I am a Gen Z adult. I was born in 1998 and I'm not embarrassed to say it. I even thought I was a Millennial up until recently. There's been a recent cultural shift that turned its aim from Millennials to Gen Z. The same insults and exaggerated perceptions that plagued today's 30-year-olds have now been let onto teens and those in their early 20s. But why? Why is it so easy for us to do this to those finding their footing, who are just now beginning to enter their world of cognitive reasoning? Media is ingraining itself into the world around us. No matter how much you attempt to avoid it and how deeply irritated you are by its pervasiveness, it's there. As the world changes around us, we have to learn to adapt. Staking a permanent residence in what we believe is normal stagnates us and leads us to unnecessary intergenerational cultural wars. The “boomer” vs “zoomer” discourse is so tiring. Tell an older millennial that they’re Gen Z and they’ll hiss and argue, “no — the...
We understand myths to be ancient stories that have been passed down. Although that does bear some truth, it wouldn't be totally correct, as it's a vague statement that doesn't take into consideration the way contemporaries have shaped myth. But in short, myth is a story that explains phenomena. Stories that have stood against times long enough to become ancient fiction. In my opinion, the really really good myths have all become religions. Reading and studying myth is just as powerful as writing it. But when you’re writing something that you know to be utterly false, you are now the divine creator capable of wielding power to whichever magnitude. The power of fiction, but more importantly the power of narratives, serves both its creators and its consumers. A potent enough story could serve as a weapon to the one telling it. How we wield the lessons taught in these myths is how we are remembered. The story of Christ coming out of the mouth of a priest may sound more beautif...
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