Truth.
Every generation has hardships. Our generation happens to enjoy the most comfort, and luxury wealth, access to medical care, food, and all kinds of, excess of any generation in history. We're on our thousand and some dollar iPhones, video taping ourselves, holding a Starbucks, driving our fancy cars with heated seats, wearing designer sunglasses with our salon styled hair, and our designer breed dog in the backseat, while we complain about how Boomers ruined everything, and don't understand how hard it is that we can't afford to own a home, and inflation is unfathomable.
You know who warned us about things like inflation? You know who warned us about what a bad idea all our young, hip, and modern ideas were?
I think it's in Matthew, that tells us to pluck the log from our own eye before we turn to our brother and try to pick the splinter out of theirs. The first step toward wisdom is self-reflection, and self-awareness. We all must look inwards.
The people of yester-year would look at our struggles and laugh at us. We complain our retail jobs, they risked life and limb to build skyscrapers and work in mines with almost zero safety protocols like we're used to. They had World Wars like we have no concept to fathom, forced drafts, etc
And they were stoic. They understood life wasn't meant to be easy, and luxury wasn't a human right. They faced their hardships with stoic determination to overcome, to better their lives and their family's lives, and build a better future.
Especially to the men here, being that we're all single, weakness is unattractive. We wonder why we can't attract any "females"... Don't believe the media in their: "soy boy, hipster men are the best" lies. To use an antiquated phrase: be a man. To phrase it as the Bible does: gird up your loins and be a man!
Myself included, we need to face our hardships and overcome. We need to be stoic, and hardworking, and 'run the race', as it is says in Hebrews. We need trust in God to deliver us, and be faithful, and grateful.