our usual morning segment this week, making across the front page of the washington times, with this headline [interpreter] [interpreter] . young professionals struggle to adapt to workplace. the article looked at the study of college graduates between 22 and 28 years old. more than half said they had sought help for emotional problems like anxiety or depression. some advocates claims this on soft parenting or falling academic standards that only got worse during the pandemic. we thought the story needed a much longer discussion, so, we gave it one. it s very interesting that friends my age, i m really old, who have kids, kids in this age bracket, they re not looking at their children, blaming their children for challenges they re going through.
age, really old and who have kids in this age bracket, they re not looking at their children, blaming their children for challenges they re going through. they re looking at themselves and saying, were we soft parents? there s a new expression out there. willie and lemire don t do it, it s called snowplow parenting. you heard helicopter parenting. snowplow parenting is where you get in the snowplow and you push everything out of your child s way because you want them to have a better life than you had. all the things you had to wrestle with and get through, you want to help make things easier for your kids. what one medical professional after another medical professional is saying, and we ve had people on the show talk about it, is that parents like people my age and younger, have done their children a grave
problem. greg: it s a problem for you. rob: no, it is a not a problem with me i don t date the zoomers. they would like to date me but i say no. greg: what s your age bracket? close to dieing? [laughter]. rob: oh, no, greg, we broke up. greg: wow. andrew. tyrus: vicious. greg: i know, very angry young man. do you think this is really good for cat fishers and scammers? everybody s on line now and all you have to do is be nice. andrew: if that s your friendship all your groups are digital you re not in real life on the other hand people in real life are quite annoying, like rob pointed out. greg: rob is a perfect example. andrew: i can t mute rob. i can put a bag over his head but that wouldn t be helpful. greg: he s used to that. tyrus: yeah. rob: that s true. back in the 20s, i m a little better now. andrew: i think there s something in it, just meeting