“This book tells the story of what happened to the generation born after 1995, popularly known as Gen Z, the generation that follows the millennials (born 1981 to 1995). Some marketers tell us that Gen Z ends with the birth year 2010 or so, and they offer the name Gen Alpha for the children born after that, but I don’t think Gen Z—the anxious generation—will have an end date until we change the conditions of childhood that are making young people so anxious. …
Adults in Gen X and prior generations have not experienced much of a rise in clinical depression or anxiety since 2010, but many of us have become more frazzled, scattered, and exhausted by our new technologies and their incessant interruptions and distractions. As generative AI enables the production of super-realistic and fabricated photographs, videos, and news stories, life online is likely to get far more confusing. It doesn’t have to be that way; we can regain control of our own minds.
This book is not just for parents, teachers, and others who care for or about children. It is for anyone who wants to understand how the most rapid rewiring of human relationships and consciousness in human history has made it harder for all of us to think, focus, forget ourselves enough to care about others, and build close relationships.
The Anxious Generation is a book about how to reclaim human life for human beings in all generations.”
~ Jonathan Haidt from The Anxious Generation
Jonathan Haidt is one of the world’s leading scholars on the psychology of morality and politics. He’s also one of my favorite thinkers on the planet.
His blend of practical, scientifically-grounded wisdom combined with his intellectual rigor (and intellectual humility) is deeply inspiring.
As I mentioned in the Notes on The Righteous Mind and The Coddling of the American Mind, during one of my micro-sabbaticals in which I unplugged from inputs and went DEEP, I decided to spend a week hanging out with Professor Haidt. I read this book and the two I just mentioned. All of which are FANTASTIC.
Each of them were also incredibly thought-provoking and humbling explorations of some of the fundamental questions of humanity. The Righteous Mind explores the question “Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion” while The Coddling of the American Mind explores the question of “How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure.”
This book explores the question of “How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness.” (Get a copy here.)
As you’d expect, this book is packed with Big Ideas and I’m excited to share some of my favorites so let’s jump straight in!
P.S. Learn more: AnxiousGeneration.com, JonathanHaidt.com, and the Substack After Babel.
P.P.S. Another book related to serving the next generation we recently featured that I think you’ll enjoy is called 10 to 25: The Science of Motivating Young People by David Yeager.
And: Check out our Notes on Georgia Ede, MD’s book Change Your Diet, Change Your Mind: A Powerful Plan to Improve Mood, Overcome Anxiety, and Protect Memory for a Lifetime of Optimal Mental Health for more on the impact of NUTRITION on our mental health. Dr. Ede was a college counselor at elite universities and tells us about the importance of “nutritional psychiatry”—a facet of mental health that is rarely discussed but extraordinarily powerful.