to dominate?
When we repeatedly hear that young people are struggling more than before,
it is not necessarily because it is false—
but because certain perspectives are given more space than others.
Problems attract attention.
Concern sells.
Deviations become visible.
What works, what quietly holds everyday life together—
often remains unnoticed.
Perhaps youth have not become weaker.
Perhaps our gaze has become more problem-oriented.
Gadamer: Understanding Begins in Our Prejudices
But we cannot escape ourselves.
Hans-Georg Gadamer reminds us that we always understand the world through our pre-understandings—our “prejudices” in a neutral sense.
We do not meet young people as blank slates.
We meet them with experiences, with memories of our own youth,
and perhaps with a quiet longing for a time we believe was simpler.
When we say “things were better before,”
it is not just an observation.
It is an interpretation.
And Gadamer would say:
Understanding happens when our horizon meets that of the other—
not to win, but to expand.
Perhaps we need to meet young people anew,
not as a problem to be explained,
but as an experience to be understood.
Kierkegaard: The Individual – Beyond the Statistics
And then comes Søren Kierkegaard, quietly—but with weight.
Because in the midst of all research, all graphs and general trends,
there is always a person.
The individual.
Kierkegaard reminds us that truth is not only something we measure,
but something we live.
Yes, statistics may show that “things are getting better.”
But for the one who stands in anxiety, loneliness, or inner struggle,
this is no comfort.
Here lies a responsibility—
not to choose between optimism and pessimism,
but to hold both at once:
To see the bigger picture,
and still not lose sight of the one.
Between Concern and Trust
So where does this leave us?
Perhaps somewhere between two poles:
- A public narrative shaped by concern
- A body of research showing significant progress
Both are true.
But neither is the whole truth.
What emerges is a more demanding picture:
A generation that, in many ways, is doing well—
and at the same time carries new kinds of burdens.
And perhaps this is where our responsibility lies—
not in judging, but in understanding
not in idealizing, but in meeting
A Quiet Shift
Perhaps we need a small shift in perspective.
From:
“What is wrong with young people today?”
To:
“What are they actually managing—
and what might we learn from them?”
Closing
In meeting the younger generation, we are not only encountering something new.
We are encountering a mirror.
A mirror reflecting our own assumptions about human beings,
about development,
about what it means to live a good life.
And perhaps it is like this:
Not that young people are necessarily “better” than before.
But that they—like us—
live their lives in the tension between vulnerability and strength.