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Economic Times
15 minutes ago
- Economic Times
What do these kids even want? A five-course lament on Gen Z over dinner and despair
There are few places better suited for reflecting on the grand decline of civilisation than a fine-dining restaurant with five courses, seven opinions, and no clear dessert of conclusion. The boardroom had moved to Indian Accent for dinner, following the successful end of a conference. The original agenda? The future of content, and Gen Z's fast-changing relationship with it. But - as is tradition with gatherings of people seasoned in life and sufficiently marinated in media - the conversation swiftly veered to the real existential question of our times: 'What do these kids even want?' Not that anyone asked it out loud. We began, as dignified veterans do, with mushroom chili cheese toast and a civilised chat about shrinking attention spans, and how algorithms now decide not just our content diets, but possibly even our romantic ones. But by the time the Rajasthani mangori curry arrived, we were knee-deep in familiar lament: Gen Z - the therapy-frequenting, feedback-seeking, dopamine-chasing generation that believes the universe owes them clarity, closure, and preferably a trigger warning. There was near-unanimous agreement that we, the noble Gen X-Y sandwich generation, had it tougher. We survived dial-up internet, arranged marriages, and the trauma of never being praised for just showing up. We didn't have 'safe spaces' - unless you count the time-out corner after a solid scolding. We drank from garden hoses and waited 30 minutes to download a song. Our personalities were forged in buffering screens and budget came the inevitable segue into relationships and resilience. Divorce rates, for instance. Officially just 1% in India - unless you live in a metro, in which case it's 20%, or more, if you count the couples who remain legally married but emotionally outsourced. And as one well-marinated board member noted between bites of goat cheese dahi vada, 'Men need to be more vulnerable.' A long pause followed, as if vulnerability might be available on the menu, but only after prior reminded us that today's financially independent Indian woman is rewriting the script. 'Earlier, women compromised,' someone said with the wistfulness of a veteran soap opera viewer. 'Now they leave.' A beat. 'And take the dog.'Talk turned to therapy, boundaries, emotional bandwidth, and our collective flammability in the age of AI. 'We're the generation that stayed married for the children,' someone offered. 'Gen Z won't even stay for Wi-Fi.'By the time the crispy lotus root and avocado bonda made their appearance, we'd moved into the inevitable zone of self-diagnosis. We, too, were a little broken. We crave validation, but can't ask for it. We use work to dodge feelings. And we quietly believe that anyone under 30 who cries at work should probably be in fifth course - a smoky, ambiguous creation that claimed to represent fusion - arrived like a metaphor for our collective midlife confusion. It became clear that this was no longer a dinner, but a group therapy session with silverware and shared then came the twist. As we clinked glasses and compared vitamin D levels, one question lingered: if Gen Z were at this table, what would they be complaining about?Probably this: 'Look at these Gen X uncles and aunties cribbing about us again. Can't cry, can't quit, can't communicate. They romanticise trauma, glorify burnout, and think downloading a PDF is a personality trait.' so we left - well-fed, mildly enlightened, and deeply convinced that every generation thinks the next one is doing it all wrong, just with better lighting and worse attention spans. But perhaps that's our true legacy: the sacred art of dinner-table judgment, passed lovingly down, one course at a time. (Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Paid less than plumbers? The real story of freshers' salaries at Infy, TCS. Can medicines inject the vitamins Amazon is missing? Can victims of Jane Street scam be compensated by investor protection funds? We prefer to have idle pilots than grounded planes: Akasa CFO on losses, funding hiccups, Boeing What if Tata Motors buys Iveco's truck unit? Will it propel or drag like JLR? How private ARCs are losing out to a govt-backed firm dealing in bad loans Stock picks of the week: 5 stocks with consistent score improvement and return potential of 13 to 45% in 1 year Short-term valuation headwinds? Yes. Long-term growth potential intact? Yes. Which 'Yes' is more relevant? F&O Radar| Deploy Bull Call Spread in Nifty to gain from a 'buy-on-dips' stance


Hindustan Times
23 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Amit Aggarwal: Couture's new czar
he third day of the Hyundai India Couture Week, in association with Reliance Brands and an initiative of FDCI, began on a high note. Models in designer Amit Aggarwal's creation. There are a handful of Indian designers who take one by surprise every time, and Amit Aggarwal is one of them. His immersive showcase Arcanum, took inspiration from the very code of life, DNA, as he explored the invisible architecture that defines human existence. Aggarwal translated this concept into design using engineered techniques and layered construction. Traditional patola and ikat sarees were deconstructed and reworked, turning heritage textiles into something contemporary. Menswear also offered a fresh take on form with sculpted, almost armour-like tops and tailored pieces that showed deliberation. From the glittering hairdos to metallic makeup, the mood was intentionally futuristic. With Arcanum, Aggarwal merged science with craft, showing just how far couture can stretch when it is constructed thoughtfully.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Women poets illuminate Metaphor Circle
Lucknow: With verses that pierced the silence and evoked heartfelt applause, Major Ankita Tewari of the Indian Armed Forces set the tone for the inaugural Metaphor Reading Circle, a monthly literary initiative under the banner of Metaphor Lucknow Litfest on Saturday. Her poems 'Nirbhaya ki Nirasha' and 'Jai Veer' explored two deeply resonant themes, the lingering trauma of gender-based violence and the unwavering spirit of Indian soldiers. Tewari's performance was both a cry for justice and a salute to courage, proving that poetry still holds the power to provoke, heal, and awaken. The evening continued with five more compelling female voices. Shruti Mishra recited Kamala Das' 'Introduction', along with her original works such as 'I Dare to Fly and Chaos of Silence'. Akansha Pandey presented Rabindranath Tagore's 'Freedom' and her poem 'The Dark Horse'. Aditi Singh shared 'Trapped' by Sanjukta Das Gupta and her own compositions, 'Kahani' and 'Maa'. Smriti Sneha brought emotional gravity with AK Ramanujan's 'River' and her poem 'Currency of Guilt'. Toshani contributed her poem 'Likh Leti Hoon' and a short story 'Ped ka Patta'. The session was moderated by poet and RMLNLU English faculty Alka Singh, who also recited her piece 'Certificate'. The Reading Circle, to be held monthly until the Metaphor Litfest in Dec, promises to create a space for honest reflection, deep reading, and shared dialogue, where every voice is heard and every word matters.