Culture Why Don’t Millennials Have Hobbies?

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The Walrus (Archive) - August 19, 2022
by, Alisha Sawhney

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On a mundane Saturday night during lockdown last year, I was tapping through Instagram Stories to pass the time. Like so many millennials, I turn to the app mostly to send my friends memes and screenshots that sum up universal truths about our late-twenties lifestyle. A tweet—made into an Instagram post—by Canadian author Jonny Sun caught my attention. It read:

I’m an ADULT
which means I don’t have any HOBBIES
If I have any FREE TIME AT ALL
I will go LIE DOWN

I came to a stark realization: I don’t have any hobbies—and nobody else I knew seemed to either. It had been nearly a decade since I played the piano. Aside from the dodgeball league I joined impromptu at the height of unemployment one year, I never fostered the time and commitment toward a joyful activity when I wasn’t on the clock.

In the first several months of the pandemic, I remember calculating the weekly hours I saved by not commuting and asking myself how I could use that time more effectively. Naturally, I relied on Instagram trends to help with my identity crisis. I started by aggressively completing an adult colouring book while everyone around me made body-shaped candles. Photos of sourdough baking and people concocting at-home “quarantinis” cluttered my timeline. While these activities captured the zeitgeist of the pandemic—especially in those early months—I allowed myself to believe that in the midst of those hours between solving puzzles and baking bread, my hobby would miraculously turn up. Surely, if everyone was struggling with the long and dark days of the pandemic, posting an Instagram Story would make me feel less alone. I found myself leaning into all of my online community, determined to share my DIY renovations with my small but loyal audience. At the peak of my crafting phase, I painted my bedroom walls purely out of boredom. Ever since that accomplishment, I have been possessed by a certain kind of hubris and invincibility. What handy task will I do next?

But the popularity of these social media–driven pastimes also faded. And therein lies the problem: I had sought the help of an algorithm to help me figure out how to spend my free time. In my mind, it was easier to get lost in a rabbit hole of content than take the time to discover what might actually interest me. But amid all this pressure to find my hobby, I’ve been asking myself: What does it actually mean to have one, especially at a time when we’re living so much of our lives online?

When I asked Robert Stebbins, a professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Calgary who specializes in leisure studies, about whether any of my pandemic pursuits added up to a hobby, he told me that he’s been contemplating questions on the subject for the better part of fifty years. “Leisure, in a common-sense version of it, is fundamentally not work,” he told me over the phone. “It doesn’t define anything. It defines what it’s not.”

So, then, what is it?

“Few people in sociology seem to find this a remarkable or regrettable deficiency in the field,” Stebbins tells me. “Serious leisure,” a term he coined, is the systematic pursuit of an activity—like rock climbing or singing—that usually requires a “special skill.” In other words, we need to put serious effort into a hobby in order to reap its rewards over time. Just like we dedicate our time and energy toward a career, committing ourselves to a “serious leisure” activity is one of the keys to achieving a fulfilling life, he says.

At the turn of the twentieth century, the monotony of specialized industrial work and increasing urban expansion led workers to demand more time away from the bustle of the city. In response to the rapid industrialization that followed the American Civil War, when the emerging labour movement advocated for reduced work hours, eventually leading to the eight-hour workday and the five-day workweek, there was finally time for leisure.

Over the next century, as lavish Silicon Valley headquarters, pizza stations, and in-office gyms became the new norm, work culture blurred the lines between our professional and personal lives. Somewhere along the way, many people within my Y2K cohort took work merch and free booze to compensate for long hours and unpaid vacation. For a lot of us, the rise of precarious employment and job insecurity created a toxic relationship with work that left little time or energy for anything else.

Millennials have been dubbed the “lost generation,” destined to be poorer than those who preceded us. As numerous studies have shown, even the best-off millennials, who are generally more educated than their parents, suffer from high unemployment rates and stagnant earnings trajectories. Unfortunately, as many in my generation slogged their way through the Great Recession, overpriced avocado toast in hand, they proved those miserable studies true. It’s no wonder the number of young adults staying or returning home has steadily risen, especially at the peak of the pandemic. A meme that keeps cropping up on my timeline sums up the predicament perfectly. It reads: “I’m 1st world poor. Which means I own a smart phone and an expensive laptop so I can go online and check that I have no money in the bank.”

As a cohort, we’re constantly being told to have side hustles—masked as hobbies—in order to have multiple streams of income in today’s gig economy. It can be hard to foster new skills that have nothing to do with a pay cheque when we’re constantly being told we’ll never afford a house. According to Rentals.ca, the average rent for all Canadian properties listed on the site in March 2022 was $1,818 per month. Considering that the national average annual market income was about $55,700 in 2020, for many people, this works out to approximately one-third of their monthly pay cheque. If the purpose of a hobby is to fulfill me outside of my professional life, how can I attain some level of satisfaction—or, better yet, happiness—without the pressure of needing to monetize it looming over me?

I’m not the only one struggling with this question. For proof, look no further than Etsy, where you can find local artisans selling everything from wedding face masks to seed kits. According to its 2020 “Seller Census” report, the mean age of the almost 200,000 active Etsy sellers in Canada is 38.7—an older millennial. Of those surveyed, over 70 percent said that their small businesses provide an important source of supplemental income—on average, nearly 10 percent of their household earnings. This monetization of “hobbies” demonstrates where the future of work might be headed: it’s not hybrid, it’s asynchronous. So what does this mean for how we think about hobbies?

According to Sarah Frier, the author of No Filter: The Inside Story of Instagram, hobbies aren’t dead; our definition of what they are is just changing. More often than not, she says, millennials are now finding visual hobbies online. Pandemic obsessions like cross-stitching and at-home bartending became desirable skills because we kept seeing posts that endorsed them. Whether or not we consider ourselves to be influencers or curators, the very nature of Instagram teaches us to be. “The actual design of the app encourages us to perform for others,” says Frier. Even something like reading, which isn’t an inherently visual hobby, has been turned into a kind of aesthetic. As of July 2022, a quick Instagram search under the hashtag #bookstagram yielded a casual 79 million posts. Each “score” we get on a post teaches us how to make our next one gain more likes, comments, and shares. “That’s a feedback cycle that encourages us to go after these really visual hobbies,” says Frier.

It’s impossible to ignore the cultural weight we put on our online personas. Even those who don’t actively use social media can’t avoid its impact, since the items we buy and the vacations we take are often influenced by the app, says Frier. For better or worse—but mostly for worse—our personal brands require continued upkeep and innovation at great emotional expense. Unlike TikTok and Snapchat, which value consumption and entertainment, Instagram’s focus has always been on displaying the version of yourself you want others to see. Simply put, Instagram has become a resume for how interesting you are.

During my identity crisis over the past two years, I’ve become a cyclist—because it’s not enough to enjoy cycling, I must be a cyclist. In the fall of 2020, I ordered a lavender beach cruiser on Amazon. My best friend came over and helped me assemble the bike, which became my raison d’être in real life and online. I tracked my progress on Strava and photographed my fall rides every day for thirty days—both of which I regularly shared on my Instagram profile.

Of course, my physical and mental well-being has improved thanks to cycling. But attaching these listicle-friendly identifiers to our social media bios obscures a muddier truth. My time on the internet has certainly blurred the distinction between my online identity and my offline personhood. I’ve placed a lot of value on metrics—on numbers that are meant to determine how funny I am, how insightful, how attractive, how talented. But I would not genuinely invest in these things if I had not, on some level, agreed that I am my social media profile.

As we reemerge into the world, hopefully feeling a little more grounded in the newer versions of ourselves, I sense many of my peers—like me—are starting to rethink how they spend their free time. Over the past two years, being stuck indoors allowed me to pause, to reevaluate how I can enrich my life without the scrutiny of an online audience all the time. That doesn’t mean these apps have become less relevant. Instagram, and social media in general, is a tool at best. I’ve embraced the ways it has allowed me to learn more about social justice issues, connect with other writers and, of course, to try new things.

I’m still figuring out what hobbies I’d like to pursue, but I’m not on a deadline. Maybe I won’t find my next great hobby on the app, or maybe I won’t find one at all. But learning about myself has no expiration date. That could be a hobby in itself, right?
 
Well I guess that explains why I'm having such a hard time meeting younger people that share similar interests. As much as I love making friends with older folks, I'm hesitant after they all passed away these last few years.
 
Can basically be summed up as doing things solely for attention and then encountering existential crisis when said things don't yield said attention.
Hobbies don't need validation, just personal enjoyment. I play a lot strategy games, I build scale model tanks and warships, and during the summer I garden. Does anyone congratulate me for my gaming accomplishments? Do I get accolades over my latest finished model? Are soccer moms lining up to view my flower arrangements? Fuck no, I do it all because I love doing those things and beating a game, seeing a model come together as desired, and producing homegrown vegetables are immensely satisfying.

It's just evidence how social media has utterly screwed over basic human interaction for most people and left many basing their own interests and self-worth on what generates likes and comments rather than their own desires.
 
ITT We now post about our hobbies like the autistic faggots we are.

I like taking wire and twisting it into trees and bushes. I usually have a piece of braided copper wire in my pocket to twist and work on.

I also like tabletop RPG's and sometimes design stuff.

Neither of those require much money.

It's relaxing sitting on the front porch, watching the rain and lightning and thunder, reading a TTRPG book or twisting some wire into a little bush.
 
This is the real problem - people don’t feel any fulfillment without external validation. They no longer have any concept of intrinsic or personal motivation. The idea of a personal zen garden, or of cooking something just to enjoy it, or building something just to show a couple friends no longer exists.
Just like people are more and more blaming their lack of responsibility on external factors, they’re also putting their sel—motivation on others. Which is stupid. Outside of your family, no one gives a shit about you beyond what you do for them.
Exactly. The author's hobbies are obsessing over his self-image on social media and preening for more peer approval in the form of Internet points. Of course that takes up a lot of time and mental energy. Kill your fucking Instagram and Twitter and watch how you suddenly have all the free time you need. Probably more money too.

Staying among the social elite of Twitter and Instagram is a Red Queen's Race that demands all of your effort. Of course you're tired if you never stop running, but no one ever does, because the cost of stopping or even slowing down is to miss out on the Current Thing and lose your seat at the Cool Kids' lunch table, or even worse, looking inside of yourself and seeing an empty void.
 
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Can basically be summed up as doing things solely for attention and then encountering existential crisis when said things don't yield said attention.
Hobbies don't need validation, just personal enjoyment. I play a lot strategy games, I build scale model tanks and warships, and during the summer I garden. Does anyone congratulate me for my gaming accomplishments? Do I get accolades over my latest finished model? Are soccer moms lining up to view my flower arrangements? Fuck no, I do it all because I love doing those things and beating a game, seeing a model come together as desired, and producing homegrown vegetables are immensely satisfying.

It's just evidence how social media has utterly screwed over basic human interaction for most people and left many basing their own interests and self-worth on what generates likes and comments rather than their own desires.

Hobbies don't even need to cost money. There's plenty you can do for free. These people just want to be trendy and get tons of likes for being trendy. How depressing. What empty, sad people.
 
Your hobbies are things that are mere and dear personal to you. Aside from video games and books, one can also find hobbies in going to the park or gym to exercise, or even something more adept, like making train or plane models/figurines.

To say that millennials do not have hobbies would be like saying that poor people should just stop being poor.
 
Yeah, totally not because the author is a boring dullard. Nope, the problem is we’re too poor to have hobbies, gotta be it

I’m an (older) millennial. I play tabletop games, I read, I go hiking, I like going to karaoke clubs. Most relatively normal people have at least one hobby or interest.

Then again, my childhood and teenage years were spent actually growing up and having a social life before social media and Chink Tok rotted everyone’s brain so that could be it as well. My younger brother is on the cusp of millennial and zoomer and he acts like he has fucking withdrawal symptoms if he can’t be on his phone staring at Tik Tok all day.
 
Is shitposting a hobby?

Depends, do you do it to relieve stress, vent bad feelings so you can be love and sweetness (TM Shirley Manson) with others in your immediate orbit, and to pass time?

Then yes, shit-posting is a hobby.

But phones are cheap in the third world. I mean you can be in the most dirt poor, starving, tiny African village in the desert and they won't have food or water, but they all have smart phones.

Also, this whole article seems pretty generalizing. I haven't met any millenials that don't have at least one hobby of some kind. Headline should be 'Me and my boring vapid friends only hobby is our social media addiction'

Fucker in the story is a bugperson in the city and most likely owns an Iphone for the sake of being cool/having the most famous brand name smart phone around. An Iphone, which is so fucking expensive these days (going for over $1000+) that Apple has started selling them almost exclusively on payment plans since the average bugman and woman of the world no longer can afford to to buy them outright.
 
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Kek, standard journoroach opinion: this thing happens to me, so I must project on my entire generation.

I don't get as much time for hobbies as I used to and the ones I do have are a little too PL to post aside from cooking and golf, as they are somewhat unusual (but benign... I'm not a twitter tranny, after all), but I always have more aspirations. I want to learn how to fly planes. I want to visit a whole bunch of 3 star restaurants in my plane. I want to open a bar and grill someday.

I'm probably around this girl's age. Don't blame me for being a boring fuckin' cunt.
 
“I have a smartphone but I’m too poor to have a hobby!”
Rope is cheap and knot-tying is fun. Get a cheap padlock and learn how to pick locks. Take online courses in coding. Get some seedlings and potting mix and grow herbs, sugar snap peas, monkshood etc. Get yourself some substrate and a sterile box and grow mushrooms. Learn to brew your own wine. There are so many cheap and interesting things people can learn to do that I don’t buy the “I can’t afford it” angle.
If individual Millennials don’t have hobbies it’s because they’ve been raised to be consumers, not creators.
 
Yeah, totally not because the author is a boring dullard. Nope, the problem is we’re too poor to have hobbies, gotta be it

I’m an (older) millennial. I play tabletop games, I read, I go hiking, I like going to karaoke clubs. Most relatively normal people have at least one hobby or interest.

Then again, my childhood and teenage years were spent actually growing up and having a social life before social media and Chink Tok rotted everyone’s brain so that could be it as well. My younger brother is on the cusp of millennial and zoomer and he acts like he has fucking withdrawal symptoms if he can’t be on his phone staring at Tik Tok all day.
I'm around your brother's age and feel geriatric thanks to Tiktok. I don't get it. Even Fred had more substance. Is this what getting old feels like?
 
Everyone needs three hobbies:
  1. One that keeps you physically active
  2. One to engage your mind
  3. One that can be monetized if wanted or needed

Photography requires one initial large purchase, but is otherwise fairly inexpensive until you need a new lens or filters - but you don’t need them for a while.
Do you have a cellphone? Does it have a camera? Then you can start dabbling in photography.
Use what you have until you run up against a wall that prevents you from doing what you want to do.
This is the real problem - people don’t feel any fulfillment without external validation. They no longer have any concept of intrinsic or personal motivation. The idea of a personal zen garden, or of cooking something just to enjoy it, or building something just to show a couple friends no longer exists.
External locus of validation and motivation.
 
I am 37 a Millennial and I have hobbies. Many hobbies actually. Though the main one is video games, and it gets most of my time. If you are an adult and you have a job, you might not have a whole lot of time for hobbies. Especially if you have to spend most of your time working to support yourself. When you become unemployed or retire maybe you can enjoy a hobby. I watched videos of guys on YouTube that have jobs and families and they build and paint models. It depends on your time management.

But most people work shitty jobs that require some sort of manual labor and the stress from work alone can make you tired as shit.
But phones are cheap in the third world. I mean you can be in the most dirt poor, starving, tiny African village in the desert and they won't have food or water, but they all have smart phones.

Also, this whole article seems pretty generalizing. I haven't met any millenials that don't have at least one hobby of some kind. Headline should be 'Me and my boring vapid friends only hobby is our social media addiction'
"I'm first world poor"

That's good and I am taking it. lol

This is something I spent my time explaining to morons who would go around saying if you owned (insert Chinese made electronics here) then it means you aren't poor or not as poor as the people in third world countries. There is a big difference between first world poorness/poverty and third world poor/poverty. I remember back in the early and mid 2000's when Sean Hannity on Fox News would read off facts about the number of Americans that own TV's VCRs (in the early and mid 2000's) and use it as proof Americans weren't that poor. By the early 2000's you could get a VCR for like $30. I know because I bought one in Best Buy in 2000. Most people were switching over to DVD's. By the mid to late 2000's I don't even think VCRs were sold anywhere new in the box.

You can get cheaper smartphones. They don't have to be some $800-$1,000+ iPhone. There are cheap phones here in the US I know because I have one. Those iPhones are just status symbols for hipster faggots and niggers.
 
ITT We now post about our hobbies like the autistic faggots we are.

I like taking wire and twisting it into trees and bushes. I usually have a piece of braided copper wire in my pocket to twist and work on.

I also like tabletop RPG's and sometimes design stuff.

Neither of those require much money.

It's relaxing sitting on the front porch, watching the rain and lightning and thunder, reading a TTRPG book or twisting some wire into a little bush.
Some of that twisted wire art is super cool. I've only created stuff like that by mistake when I have to deal with fixing electrical stuff. I am starting to get halfway proficient at sewing. I spent <$20 on nice needles and some strong thread and repaired probably several hundred dollars worth of clothes. Even if I took the time to pin them and take them to my cheap guy, it would have been like $50. Since then I've done a few smaller projects and recently converted a whole mess of long sleeve Pendleton shirts to short sleeve. I saved the scrap fabric, pulled the buttons, and I'm in the process of sewing them up into some really nice handkerchiefs/pocket squares.

There have been several things that I either saved a whole bunch on purchasing because I could alter it myself, or I got something for free to repair and sell. I don't waste my time on social media learning things I don't want to know about people I frankly do not even like. It's every bit as fulfilling as a time-waster, and I actually have something to show for it when I'm done. In that vein a half-decent whet stone set and some diamond/needle files is not the most expensive, will last nearly a lifetime if you care for it, and pays for itself like sewing will. Most people abuse knives and don't know how to maintain them and no amount of money spent will get them a knife sharp enough. Shitty steel has the silver lining of being very easy to sharpen. If you're halfway competent you can get about any metal to scalpel-sharp. (Bonus: those files will give you fingernails the women's softball team would be jealous of)
 
Naturally, I relied on Instagram trends to help with my identity crisis.
You know, sometimes I think that people are too hard on Millenials... and then I read sentences like this.
 
This kind of mentality is seeping from the millennial generation into the zoomer generation, made worse by Z having grown up with the internet being easily accessible their whole lives.
I can still remember the pre-9/11 world when the internet was a new thing and dialup was still normal. Must be different having high speed internet around one's entire life, and web 1.0 GeoCities-like websites with space backgrounds being like disco music is to me.
 
Jesus Christ, I hope this retarded bullshit isn't actually indicative of my generation.
I think alas that it is. I mean not everyone, obviously, but a lot of the younger people I meet are just very dull. They don’t seem to have any inner spark or life somehow. They can’t concentrate.
Hobbies require a bit of concentration. They don’t need to be expensive. What the author means is that to make it look pretty for instagram and TikTok it has to be expensive. Personally I garden and grow food in the summer, I knit, I sew (clothes quilts and embroidery.) it takes time and I like that. I have an embroidery project that will probably take me five years or more. I quite fancy having a crack at wood carving. The older women I know all do things like this - handicrafts, hiking, one is even into fly fishing. Says it’s very peaceful.
TLDR. Verbal masturbation, which could be a hobby for some of these shiteaters. Have always had hobbies, reading foremost. Face it, everyone has a hobby, whether they'll admit it or not.
Their hobbies are pecking at their reflection in the dark mirror like a coked up narcissist human budgerigar. Unless someone observes and strikes their ego it’s not fun.
You know, sometimes I think that people are too hard on Millenials... and then I read sentences like this.
I picked that one out too and laughed. Insta is actually the one SM I do have becasue I like looking at pretty pictures of other peoples gardening and knitting. The algo constantly shoved all sorts of stuff in my face that’s just bizarre, but with some dedicated ignoring I can simply admire other peoples gardens.
There’s a huge issue here with internal vs external validation and even internal vs external life. We can laugh at how shallow the author is but I do think this is a problem. Too much screen time kills something inside you. It kills the imagination
 
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