evile: (clutter)
[personal profile] evile

  • Sep. 9, 2003

    HEY! I was talking/thinking about this, like 2 yrs ago!
    =========
    http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/story.jsp?story=441620

    Meet the Tireds: young, wealthy and disillusioned by 30

    By Matthew Beard

    09 September 2003

    They started as precocious teenagers and became high-earning yuppies
    but on reaching 30, their generation has concluded that much of
    modern life is rubbish.

    Enter the Tired - the Thirtysomething Independent Radical Educated
    Dropout - who is prepared to leave a hard-won professional job
    because he or she feels the system has let them down. Instead of
    risking burnout by pushing body and soul to the limits - so 1980s -
    they are turning to occupations that pay less but offer more
    satisfaction and less stress.

    According to research by a niche marketing group, about one in 15
    people aged 30 or over has already decided to "protire" - a term
    describing a mid-life sideways move that emphasises the positive
    aspects of retirement such as the time to explore other interests.
    A further 45 per cent in a survey of 1,100 people aged 18-35 said
    they were considering taking the same route out of the "rat race"
    into jobs such as small-scale organic farming, charity work, flower-
    arranging, alternative medicine or housework.

    The report said that the Tired generation was a backlash against
    social changes that forced them to work harder in the past decade
    amid increasing insecurity. They have graduated with student debts
    averaging £11,000 into a flexible but increasingly "cut-throat"
    labour market with little protection from the welfare state,
    according to the report by The Fish Can Sing, which advises brands
    such as Absolut Vodka, Nike and Motorola.

    Howard Beale, a partner at the company, said: "A significant
    proportion of talented young people, precisely those who business are
    so keen on, are pro-tiring. Young people in a weird way have become
    older than their parents. Huge student debt means they have become
    very career-focused and worried about money. The generation perceived
    to have it all are questioning whether they want it all.''
    Authors of the report interviewed people in focus groups and
    concluded that at the age of 30, many are facing an epiphany. "The
    mid-life crisis is coming earlier and to a broader range of
    professional people. Once it was the overworked bankers aged 45-50
    but now it is happening to lawyers, journalists, teachers and doctors
    in their 30s,'' Mr Beale said.

    Among under 30s there is still an intense desire for money, career
    success and status. The report even claims that "Britain has never
    been a more ambitious place" and notes that in the past decade the
    number of young people who fear "dying without achieving anything"
    has doubled to 65 per cent. The most popular route to achievement is
    seen to be in the media, technology or design.

    The market will intervene to restore faith and aspiration to the
    generation succeeding the Tireds but things may get worse before they
    get better, the report predicts. It concludes: "It is unlikely that
    pro-retirement will become the norm. History suggests that were this
    to become the case, employers would raise pay in order to persuade
    employees to stay. It also confirms that as with the counter-cultural
    years, the socially aware drop-outs in society can represent the
    repressed feelings of a far larger social group.

    "Relatively few of our respondents may have pro-retired; almost half
    of them say they would like to. Tired and pro-retirees might be
    losing interest in business, but business should not lose interest in
    them."

    NIKKAN WOODHOUSE FROM CITY LAWYER TO FREELANCE DESIGNER

    Nikkan Woodhouse, 32, quit her £80,000-a-year job as a City lawyer in
    February because the work left her unfulfilled and with little time
    for outside interests.

    She has since set up her own business making and selling modern art,
    and speaks highly of her move into "protirement".

    Although she never planned to become a lawyer - falling into it as
    an "easy option" at Oxford University - it was a job with a title and
    a set career path. But it also came with a 70-hour working week.

    Her time with a multinational company's legal department
    was "interesting but very stressful", leaving her restless and
    wanting to do something more creative.

    "I never once felt that I did anything other than push words around,"
    she says, describing the City as "like living in virtual reality
    where you can earn a lot of money by contributing astonishingly
    little". The highs were the financial security, the travel and the
    involvement in high-profile business, but the level of commitment
    demanded took its toll. "This company takes massive chunks out of
    each day of you life, there's this issue of control," she said. "You
    feel like you don't really own your time, they have a hold over you
    which you can't change unless you walk away."

    Ms Woodhouse had always harboured artistic ambitions but buckled in
    the face of conventional career advice. She now runs a web-based
    company which specialises in printing contemporary art and designs on
    materials ranging from canvas to perspex.

    She said: "It was an idea I came across a year or two ago when I was
    decorating my loft apartment. I blew up a load of cool photographs,
    printing them on to perspex, and loads of people commented on them. I
    guess I just thought, 'Why not?'"

    Away from the office she has the time to play five-a-side football
    several nights a week and has started an evening college course.
    She said: "It's great to be able to make commitments outside of work.
    There just weren't the hours in the day to do anything like this
    before."

    Oliver Duff

    ACRONYM GENERATION
    DINKY: Double Income No Kids Yet. Origin: Eighties term for gay
    couples. Use: Affluent, childless couples
    YUPPIE: Young Urban Professional. Origin:Eighties advertising.
    Use:Ambitious career person
    SINBAD: Single Income No Boyfriend Absolutely Desperate. Origin:
    Eighties marketing. Use: Single woman in her thirties.
    SITCOM: Single Income Two Children Oppressive Marriage. Origin:
    Eighties marketing. Use: Unhappy marrieds.
    WOOPIE: Well-Off Older Person. Origin: Eighties marketing.Use:
    Affluent and active retired people.
    Melissa Sim

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