Why we feel behind in life: from Rory Gilmore to the 'career woman' trope

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 24 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 302

  • @cate5744
    @cate5744 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +256

    Kinda like ‘I’ve been an adult for 5 minutes and I’m already ten years behind.’

  • @РоманаСінкевич
    @РоманаСінкевич 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +858

    As a Ukrainian in my mid 20s I feel like content of the self-help creators doesn't align with my reality at all. "Go to parties" - I can't, I have curfew. "Travel more" - I cannot travel safe in my own country. "Don't compare yourself to others" - i would watch them trying not to make comparisons with people in peaceful countries, while your friend is packing their things because of offencive therefore more chances to be killed. "Your life depends on you" - i cannot even control my sleep schedule because of air raids. And the absolute banger is the idea that 20s is the best years of your life. You wanna tell me that THIS is the best period in my lifetime? I'm afraid to continue to live then
    Thank you for your video❤

    • @justwonder1404
      @justwonder1404 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      Це все дійсно наче з паралельного життя, в яке нас не пускають)

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +99

      Sending you so much love and strength ❤️

    • @Арина-я9у7с
      @Арина-я9у7с 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +88

      I'll write my comment in English so more people can understand it, but I'm a Ukrainian too, 20 y.o now and I couldn't agree more. All this lifestyle content with parties, travelling etc feels like parallel world. I also long for a relationship but I am already anxious about my and my family well-being, so having someone you love near you would only add to that anxiety. I live in relatively safe region with only 1-3 air raids per week and was even able to go to uni (which only added more anxiety tbh). I'm anxious about ongoing war, my future career that seems non-existent though on some days I became so tired of uni assignments that I want to die. Best years of my life, yeah

    • @lalailm
      @lalailm 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      You want to know what helped me? To stop listening to everyone but myself.
      I also watched all the self help videos I could find. One after the other, looking for the one that would finally have the answers I was looking for and change everything in my mindset.
      As you might have noticed already, your situation is unique, only you know all its circumstances and specificities. Therefore YOU are the best person to guide you. But you will have to silence everything and everyone for a while until you figure out how to actually do it. It takes time, it’s frustrating in the beggining and you will often want to take the easy way out and wish someone would just hand you a map with everything you have to do instead of figuring it out yourself. But trust me, once you learn how to do it, you will ask yourself how could you have spent so much time just looking for answers in all the wrong places.
      My suggestion to you is try to silence as much of the noise you can at first. Get rid of the distractions (even though they might be whats keeping you sane for now) and see what comes up. And once you get in contact with that, start sharing what you learn. Dont care who will see it or if it’s perfectly polished before you share it, that completely irrelevant. But just by reading your comment I could see how much potential you have to make a huge contribution to the world. So go find out what it is, regardless of how you think it should start or look like.

    • @darajoyce5514
      @darajoyce5514 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      free ukraine🇺🇦❤️

  • @joelleblanc8670
    @joelleblanc8670 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +448

    I think it is important to remind ourselves that most of these films only portray the experiences of privileged, educated, wealthy, middle-class, straight, white, American women. No wonder people feel they are falling behind in life if thats the comparison.

    • @SpiritVines
      @SpiritVines 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      LITERALLY

    • @felixthecat2786
      @felixthecat2786 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      This narrative was shoved down our throats by our baby boomer parents. We were told to go to college no matter what. We were told to wait before getting married and having kids. We were told to be financially independent no matter what.
      Then the economy crashed in 2008 and jobs were nowhere to be found. Many Millennials wen to college because it was the only thing available for them. Some took out loans to do so. When we graduate there were few jobs to be found. Many of us ended up in lousy, low wage retail/customer service jobs. Some of us went to graduate school to open up our opportunities.
      This still didn't really do much for many of us.
      I realized over time that the system is literally broken and most industries are strongly gatekept. Trying to "establish a career" is somewhat futile. The career exists in self employment. Find something that you're skilled in and try as best as you can to make as much money as possible.
      So many Millennial women wasted their 20s chasing a false ideal when they could have established themselves financially much earlier through self employment. Many of us could have used that time to find a romantic partner, have kids, and buy a house/condo.

    • @niebieskimotyl3308
      @niebieskimotyl3308 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@felixthecat2786 I 100% agree, I could have had a stable low stress job, raising kids, rather than chasing a "career" for minimum wage, because it was in demand and there were more candidates than places. It was also a very competitive and hostile environment. At 30 I realized it's the last moment to start a family if I want 3 kids. Ended up with only 1, didn't get along with my partner due to financial struggles. Now being 40, I don't have a career, but a child to look after. But still I'm happier that I decided to have a child while I still could. My 8 yrs old son says, he wants to earn good money at work and I think that's better than a glamorous "career" that looks only nice on the outside.

    • @AlanaJ_888
      @AlanaJ_888 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I grew up poor and waited tables at four diff jobs at once, worked since I was 15, and paid for my own dance classes in college while I was still working my bum off serving, because I love to dance. Just cause someone loves dance and dances in a studio doesn’t mean they are an over privileged snobby rich kid dude. I think it’s so weird how people love to project and stereotype people they don’t even know because they are good at something or a woman or white. None of those things automatically mean I didn’t grow up poor or that I’m a snobby rich person. Lower or middle class women or people can be talented too bruh!

  • @wibo92
    @wibo92 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +278

    I’m feeling so lost because some of those adult milestones don’t apply to me: I don’t want children, I don’t want to get married (the idea of marriage doesn’t convince me), I don’t want to buy a house, I’m not a “girl boss/career woman” and I’m fine with being single.. I have to set my own milestones and that is incredibly hard!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +128

      One thing I didn’t touch upon in this video that I wish I’d included is exactly this: even people who don’t want the traditional milestones are made to feel like they have to have something, some achievement, to prove that their existence is worthwhile. And when the entire value system is built on things you don’t want, well, what then?

    • @red3pants
      @red3pants 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Would love to hear what milestones you set for yourself to inspire others in their process!

    • @ieatkids03
      @ieatkids03 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      Same. I don't care about any of those things either. I use creative passions as milestones to work towards instead.

  • @pgrzesina
    @pgrzesina 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +348

    The milestones come with an implied message that reaching them is entirely within the control of the individual. As with so many things, the importance of luck and circumstances is ignored and instead replaced with a claim that you aren't working hard enough or don't want it enough. It isn't buying lattes that's keeping young people from buying houses and no one can work 20 hours a day. And I'm not single by choice or because I haven't tried, but it just hasn't worked out yet.

    • @rushmetofood
      @rushmetofood 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      👏👏👏👏👏

    • @skromnyasha
      @skromnyasha 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Yes, it's so heartbreaking.. I did tried and I wanted a healthy relationship but life is like fuck you silly, we cannot allow you have anything good, get back in line

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Love you Paul ❤️

    • @Ladeliciadelinda
      @Ladeliciadelinda 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      This resonated very strongly with me. I'm in my mid 30s... never married. No kids but frankly I can't have them due to my conditions. I have no career because again my health conditions. I'm struggling to find a way to move out but stuck. At this point all my old classmates and cousins are married with kids. I feel like a failure in life. I've had people secretly say crap about me behind my back... looking down on me where I am. They point the fingers as if I'm entirely to blame. But in reality most of us do have circumstances that make achieving milestones hard if not impossible.
      It's easy to judge others and think they are lazy or stupid. But sometimes we just have bad circumstances or bad luck

    • @jayciflashx9425
      @jayciflashx9425 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Spot on!!

  • @kallistoindrani5689
    @kallistoindrani5689 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +167

    I'm 35 now and I've only just barely begun living. This whole idea of 'your 20's are the best' is just toxic. I did feel behind in life but I can't blame myself for that because it was told to me over and over that I was behind in life! People in real life, tv shows and movies, social media,etc.... If I had listened to them I would have a house I can't afford, a husband I don't like and children I don't want.

    • @ShimmerynightsASMR
      @ShimmerynightsASMR 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      THIS!!

    • @BellBouvier
      @BellBouvier 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      i love this. i can relate.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      good for you!!

    • @oldskoolmusicnostalgia
      @oldskoolmusicnostalgia 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      20s are the worst in our day and age. It's certainly when I felt the worst because you lose the "white bread world" protection of school and find yourself thrown into adult life without much preparation (let's be honest: even those of us who had good parents were not prepared for this), having to worry about your employment prospects even before you're done studying.
      For previous generations surveys did actually find that happiness peaked in people's 20s, began to dip in 30s, fell to its lowest in 40s-50s then regained momentum in the 60s. So the carefree life of the 20s is another thing that's been taken away from our generation.

    • @usd2868
      @usd2868 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I'm 31 and just began living
      Raised in a toxic family but never thought that most of the time it was thier fault and I most of the time blamed myself

  • @citlalialvarado666
    @citlalialvarado666 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +256

    There is an interview of Guillermo del Toro where he says "The time I've felt worst in my life was at my 20's. I've never felt as lost, fall behind, tired, being such a failure as in my 20's. Felt time had passed me, but at your 20's you have nothing but time"
    It's so real, whenever I feel sad or disappointed because I feel stuck I think of that interview and all the things ahead of me I have no idea are coming.
    Another example is Taylor Swift's documentary, she says that as she approaches 30 the release of this album is one of her last chances to become successful while society still tolerates her being successful.
    The album wasn't big, good not a huge hit. Then came the pandemic and she released Folklore breaking many records, Re recorded her old catalogue and broke records, won Grammy's and now people are in awe at her new tour.
    It makes me really emotional, similarly, we have no idea what's ahead of us as long as we don't give up

    • @ahogg5960
      @ahogg5960 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      And what happens when your parents are fucking loaded. Her father was a Merrill Lynch stockbroker and her mother was a marketing executive.
      Sure hard work helped but so did yacht loads of cash.

    • @IWillBeSaved
      @IWillBeSaved 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ahogg5960she was born into a dream team

    • @ellevasc
      @ellevasc 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      @@ahogg5960 true she was really privileged growing up but i don't think that has to do with the point they were trying to make. at 29 taylor swift was already super famous and successful, but she was worried her career was coming to an end because of how the entertainment industry treats women who are over 30. so the point here - i believe - is that life for women doesn't have to end when they turn 30.

    • @mau345
      @mau345 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@ellevascas much as this is true, an average single to married woman would have the most difficult time to relate to taylor swifts woes.She deserves her fame and fortune, but please, I dont want to try and relate and be on a bandwagon that she should be a top model to look up to for an average modern woman

    • @matthewcaldwell8100
      @matthewcaldwell8100 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Taylor Swift was a famous singer as a teenager producing vapid music with daddy's money. Nothing she says about being alienated in her 20s is meaningful except as a forensic account of celebrity narcissism.

  • @catcreme
    @catcreme 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +221

    The only aspect of my life where I feel behind is my ''career''. Only once I graduated and entered the job market, I realised that I deeply dislike the entire system. Media makes you believe that if you work hard you'll get to work a job you like, but reality is far far from it. I worked a job I liked for a year, got fired and then was convinced that I could get another one in a similar field but the hiring process was soul-crushing. I felt miserable for not being able to have a fulfilling career like all my peers, and had to live with my parents.
    It really decimates your self-esteem and you have to be happy to get any job that'll hire you, even if it's ''below'' your education and skills. You feel like you're not living up to the potential you were told you possess, and you need to make peace with it.

    • @NormieNeko
      @NormieNeko 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I'm not so sure they're honest about their "fulfilling career." There are plenty of Reddit posts about anonymous people admitting to how unfulfilling their job is. It's the same with relationships and family. Travel is no different. There's an overall lack of contentment no matter the choice, and that is so scary to me. Is anyone actually satisfied and at peace out there? I feel too many people are playing life in zombie mode. I'm kind of blackpilled right now...

  • @SpiritVines
    @SpiritVines 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +99

    I’m black, and I never really saw myself in any of these films, my hair floats, it doesn’t fall. It’s not easy to just walk into a room without judgmental eyes immediately picking you apart. Being in spaces like this as a girl like me would just feel uncomfortable I would constantly be reminded by people who don’t like me that they don’t want me there because they believe I don’t belong there. That’s why I never became class president, or prom queen, or went to an Ivy League or did anything of the sort, I would feel isolated and picked apart down to the atom. I’m glad to know I’m not alone in feeling behind though. The whole point in living is that there are so many different ways to do it. I wish we would just abolish the capitalist greed structure and have a better environment where there was no overconsumption exploitation hierarchy to claw our ways to the top of.
    Love your video!

    • @monsutades9999
      @monsutades9999 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      My hair floats. It doesn't fall🖤 this made me appreciate my curly hair more 😭

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      thank you so much for adding your perspective

  • @rebeccag8589
    @rebeccag8589 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    I initially started out hitting the life milestones (minus kids)- I graduated college, got married at 26, advanced in my career, and we bought a house when I was 28. BUT- this marriage ended up being dysfunctional and abusive, and this career path was unhealthy and absolutely not the right fit. I'm now 37, divorced, on a totally different career path, renting, and definitely behind in all those milestones. But because I'm in a place that feels like a good fit for me and I feel healthy, I feel so much better than I did when I was checking off all the boxes (many people of course hit those milestones in a healthy way, and I'm certainly not trying to invalidate that!)

  • @justingerald
    @justingerald 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +82

    I made all of 9,000 dollars the year I turned 25, which is..... not enough to survive in NYC. And all my college classmates seemed to be on rocket ships.
    Eventually, I figured it out. But I didn't come close to self-actualizing until I was seriously more like 35. And it took a ton of work. And a lot of degrees, and therapy, etc. It's going very well now, but I'm almost 40.
    20s were a really really stressful and painful time.
    -One of your five men

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      I love my five men. Thank you for sharing ❤️

  • @Maison_Marion
    @Maison_Marion 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +120

    Rory Gilmore comes from "old money" and nepotism runs through the entire series. That's not relatable for 90% of the people nowadays. We need new and modern milestones for what it means to be an adult instead of graduating, a career, house, marriage etc. Because they're all very hard to obtain. Figuring out your core values could be an "adulting" milestone, and is easier to achieve. It's very helpful to do some questionnaires on the internet, read some books and figure out what you really like and dislike in life. Not many people pay attention to that, even if they hit all the traditional milestones. There's a reason the divorce rate is also high. Marrying in your 20s is not always wise if you don't know yourself at all.

    • @krii998
      @krii998 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      i agree 100%, as a 25F i got into a mediocre relationship because i was feeling left behind watching my friends get married and pregnant but it turned out to the worst relationship and i didn’t even like the person as he was forcing me to compromise too much of my life but thank God i was brave enough to not drag it out and started to get to know myself

  • @rissahaven
    @rissahaven หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I needed to see this. Thank you. I'm nearly 30, and I moved back in with my parents over a year ago, after graduating from a prestigious college then living on my own, like a "real adult", for four years. The pandemic began less than a year after I graduated (by the way, I come from a very low-income family, and never thought I would be able to attend college at all, let alone my college; I was so full of promise and hope during my college years, for the first time in my life), and everything went sharply downhill from there, ending with me needing to move back in with my parents because I was being priced out the area where I had grown up, attended college, and begun to make a life for myself. I don't even have my license, and rely on the local bus system (which is NOT reliable) to get to work every day, because I can't afford a car, car insurance, etc. I have no mobility, and I feel like all of the progress I had made socially (especially sexually) during those precious, fleeting years of independence has been reversed over the course of the last year. I feel like I am simultaneously very old (because, as a woman, my sexual "market value" is decreasing as I age (🙄), and I have never been in a relationship), and very, very young, to the point of being dependent on my parents.
    Anyways... this video made me cry, because it's been a while since I have felt so seen. Thank you. ❤

  • @hannahpatten7226
    @hannahpatten7226 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    I’m 32 and gave up on caring about milestones. Instead I’m trying to enjoy my own life in my own space

  • @deardsco
    @deardsco 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    Thank you for making this video. As an almost 30 year old woman, I'm tired of hearing other people's comments about my life, why I haven't gotten married, have kids, have a car, own a house bla bla bla, as if my life would stop at the age of 30 and there wouldn't be any chance for me to get what I want after 30.

  • @360shadowmoon
    @360shadowmoon 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I personally think it’s insane to expect people to make all their highest stake life decisions regarding careers, life partners, and families in the very first decade of adulthood. Like, your prefrontal cortex isn’t even finished baking until 25! This kind of expectation is designed to make anyone with any sort of disadvantage feel like shit, because those disadvantages will naturally get in the way of most of these achievements at an early age.

  • @Anotherusernameistaken
    @Anotherusernameistaken 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +87

    as a Romanian who just turned 30, I would like to thank you for this video

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      😭😭😭lots of love to you

  • @taliajournee212
    @taliajournee212 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    This is a great breakdown of the current situation for many in the Gen Z and Millennial groups. I think the economic shifts from the 00s ended up impacting our lives (I'm a millennial) in greater ways than ever to be expected. This is compounded by the older generations not understanding these nuances and projecting that we are 'lazy' and 'need to work harder'. I'm in my late 30s, I'm currently unemployed and live with my parents, this is most definitely not what I thought my life would look like when I was in university in my early 20s. I feel the answer to feeling less behind isn't to compare yourself to others but to LOOK at what other people are doing to live better lives. I've found that consists of doing the unexpected for your age: changing careers, moving country or taking time off to figure things out and most important prioritize your health.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      you make a great point here: to look at what others are doing. This is one of the reasons why I hate the "don't compare yourself to others" advice. Comparison is bad if you do it to measure your value against other people. But it can be very useful it you are trying to compare notes. See someone who has the life you want? try to figure out how they got there. And if the answer isn't blind luck or parent's money, then you might find useful information there!

  • @justwonder1404
    @justwonder1404 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +62

    As a 30 yo daughter of refugees who lives with parents because culture, I've felt behind many times because - well, I am behind in many ways. My only response is the question that kind of came to me before my 30th birthday: so what? If I'm not doing my best to change something, I'm probably not too bothered by it. I still have a job and a family to take care of, so clearly I'm not an absolute failure. Finding comfort in what you've achieved, being grateful for what you have and trying to change what you dislike might be a tired recipe, but it works for me.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Thank you for sharing your thoughts xx

  • @msdebruin.
    @msdebruin. 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    Met my now husband at 25, started dating at 26, got married at 28. Bought a house at 30. Even though i did 'the things'. I still feel immensy behind and I can't catch up.
    There is so much focus on a successful career. It's drilled into me that you shouldn't want to work in a fast food chain, shop or anything else using your hands. We should use our brains! Anything less than a fancy office is just not acceptable. But that's just not reality. We need people in all sorts of lines of work. I failed in University. Probably will never have a fancy job. And for me that still feels like it's unacceptable.
    I also think social media and tv plays a huge part in comparing ourselves to others. My parents were very happy in their rental home with 3 kids. They didnt have a higher education. They just worked and lived a normal life. I just remember seeing these huge houses on mtv cribs, disney channel shows with houses 10 times bigger that our normal sized home. I 100% believed we were poor even though we weren't. And now, seeing all these mansions on instagram and youtube. Were are just constantly bombarded with better stuff, better lives, better travels out there.

  • @Scipio0404
    @Scipio0404 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +90

    Another reason could be why men don't really have these "I feel left behind" videos and etc. is because it's not as expected from them. You can constantly hear people go "men mature later" etc., so when women reach the point where society tells them that well you are as good as dead, men get the yes your life is just starting.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      Oh dear, I grew up with a cousin my age and we used to get in trouble for the same things as kids, except he was “boisterous” while I was “insolent” for doing the silly things we did

    • @msdebruin.
      @msdebruin. 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      I'm 30 and married. People constantly point out the clock is ticking, are we trying for a baby yet? Will we start soon?
      We dont even want kids (Maybe later but not how things are right now in the world). They don't ask my husband. They say he's young to be married. (He's one year younger.) Urgh

    • @runningcommentary2125
      @runningcommentary2125 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Men absolutely feel this way. It’s a universal experience.

    • @Ella-g2m
      @Ella-g2m 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Seriously, this. Men get so much lenience and less pressure. People act like at 25 a man is young and a woman is irresponsible for being in the exact same life circumstances.

  • @taryndancer29
    @taryndancer29 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

    My 20's were ok but things started to get better for me after 30. Maybe because I stopped giving a f*ck and started living my life for me and making decisions that make me happy.
    But yes my older Gen X parents had a completely different 20s/30s compared to me. In 1997 my parents were 28 and 30, 3 kids, each had a car and owned a house, all on my dad's income. That simply is impossible these days.

    • @mau345
      @mau345 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Not to mention, your parents also are an exception global wise for their generation. Imagine being in a developing country and this is what you aspire to have while watching Hollywood movies. This was an expectation rather than a big achievement a few can only have

  • @adreamerontherun
    @adreamerontherun 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    I always find it baffling that people believe you're the wisest or smartest while you're in your 20s. I started watching old classic movies in 2020 when I just hit 29 and I instantly realized I'd not have the same deep connection with some of these movies had I watched them in my 20s. You can still learn until you're nearing 80!! these trends are very counterproductive in my opinion, seeing people on social media calling 25 year olds as "hags" is so dystopian and scary to be honest!

  • @afreen4608
    @afreen4608 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +124

    I feel like we forget that Gen Z are currently also going through the same and this is not just a millennial issue. We grew up with similar media but are both overlooked and told we need to do better to not be in the situation that millennials are in.

  • @miriam8376
    @miriam8376 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    This isn’t a generational thing. I’m gen x and I felt it too. I legit think this is just people in their 20s in every generation slowly waking up to the fact that media doesn’t accurately depict where people are in their lives at any given age. Like, I felt terrible about not having a house and a husband, but I can count on one hand the number of times I was pressured IRL to my face. It comes from media. You just have to realize that 99% of what you see is BS and stuff gets a lot better.

    • @kayellejay9608
      @kayellejay9608 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I agree. The movie Reality Bites (1994) was all about this type of feeling.

  • @chia_.
    @chia_. 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I’m turning 21 in a couple of months, so I don’t really fit in the age range that’s depicted here and yet I feel behind in life.
    I appreciate so much hearing other people say that they’ve been here and that it gets better.
    I’m starting to feel hope in the fact that life can actually get better as you age, and it doesn’t crumble on you when you turn 30.
    Loved this btw!

    • @TravellerZasha
      @TravellerZasha 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I just turned 22 and i think i feel the same as you. I'm currently retaking high school to get into university which has made me feel behind. I heard for many people it does get better at 30's and I do think that's true however it doesn't make my present feel better cause all my life I was always told "keep waiting cause it will get better" when that's not true I learned. it can only get better when you make changes to your life and when you have supports that match at your stage in life.

    • @chia_.
      @chia_. 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TravellerZasha you’re right it doesn’t get better if you wait! I had this same realisation some time ago and it was shocking bcs I felt the weight of the responsibility: “ I have to do something or I’ll waist my life” .
      But I think looking at it the other way we actually have the possibility to improve, to change things, to change ourselves and that’s the only thing that matters at the end of the day. And every time I feel lacking looking at someone I try to remember that in the end the only person I need to impress and make happy is myself.
      Thanks for sharing btw :)

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      in my experience, it really does get better! just mustering up the confidence to make this channel and the discipline to let negative comments go in one ear and out the other, would not have been possible for me 10 or even 5 years ago. And this is just one example of things that have become better and easier with age. You got this x

    • @chia_.
      @chia_. 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@accordingtoalinalove this thank you so much!! it’s so reassuring to hear, and it def makes me want to continue on this path of self-improvement!

    • @contemporarydncethot0382
      @contemporarydncethot0382 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hi yall :) I turned 26 this year and if I have one peice of advice it would be, don't wait to live 🫡👀☝️🤝❤️
      I used to be a professional ballet/ballroom dancer and had a decent career. From age 18- 25, I gave everything to dance and sacrificed things like birthdays, vacations, Social life and stability to be a dancer. I don't regret my career, but dance was very thankless. Financially I have nothing really to show for all my efforts. I still dance and I'm going into a new career, but I'm ready to enjoy life 😊 rebuild and strengthen relationships, go out to dinner, celebrate holidays, dance for fun.
      Of course we ought to work hard and be responsible but don't wait to live 😊❤. You have time of course but I somewhat regret not being more present for things outside of dance when i was younger, yah know ?
      I think it'd have made me happier person and more grateful

  • @JaceBlack-do2uy
    @JaceBlack-do2uy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    pls this was needed because why do I feel like an utter mess at 22? This is when you're supposed to be messy right??

  • @janepdx
    @janepdx 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    It's not a trend. It's just life. It's a feeling that inspires you to re-evaluate your priorities and change your trajectory for the better.

  • @HiuchiKiyoko
    @HiuchiKiyoko 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The concept of being "priced out of adulthood" is such a revelation. Looking at it that way, it explains a lot.
    And I've had similar circumstances to you vis a vis moving around a lot. Basically all of my twenties were spent in a string of foreign countries which led to having friends scattered all over, losing touch with people, and not being able to really grow into any place, let alone buy a house even if it were affordable (which for people who came of age around 2008 is, yeah, impossible).

    • @VK-kc3ob
      @VK-kc3ob หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That resonated with me as well. Like a weight has been lifted.

  • @n3mo1123
    @n3mo1123 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I just stumbled across this video. I'm 35y/o, I was stuck in an abusive relationship from ages 15-25 that decimated most parts of my life, not to mention exacerbated my bipolar disorder. I never thought I would live this long. I was definitely a "smart girl" growing up and dealing with other people's disappointed expectations of that have been almost as difficult as dealing with my own. I currently survive by the grace of my family. I've taken a lot of steps to become more independent, and I have had to seriously reckon with what it means to be an adult, what it looks like when I'm behind even those who feel behind. I really liked this video and I'm glad I found it. I like your sense of humor, thank you for sharing your thoughts

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      So sorry to hear about your relationship and so happy and proud to hear that you found the strength to move on from it! Sending you love ❤️

  • @hanie2350
    @hanie2350 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    I am 28 years old. This was a very informative video. I'm really glad that you talked about some of the socioeconomic realities that many of us are facing in our societies. I think this perspective soothes my insecurities more than advice that says, "it's okay to feel behind."
    Thank you for making this video.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      My pleasure, sending you a big big hug ❤️

  • @rebeccacrow9427
    @rebeccacrow9427 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    I think a lot of my feelings regarding being left behind is due to being a closeted lesbian. I don't plan to be closeted forever but feel too unstable right now to deal with the consequences of coming out. But at the same time, I feel like I am losing my youth and prime dating years to isolation and depression and lying my way through a lot of social interactions.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      sending you so much love. If it's any consolation, my first healthy and fulfilling relationship started at 29. I spent my 20s in and out of terrible relationships and then in the space of 3 months I met and fell in love with the best person I've ever met - 2 years down the line and he feels like the home I've always looked for.

  • @pisceanbeauty2503
    @pisceanbeauty2503 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    At this stage “normal” means nothing. I am in my late 30’s and I have just as many friends married with kids as I have friends who are still single, some of them living with parents and family still. And I’m in the US where living at home after your early 20’s has historically been frowned upon. There is already a new normal where large numbers of us aren’t hitting traditional
    milestones, and those numbers will only increase. Time to embrace the new normal without shame.

  • @H.O.M.E.LANDER
    @H.O.M.E.LANDER 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I'm 27, dropped engineering after 2 years 6 years ago never went to college again for studying any course. College is not meant for me. I feel so behind with no carrer , right now for me there's nothing scarier than my own future life

  • @longlongie5938
    @longlongie5938 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I'm 23 y/o Russian from a less than average financially well-off family. My soviet boomer grandparents were the last people to afford a property. They did it before 30 with 2 kids too. My grandpa had a typical boomer career story as in he walked into a printshop once, asked to become an apprentice and just worked there until retirement. Grandma's education was actually useful unlike anything you can get today. Education I tried after school was a joke where you could only be successful with connections. I only had 1 job and total year of active job search has given me PTSD. My parents didn't secure any job position or make a savings account for me, they just expected me to figure everything out on my own and that the only way I live separately from them is if I find a man with his own property. Heck, they never even gave me pocket money, I learned to manage my money properly only recently. There was never a hope for me. And now that I have a husband that takes care of me, everyone everywhere says "just get a job and become successful and never be financially dependent on a man!", even my mom who contributed nothing to me becoming successful. While my husband is looking forward to support me in doing anything with my life.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Ughhh that sounds rough. So happy to hear you met someone who loves and supports you ❤️

    • @longlongie5938
      @longlongie5938 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@accordingtoalina thank you for bringing up this topic that a lot of us can relate to🙏

    • @mau345
      @mau345 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I know its annoying depending on how it is said, but not being financially dependent on man or anyone is still good advice, and heck, could even add spice life if youre already content. Think of it also as a form to express love for your man if not for yourself because sometimes you just dont know what life throws at you and it would be a great blessing if you have that back up to support each other. Of course this is at moderation if you’re especially doing child rearing roles

    • @longlongie5938
      @longlongie5938 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@mau345 here's the catch - *if youre already content*. But people who force this girl boss thing act like all women have harvard tuition or inherit family business and think everyone has equal opportunities in life.

  • @rebelkallus
    @rebelkallus 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I'm mid 20s (older gen z) but I really feel this on so many levels. I had loads of different jobs that never lasted before going back to university, travelled but not for fun, now I'm late and "behind" and can't even relate to anyone at a "prestige" place. It doesn't help that I'm trans and feel behind for that anyway, navigating everything else is difficult enough. The worst thing is when others older than you expect things like learning to drive, as if it everything doesn't take money that younger generations just have no way of attaining yet. Thank you for this video! Idk why the this got recommended but subscribed.

  • @thatgirldaria
    @thatgirldaria 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I think what helped me not to care about being behind is just focusing on myself and my own achievement and also actually telling myself that my path is different from so many people as I am an immigrant from east Europe, and definitely did not start “on the same level” as others.
    We all have individual journeys and it’s just incomparable to compare, and yes very often it’s also feels unfair but that’s life I guess 😅
    As someone in my late twenties I can relate to this video sooo much! Thank you ❤

    • @krii998
      @krii998 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      as an Albanian girl i can totally relate. I come from a poor family who tried their best to provide for my college and now i’m in Europe but after graduation life has been a living hell for me, that’s why i moved back in with my family since living alone is too damn expensive especially as a single person.

  • @Giuliasaintx
    @Giuliasaintx 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    this video came at the right time for me. I was recently fired from my job (i managed to get another two jobs at the same line - i'm a child psycologyst for children with autism and other neurodiversities in Brazil) and this created a huge gape in my brain. Like, im 23 and i was already fired. I still live with my parents, my friends are already doing masters and traveling the world. Meanwhile i'm here, reading book (or trying to) and working 50 hours per week.
    Today i've made a realisation that is simple: my life is my life only and i cant compare myself to them. Of course, this thought will variate because our mental health can be really uneasy so i will probably have day where i will be second guessing myself but i really did put things in perspective.
    It also helps to write down all the things i accomplished. For exemple, at 23 i alredy have a degree and i'm doing two post graduation courses and also working. So write this down made me realise that im moving at my own time while not being behide anyone because life its not a straight line.
    I adore your videos and this one came at the right time.
    (english is not my first language so im sorry if grammar/english is not good)

    • @blackgirlreading
      @blackgirlreading 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Being proud of your accomplishments is the best thing you can do! Gratitude and self-love (as cheesy as some people might see it) is the way! You're doing amazing 😊🥹🥰

  • @irisalexander
    @irisalexander 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    this video, as my fellow gen-z people would say; is *so real.* i have literally always felt "behind in life" even when i was like 12 years old i remember thinking like "i really need to start thinking about my future..."
    i think a potential reason for that is seeing all the child stars on television, and seeing in magazines that they "bought a house for themselves and their parents at 16" etc.
    i never struggled financially, which i am so grateful for, but it was never lost on me that eventually i wouldn't be a kid, and my parents wouldn't be there paying for my new school outfits and buying me food.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      oh the child star thing is ~so real~ for me. Coming from the same generation as Miley Cyrus, Selena Gomez, Demi Lovato, I really grew up thinking that you were to old to have a creative career literally after the age of 20 :|

    • @person1420
      @person1420 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@accordingtoalina " I really grew up thinking that you were to old to have a creative career literally after the age of 20 :|
      I'm 23. Literally feel this exact same thing ever since I have access to the internet which was when I was 19.

  • @solanaszoo
    @solanaszoo 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Having survived SA and DV, the impact trauma had on me made me feel behind. When I graduated from college before even turning 21, unemployed and still being abused at home I was constantly reminded by peers and family that compared to others I should have a job, money, my own place. When I kept pushing myself to study harder, learn more, advocate for myself on paper to get the interviews and finally (after so many applications) the job offers- I realized that to get "ahead" you had to be steadfast in where you wanted to go and what you would do to get there. For me that looked like sleepless nights, starving just to afford bills, and deteriorating mental health that I attempted to fix with self help books and countless information on healing following trauma. For some life in the early 20's is a endless joyride and for others its not, we may not all have the same experiences or even opportunities but we owe it to ourselves to make our journey one that works for us.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      so sorry you went through all of that and I have to commend you for pushing through it. I can't imagine what it felt like. I hope you get the peace and ease you deserve in life

  • @mustytechnorat
    @mustytechnorat 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    my only general goal in life as a 19 year old is looking back at my day everyday and feeling satisfied, like yeah I could die in my sleep and it would be alright, i had fun, im fulfilled, i did stuff i liked or i accomplished something today. but like more specifically consuming media that i like, living in a nice space, having a fulfilling career in my way, and overall witnessing stuff. life is not linear and my goal is for it not to be, life is about learning and experimenting until you die and that the great thing, i like routine but year by year the routine completely changes, i could be in the other side of the world, or have kids in in a couple of years or never, i have no idea and im cool with that it keeps me excited about living.

  • @sylviaplathfan
    @sylviaplathfan หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm glad I found this channel. I totally feel this way even though I'm only 26! I have my life ahead of me as a young MA graduate looking to get into journalism and the advantage of having my parents support me financially until I have found my first full-time job and can afford to rent my own apartment. Yet, I still feel like I'm behind in life because I spent the first half of my 20s recovering from a traumatic event and my teenage years dealing with mental illness. I'm glad to hear I am not alone in this feeling. Like every experience as a woman, it's related to sexism and how society makes women feel like we should experience as much as we can of our lives in our 20s because we're going to wither away the moment we hit 30 (which is actually still young) and nobody will want us.

  • @raveenasplaylists9396
    @raveenasplaylists9396 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    I've been struggling a lot recently. Feeling behind in life, contemplating whether I want to get married and have kids, fearing that I'll be manipulated by societies expectations and get married/have kids cause I'll convince myself that I want those things when in reality I don't. It is very complicated, especially when everyone around you is married. Not to even mention how older generation wont leave you alone with "when are you getting married" questions. send help.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Sending hugs

    • @Арина-я9у7с
      @Арина-я9у7с 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I turned 20 in December and already getting these questions from some members of my family. I currently study at uni, live with my parents and have no partner, which fucking kids do you want from me? I'm basically a child myself. Sending lots of love to you

    • @raveenasplaylists9396
      @raveenasplaylists9396 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Арина-я9у7с thanks for sharing. sending lots of love to you too

    • @raveenasplaylists9396
      @raveenasplaylists9396 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Арина-я9у7с thanks for sharing. sending lots of love to you too

  • @theboombody
    @theboombody 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    When I graduated from college in my mid 20's I pretty much accomplished everything I wanted in life already. I never wanted to work. I just knew it was something I had to do. My first job was awful, and then I bumped around for a while in the dark, about seven months, not knowing what to do, until I ended up in a job I was finally able to stick with. Once I finally got used to the job, I did feel like I was kind of going nowhere, but I just read books and made youtube videos during that time. I was making decent money and trying to save it up as best I could. I enjoyed life, but felt like I was going nowhere. Then all of a sudden I met someone, got married, and went to grad school. Finished that too. But now in my 40's I feel like I'm going downhill instead of going nowhere, with my declining health in particular. But I'm still happily married and my career still seems stable enough for now, so I can't complain. I accomplished all my goals. Just accomplished them too early. Life is short, but still good.

  • @MasalaMan
    @MasalaMan 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    Wasn't The Devil's Wears Prada more a serious warning _against_ being so obsessed with career? Rather than 'girlboss achieving her dreams' sort of thing. Like didn't she reject the promotion in the end? Yeah she was succeeding in the company but the movie made it clear that she was being favoured by the boss over another employee who had been there for years. As far as I can remember anyway. Her life wasn't exactly a clean linear path (although yes more linear than others, if she was real, she comes across as really lucky) but I don't think it 100% fits into that smart girl trope. So while imo that may not have been the best example, I do think your main point still stands about the general influence we were under of life having a linear path and media *does* reinforce it as well as boomers who had it that straightforward. As one of the 5 guys that watches your vids from time to time, we're under the same spell as well from media. Get the degree/good job, get the house, get married, have kids, happily ever after. Sounds like go on a journey, kill the dragon, save the princess, fall in love, get married, have kids, happily ever after. It's all the same stuff. Lol. 😅
    Not saying the spell is necessarily bad by the way. Also, there IS a film of a small town boy making it big in the city, it's called "The Secret of My Success" with the Legend himself, Micheal J Fox. Good movie. Loved it as a teen.

    • @angeliprimlani9389
      @angeliprimlani9389 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I’m always puzzled by how many people misread that film. It’s not a romantic comedy it’s a story about a superficially charming but toxic job that nearly destroys its protagonist. Andy is not a girlboss, she’s a trashfire.

  • @alexp2488
    @alexp2488 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    i’m 22 and feel so behind in life bc i’m not graduating college until next year

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      bestie nooooo! I started my undergrad at 24 and finished my masters at 28 - you're light years ahead of me!

  • @kallistoindrani5689
    @kallistoindrani5689 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    "And can I blame it on Rory Gilmore?" This made me laugh so loud! 👍👍👍👍😂😂😂😂

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      All I know is it’s not my fault 💀

  • @xoAmelia7
    @xoAmelia7 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Great video - I think you're really on the money with the expectations vs. reality of adulthood in modernity.
    I just turned 19 and I seriously feel behind in every single way, and even knowing that young adulthood is not the same for me as it was for my parents does not make it any better, especially when you have grandparents (baby boomers) who act as if you're behind in everything, when in reality, most people can't accomplish the same things in the same amount of time.
    You put my thoughts into words ❤

  • @rmcnally3645
    @rmcnally3645 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have felt behind in life, and I haven't managed to work through any of it, but I absolutely love this content because I think it elucidates exactly what some of the traps of thinking are for our generations and I really appreciate that you took the time to so thoughtfully put it together. "Priced out of hedonism" really resonates with me -- I literally don't have the time or mental energy to put towards drinking and kicking back. Thank you! Subscribed and shared!

  • @thehousewifehomelife5519
    @thehousewifehomelife5519 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Not making a statement, just something to think about. I’m 32. I met my husband at 22 and we married after dating and living together for 4 years. I have two little boys and a third baby coming in December. We own a house, I am a homemaker (have been since marriage), and we have a happy, healthy, stable family and marriage. I never had a career. I’ve never been to a “club”. I never “dated around”. I dated to marry, exclusively. I did go to a top 10 university, but looking back, I could have taken it or left it. However, I don’t feel behind. I don’t feel like I missed out. Why is it that women who are married and have families in their 20s and 30s don’t experience milestone anxiety but women who have strong careers and had more “experiences” feel behind? I think it’s an important thing to think about.

  • @Aires457
    @Aires457 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I feel bad for people who take life seriously. I gave up in high school and have been just enjoying my life since then. I don’t give a single fuck about a career, success, wealth, etc. I just let whatever happens happen and enjoy it as I go along

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I honestly aspire to live like this, good for you!

  • @Ashley-xb1dz
    @Ashley-xb1dz 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I started off college with my parents divorcing and going bankrupt. I'm barely educated but have some 2 year degree. Good thing I'm someone good at self teaching but job wise I'm all over the place. Things haven't gotten all that much better, but at least I never focused on having a career just learned to be flexible. I'm in my 30's now and hope i can manage to get married and have kids but with my debts I don't know how I will manage. 😞 I'm in school again at a very cheap rate but I'm not sure if the effort is worth it with the job market. It's a tough world out there. I feel bad living at home but with one parent gone and the cost of living it is what it is. Between my health issues and my debt i often feel pretty down.

  • @yana.whimss
    @yana.whimss 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This video got me thinking things😌thanks for the interesting take on Rory Gilmore affect and how we basically see our life as study plan when all you have to do is study and amount of work you’ve put in your studying always rewards in form of A+ grades

  • @CherryBerryFashion
    @CherryBerryFashion หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m still feeling behind in life but what helps me is what you’ve mentioned - recognizing that my life is not like everybody else’s- I’ve been struggling with mental health that set me back 3 YEARS of my life! And on top of that my values don’t align with the societal’s expectation of one’s life trajectory ie. I don’t want to graduate from university, I don’t want a 9-5 kind of job ect. I am creating a life on my own terms and I’m slowly realizing I need to create my own standards for it.

  • @staniarakocevic2785
    @staniarakocevic2785 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    It's really important to point out that European socialist countires weren't struggling economically because of its socialst system (i'm not saying that the politicians weren't corrupt). They were struggling primarily because of the western capitalist superpowers, which were placing huge political pressure on these countires and were economically sanctioning them. The problem isn't socialism, but the current system which actively tries to undermine alternative ways of living. (I come from Slovenia, a former Yugoslav republic).

    • @staniarakocevic2785
      @staniarakocevic2785 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I know that this wasn't the point of the video, but I just wanted to add the comment because I think that this is a really important topic.

    • @justwonder1404
      @justwonder1404 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I live in Ukraine and the way socialists will blame planned economy not being able to compete with free markets on evil capitalists in high top hats will never not be amusing. She barely mentioned a very real terrible situation in which a promise of "bright communist future" left a huge part of Europe and you're already triggered. Yes, the problem was socialism. Get over it already.
      P.S. also, Nicolae Ceausescu wasn't just "corrupt", he was a literal dictator, but of course you'll ignore that.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I’m referring to the fact that after the fall of communism (1989) Romania was left at the mercy of western capitalist superpowers AND that in order to pay Romania’s international debt Ceausescu ran an insane economy

  • @MrMoreti14
    @MrMoreti14 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Im one of those 5 men who watch your channel, and i just want to say that everytime i see a former classmate posting photos about their weddings or their children i just feel the extreme desire of taking my eyes out with a spoon and unfollow every single one of them on Instagram (the last one maybe a good thing to not feel milestone anxiety which is something that i have been feeling since i entered my 20's)

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Aaaah so sorry to hear ☹️

  • @theetherealshaye
    @theetherealshaye 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm turning 26 this year, and to outsiders, I could be seen in that "idealised" state: I work in social media, writing and photography, where I do well at my job, my boss likes what I do, and I get to go to really cool events because of the nature of our work; I have a long term relationship which will hopefully end in marriage; I have a good friend group who are supportive; I have a good sense of style and take care of myself; I go to open mic nights and poetry events and have hobbies; by all societal or cultural means I seem to be doing well.
    But what they don’t tell you is that behind closed doors, I'm physically exhausted all the time so I have no energy to put creatively into the work or the hobbies I love, I struggle to feel comfortable in places so I don't put myself forward enough in life, I'm still living at home, I never went to uni and got my job based on an apprenticeship (which I still love), I'm neurodivergent (although blessed to have colleagues and friends who understand most of the time), we are NOT super well off (but we get by as best we can), and the mental and physical health of myself and my family is on a perpetual wave.
    I'm so grateful for what I have and how I've gotten here, but it's not easy, even now. I wish and hope for better and I know I will get it, it's just a matter of waiting and working slowly.
    As a former gifted kid (a Rory Gilmore without the money), my life could have been a lot different. I could have been in more prestigious places, but then it wouldn't be mine, it would be someone's idea for my life. I view her as a cautionary tale, but I could have been worse off than I am now. I've worked for where I am now, when I never used to. So even if it is difficult, I am proud.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      happy to hear you're doing well. I think everyone is struggling, even if just in some small way, behind closed doors, but we are mostly presented with each other's heightened online personas, so it's hard to contextualise the instagram "highlight reel" into a multi-dimensional life experience where the good exists with the bad and no one is ever really "settled".

  • @ParthPatel-ut4cx
    @ParthPatel-ut4cx 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm 29 and this is exactly what I have been feeling throughout my 20's and one of my biggest fears was that I wouldn't be around to see 30. I really admire the courage it took to be forthright about the issues that are incredibly relevant to todays society. Thank you for discussing these topics that are on everyone's mind but rarely spoken about. Lastly, thank you for giving others hope :)

  • @Korfax124
    @Korfax124 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I can say that there's also a choice for men between working the job and getting a girlfriend, but we're also told from childhood not to complain unless we want to be seen as weak. Just to give a hint at what it's like as a man

  • @placeforNothing
    @placeforNothing 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I am 32 without a child. Most of my friends have at least one and I try really hard not seeing this as a competition. But when my own mother tells me "wow I am the only one without a child in my friend group' - it is hard not to crack. Or when my friend, who I did not see for 5 years, turns suddenly up just telling that she finally "caught up" with us by getting married in a month and being pregnant. Or when enjoying a grill party at a friends freshly built family house (which I could never afford) and really having a good time playing with her 2 kids, but then the third woman speaks that "wow you are sooo lucky you are turning 30 with 2 kids already" when she herself is 29 with one kid. And then all the eyes turn to me and they say "what bad position you are in"...thanks for reminding, it is not like on my mind every day because there is no other topic now within girls only childbirth and parenthood.
    And the top of it, I had to promise to give birth in 5 years (hungarian politics are crazy) otherwise I could not afford our own tiny apartmant with my husband.
    So yeah I feel like I am the delusional one trying hard not to think that this as a competition.

  • @stellarconcealment
    @stellarconcealment 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was fresh out of a top tier university in 2008 - yeah, hello economic crash - and was rejected from so many jobs. Couldn't find a serious relationship until my late 20s. To be fair I did get married at 30 and start a family before 35 - which I consider to have reached the 'traditional' milestones... But I have no hope of owning my own home, and my career is way behind, I do not have 'years of experience' behind me which I think I should have by now, and life is a huge financial struggle. I do feel behind.

  • @matthewcaldwell8100
    @matthewcaldwell8100 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Those milestones depend on a society much more stable and competently managed than the one we grew up in. Our parents benefitted from that stability and then sold it off piece by piece. Millennials and Zers are more educated than they ever were, work harder, and make more money, but still get half of what they got for just showing up. These were policy decisions and avoidable problems.

  • @dianagomes624
    @dianagomes624 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Felling behind in life seems more than normal in the globalized world we are living in. I can’t imagine a possible future when the next generations won’t continue to feel like they are missing out, left behind in life or not enough in a world where social media and media exist. I am 23, part of Gen Z and see to be a daily struggle for all the people my age surrounding me to fit into societies new realities and expectations. I don’t have a tip on how to overcome this, besides cutting our social media time as much as we can and to celebrate each small achievement in life and to be grateful. So cheesy but there is just that!

  • @kiraflash4596
    @kiraflash4596 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Movies are entertainment, not life advice. They show us dreams, things that don’t happen in real life. There’s no point in imitating movie characters..

  • @UniquelyUnseen
    @UniquelyUnseen 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I feel like I resonate a lot with your experience growing up in an immigrant household. I am a Hungarian who grew up in the US and my mom being first generation born here, I was still put under similar pressures as a man. I need to have a house, I need to get into a top University, She is constantly asking why I can’t date when I don’t have enough money to do that. Also, I developed glaucoma in my 20s, that does make things difficult as well. Thank you so much for this video.

  • @MILAMGM
    @MILAMGM 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I blame it on instant gratification bs: I can see some of my friends feeling like some milestones are taking forever to achieve but it is because life is not a movie lol and everything worth it takes time! I also see some of them thinking that they’re gonna live forever and do not start prioritizing what they need to do to achieve long term goals ..

  • @TravellerZasha
    @TravellerZasha 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    From childhood to now in my 20's I had a traumatic and neglected but sheltered childhood that watching these movies was a cope more me, that as long as I keep living and waiting I'll one day be able to experience these things and yes these thoughts did help me from committing s*icide as a kid, I missed out being a normal child or teen experiences and lack any experience in life and only just this year was able to start over which does bring me daily shamed especially when I'm often compared by everyone more successful and younger than me or told I'm expired or too old to do certain things. However I wonder if anyone else feels that when you finally achieve these milestones later in life you feel disappointment than fulfilled. That you feel angry you could've had this sooner or a sense of regret or loneliness cause you took too long that no one cares cause I do which makes me feel depressed and s*icidal often and make me wish to die before it could get better in my 30's.

  • @MitsumiKory
    @MitsumiKory 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I feel the same way regarding those 'feeling behind in life' videos. I don't compare myself to others, I don't follow celebrities in social media, I don't seek a luxurious life. I just want a job that allows me to leave my parents house and pay for groceries at 33yo. It's that too much to ask?

  • @moonwalker.v
    @moonwalker.v 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm a first generation German. My father is from the Balkans and I am the first one to have proper education. Still feel behind.

  • @incandescent.glow.
    @incandescent.glow. 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    YOU ARE 31? YOU LOOK LIKE YOU ARE 21

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      That’s kind of you to say ❤️

  • @JuriAmari
    @JuriAmari 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m 31. I had difficult time in my 20s but I feel like I didn’t give such a damn about those times as compared to my 30s where everything has a “last chance saloon” kind of energy and I have way more worries about taking action before it’s “too late”.
    I started a lot of the adult milestones rather “late” - I finished college at 24, started grad school @ 25 (finished @ 30), and went to concerts, rode roller coasters, and dated for the very first time @ 29. I recently restarted driving since I got my license when I was 16 (the one “on time” thing besides my HS graduation). I’ve been in school for so long that I’m still trying to figure out who I am outside of it. It wasn’t until I recently got a card reading that I remembered that your 30s is still young in the grand scheme of things and I can still figure out where I want to go next. I also need to give more leeway with making mistakes because I’m tired of the stress of being more perfect the older I get. I’m trying to adopt more of the “better than never” attitude whenever I try to do something new.
    I relate more to the animated version of the smart girl trope (think Ami Mizuno or Lisa Simpson) rather than the live action versions (never watched Gilmore Girls and based on the analysis videos, I wouldn’t be a fan) so it’s interesting to see the breakdown of these characters. Intersectionality was not at the forefront of a lot of 90s-00s media so those who don’t fall under the demographics of the main characters really made those lifestyles feel impossible. That’s probably why I leaned more towards fantasy, sci-fi, and animation.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I can relate to so much of this, except ai still can’t drive lmaooo

  • @daledecker
    @daledecker หลายเดือนก่อน

    very insightful solid video!

  • @AlessiaDonatocoaching
    @AlessiaDonatocoaching 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Absolute fantastic video. I relate very much as a 37 year old

  • @laidoffjournalist
    @laidoffjournalist หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm old enough to remember the 70s, 80s, and 90s. It was never easy for any of us.

  • @petramihucz42
    @petramihucz42 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I can relate so much to this video. Thank you for speaking on this and putting more words on this issue. Im also from Romania, also left my country at a young age and I have been struggling with these thoughts of being behind for the last couple of years, really hit me in my mid 20s. What I have found useful is stopping and thinking about this rationally. Not letting emotions take over my mental space so there is no catastrophizing and looking at everything at face value. Looking at what I accomplished and feeling happy about it. Everything else will fall into place, I am in momentum and it will come in its time :)

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      it's so hard to stop yourself from comparison with non-immigrants isn't it? Being the first person in your family to be able to do/ afford certain things is so hard.

    • @petramihucz42
      @petramihucz42 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@accordingtoalina oh yeah, done that too, comparison with locals, their lives make me think I've missed out on so many experiences 😱 and being able to buy stuff for the first time before ny family kinda makes me feel bad cuz I cannot share it with them, most of the time they don't get it or have no interest in it

  • @emmasbookshelves-tz3mn
    @emmasbookshelves-tz3mn 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As someone whose Gen Z, I will honestly be happy if I'm not living with my parents any more by like 25. I'm not stressing about my career right now because I'm still in school and even though I don't know, I'm not exactly feeling hopeless about what my career will be like. The problem for me is probably my social network. My group of friends changes every single year except for one person, and I'm scared that it'll get harder to make connections with people. With dating apps and everything I can at least sort of hope that dating might be fine, but my overall social life is something I worry about more than anything else.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah, there’s a lot being said about the so-called loneliness epidemic/ catch-up friendships - I recommend videos by Mina Le and Rowan Ellis on these topics

  • @donnageorge2712
    @donnageorge2712 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You truly hit the ball out of the park with this much needed and authentic video.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      so sorry you can relate but hopefully you found some comfort in the discussion

  • @Hansedgwick
    @Hansedgwick 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What helps me. (Although I can still fall back into feeling behind and not likening where I’m at) but what helps me sometimes is to focus on what good is in my life and what “milestones” or rather goals or bucket list items I can check off. Basically as cheesy as it sounds focusing on what is going right in life rather than what is going wrong. Focusing on being grateful for the things that are good in my life. Instead of focusing on what’s going wrong in life. Again easier said than done and I still do fall into feeling behind so it’s not a end all cure for it. But it helps. And they can be small goals too. Like maybe “I really wanted to try sushi and I did” or “I really wanted to finish this specific book or book series and I did” or I wanted to go to this one specific concert and see this one music artist live and I did. Etc… and it’s really going to depend on your own personal life goals. and what you yourself have accomplished and what you value and what you feel is good in your life but looking back on your life and really thinking about all the amazing things you have accomplished and have gotten to do and do have in your life is something that helps. Doesn’t fully take away permanently the feeling but it helps. Seeing the glass half full instead of half empty and again I know very cliche…. I’m not claiming to be a professional. But it’s just what’s helps me.

  • @Bamgeutcutiepie
    @Bamgeutcutiepie 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    it's so true about just not having enough money for adult things. i can't have a car or even drivers license. i can't have a nice house. would have enough for kids. i am literally too poor to live an "adult life" but it is interesting how these specific markers are the things that make us feel adult and behind or not behind in life.

  • @carythesnail
    @carythesnail 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Seems like the algorithm knows I’m turning 30 soon too lol.
    Been loving your work in these videos, I’m planning on making a video about Gilmore Girls soon too so it’s been cool to hear your thoughts.
    Also, on a random note, I came across and watched one of your videos because you look EXACTLY like one of my friends. But also stayed for the quality vid essays :)

  • @andysafeplace
    @andysafeplace 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I know it has nothing to do but I cannot help you´re the most stunning woman I´ve ever seen! and your voice is so calming!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      that's a very nice thing to say isn't it xx

  • @sofianovoa1058
    @sofianovoa1058 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Being gay, due to delayed adolescence in a lot LOT of cases, also means that aside of the financial roadblocks to feeling “adult enough”, feeling behind has a lot to do with how our relationships have developed - not only romantic but platonic and even familial as well (when you came out, if you ever did, if you were accepted or you were ostracized, etc)
    But as you pointed out, we didn’t have enough representation either so the benchmarks are way up in “straightland” so, yes… gay female millennial feels much at the back of the pack.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes, I grew up hearing a lot of these stories from my queer friends over the years.. sending you love

  • @r.brooks5287
    @r.brooks5287 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Don't compare to other people is very good advice, especially when the other people aren't real but media products.
    I'm approaching fifty, at this point there are two groups of people, those with good health, and those without it. I don't have money or assets either but it's the health I miss the most.

  • @digitaldorothy
    @digitaldorothy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I just lost it. 😅 “Where is this complicated feeling coming from? And, can I blame it on Rory Gilmore?” Continuing on …

    • @digitaldorothy
      @digitaldorothy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So, legitimately, thanks for an intelligent voice in this conversation. This is the good side of social media.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      happy to see I'm not just amusing myself lol

  • @Leah-fi5ee
    @Leah-fi5ee 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you for this. Feel this affects me so much on a subconscious level even at age 25 and like all my time is literally already gone

  • @LoreVianey
    @LoreVianey 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My personal experience is similar, I had a plan but life took me too fast and I have so much done before my initial plan by mid thirties. Personally buying a house was my priority bc my parents don’t own one and the anxiety of being old and not having enough money to pay rent was killing me, now that it’s done, I don’t know what else to do 😅

  • @MaricaAmbrosius
    @MaricaAmbrosius 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Heh. When Rory did the Andy Sachs thing and worked as an assistant and did it all perfectly and got everyone to like her, she was told she couldn't be a journalist. Never figured out how getting coffee for Miranda translates to being able to write good articles.

  • @parisrivers7707
    @parisrivers7707 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I'm one of the 5 guys watching!

  • @swimmerstuff831
    @swimmerstuff831 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I'm 33 and I used to feel behind in life, but not anymore. Disclaimer: I have a PhD, own a house, and I am married. I had a solid plan for myself and I persevered. There were some really dark times, but I reminded myself that I was building a foundation for myself in my 20s. Setting myself up took a lot of sacrifice and self control. I felt like I was falling behind from about age 24-28, when I was still in grad school, but my friends were all hitting those big milestones. I stayed true and everything came into place at about age 30 (a little later than I planned btw). To your argument about economic status, one of the big reasons I was able to hit those milestones was because I have no student loans and an economic parachute thanks to my parents. That was an economic goal of my parents when I was born. When I have kids, that is also a non-negotiable. That's how generational wealth works.

  • @victoriacampbell9789
    @victoriacampbell9789 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    thank you for this!! that was a great video, i would love to hear you about guilt if possible. It could be guilt in general, but where i am coming from it is guilt about not doing enough, or guilt for choosing some path and not other.

  • @zuzanna8394
    @zuzanna8394 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Actually we can see a 30 yo Rory in "A year in a life" and she is a definition of a straight A student who after uni couldn't figure out her life. She has fallen behind as she is not comfortable with how her life is progressing, has no job and basically went from a New Yorker journalist to someone who is begging for a job that earlier she would consider beneath her, she is pinning after her uni boyfriend who is engaged and treats her like shit while cheating on his fiancee and she ends up getting pregnant with him unexpectedly. It's litteraly shown like she is a 30 yo teen mom and at Lorelai's stage of life when she ended up pregnant with Rory.

  • @alyasoliman1986
    @alyasoliman1986 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is so good. You've really added interesting points to this conversation. Thank you!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      thank you so much for watching xx

  • @anthonycastro2146
    @anthonycastro2146 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It's better to be a good, caring and loving human being than to have all these things.

  • @jcplays1749
    @jcplays1749 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This whole discussion will always bring back topics as old as time itself. Like, what does it mean to be an adult? What success should really look like and if it does even exist. We are always living by the standards of others and forget that everyone arround us are just as confused as we are. A bunch of sentient organic materia in a rock going in circles arround a hot ball of gas and plasma. For god's sake we can't even tell for sure if the universe wasn't created 5 minutes ago with the appearance of being old and that all our memories are actually real.
    No one knows shit about what's really going on and yet we still want to compare our life to the ones of not only people that had lifes completly different than ours, but also fictional characters that have their "lived happily ever after" as if this was as real as anything else. The thing is simply that we all love to overthink and it's not even only our fault, as Sartre said "Hell is other people". As existing arround other people makes us conscious that we exist as object in their view, hince are subject to judgement and critiques. Things we fear more than death itself at times.
    Overthinking, overcaring and comparing ourselves. Most of the times this is what put us in the position to have the feelings of being left behind but leaving these traits behind is as difficulty as leaving behind something or someone you love, because the truth is, we love doing these things. Putting ourselves down and feeling pity for who we are. Griefing over the famous "best version of ourselves" that does not exist and we believe are acchievable if we only tried hard enough.
    For anyone struggling with this feelings honestly I can't do much except wish you good luck. I don't know your life or you and your journey is completly different than mine. I can only suggest for you what worked for me. Philosophy, people struggle with this feelings for as long as we know and each one has found their own ways. They will surelly not give you a straight answear, but using the examples of people that actually existed (or not sometimes) can be really helpful. But again, this is only what worked for me, a random 19 year old in the internet that knows absolutely nothing about life. I'm not even in my 20's yet for god's sake lol. I know this feelings will always come back to haunt all us sometimes, but that's life. We just gotta keep pushing and hope the road ahead isn't too bumpy.

  • @deonna3914
    @deonna3914 19 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Sometimes I wonder if men feel this way more than we, as women, realize because they are afraid to be seen as “weak” for voicing these insecurities (similarly to the lingering stigma re: mental health discussions). I do think there’s more pressure on women for all the reasons you stated, but I often wonder if pretty much all of our generation feels this way. It has been harder than expected for my friends and I to finish school, find jobs (forget building a career), afford to live, make friends as adults living in places far away from everyone we know, etc.

  • @findAplaceToCallHome
    @findAplaceToCallHome 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m Romanian. I live in the UK though. It’s odd that now that I’m married and have a child (all in the last 12 months), the Romanian society (when I visit) somehow is more accepting of me. Sunt “in randul lumii”. I can’t even pretend to “digest” their newly found appreciation of me. I was worthless before these two milestones, now I’m ok 😅 I can’t even tell you how many times I’ve told my relatives to let it go and of course, they never did. Respecting boundaries in Romania is a foreign concept. I was a straight A/10 student too. I do not work in the field I studied, though I paid my loan off so I guess that’s cool. To quote Emily Gilmore, my degree is somewhere “in a box, gathering dust, with the rest of my potential”. School killed any sort of creativity I ever had and 90% of what I learned was useless in real life. So yeah, I felt cheated for a long while, still do, to some degree. And you’re right, how we grew up in Romania, East Europe really, after ‘89 is not the same experience as those who grew up in the West. And yet somehow, we kind of ended up in the same place.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "Respecting boundaries in Romania is a foreign concept" this is so funny cause I just got back from taking my boyfriend to meet the Romanian side of my family anddddd

  • @p0t.n00dle4
    @p0t.n00dle4 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Turning 22 in 3 days and for some reason i thought i would have it all figured out by now. Nothing is figured out btw.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You’re doing amazing sweetie ♥️

  • @em97c
    @em97c 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I think we should start applying pressure on men about their biological clock.
    Read a study that said there's a strong correlation between advanced paternal age and autism in children. To be clear, I'm autistic, I'm fine acknowledging that a lot of parents would like to avoid that if possible. I just think it would be really funny if we started doing that. Morally good? No. But funny.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      lmao

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sorry, you are going insane or projecting 😂 most men can procreate until they drop d3@d, the pressure for men is usually having a girlfriend not babies.
      The internet sometimes is too much

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sorry, you are going insane or projecting 😂 most men can procreate until they drop d3@d, the pressure for men is usually having a girlfriend not babies.
      The internet sometimes is too much

  • @padmeasmr
    @padmeasmr 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Personally I relate more to Bridget Jones than Rory Gilmore 😂

  • @evam6961
    @evam6961 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As a 29 year old lesbian living in a small eastern european country i feel behind in so many ways but mostly cause there are like maybe 5 more gay ppl here and there is no way i can have the same life especially romantic life as my straight friends do. and im not even sure i want it to be the same but thats all i have ever known or seen around me.