Entertainment

Gen Z: The Generation Expected to Do It All And Why It’s Too Much

By Naeem AhmedPublished on August 21, 2025
Gen Z: The Generation Expected to Do It All And Why It’s Too Much
If Millennials were called the “burnout generation,” then Gen Z might just be the “pressure cooker generation.” On the surface, they’re seen as confident, tech-savvy, and unafraid to speak up. But scratch a little deeper, and you’ll find a generation quietly drowning under the weight of expectations – from family, from academics, from careers, from society at large.

Gen Z: The Generation Expected to Do It All And Why It’s Too Much
Gen Z: The Generation Expected to Do It All And Why It’s Too Much
Today’s young people are told they can “be anything,” but that message quickly turns into “be everything.” A stable career, financial security, passion projects, perfect mental health, a strong social life, and oh yes, figure it all out by 18 and being settled by graduation. It’s no wonder many are struggling to navigate a life that feels less like freedom and more like a maze.

When Family Expectations Collide with Passion
Parwarish
Parwarish
Pakistani drama Parwarish gives us a character that mirrors this exact struggle: Wali, forced by Jahangir into medical school. Jahangir’s dream was for his son to become a doctor, a symbol of stability and status. But Wali, like many Gen Zers, had passions that didn’t align with his father’s plan. Under immense pressure, he eventually rebelled to carve out his own path. His journey shows what happens when family expectations and personal dreams collide – the fallout is often messy, leading to conflict, trauma, and strained relationships.

Therapists often call this intergenerational mismatch. Parents grew up in a world where stability and survival meant choosing safe careers like medicine or engineering. Gen Z, on the other hand, is growing up in an era of rapid social change, online opportunities, and a culture that celebrates following your passion. When these worlds clash, young people are left feeling guilty for wanting something different, and anxious for not living up to their family’s standards.

The Pressure to Appear Perfect

Credits; Collider
On the flip side, Never Have I Ever’s Devi shows us another dimension of expectation: the pressure to look put-together. For Devi, being a young Indian-American means balancing cultural identity, grief, and the need to appear “cool.” She’s messy, impulsive, dramatic – but unlike many in her generation, she owns her flaws. Ironically, that honesty is what saves her.

A therapist would call this performative perfectionism. Gen Z often feels like they must project calmness, confidence, and success, even when they’re falling apart inside. Social media makes this worse, rewarding curated, polished versions of reality. The result? Many feel ashamed of their struggles, hiding the very messiness that could actually help them connect and heal.

The Strain of Growing Up Too Fast
Movies like The Edge of Seventeen highlight how expectation seeps into even the smallest parts of life. Nadine is awkward, insecure, and overwhelmed. She’s desperate to fit in but also crushed by grief and family tensions. For her, expectations don’t just come from others, they come from within. She holds herself to impossible standards, and every failure feels magnified.

Therapists note that this internal pressure is often intensified for Gen Z, who are constantly exposed to “highlight reels” of success online. Developmentally, this is the age to experiment and fail. But instead, many feel like every misstep is permanent, every wrong choice life-defining. It creates a sense of paralysis – if you can’t be perfect, why even try?

Silent Battles with Mental Health
And then there’s Marcus from Ginny & Georgia, who embodies the unspoken struggles of Gen Z boys. On the outside, he’s detached and brooding. On the inside, he’s battling depression, numbing his pain with alcohol, and spiraling under pressure. His story reveals a dangerous truth: while Gen Z talks more openly about mental health, young men in particular still struggle to express vulnerability. The weight of expectation, to be strong, successful, unemotional, pushes many into silence, until it’s too late.

Therapist Dr. Lisa Damour writes that today’s teens are not fragile, but they are under enormous strain. The constant pressure to succeed academically, socially, and emotionally creates a chronic state of stress. Left unchecked, it leads to anxiety, burnout, and depression, symptoms many Gen Zers are already reporting in record numbers.

Expectations vs. Reality
Research also backs this up. A 2024 survey found that Gen Z believes they need nearly $587,000 a year to feel financially secure – compared to Baby Boomers’ $99,000. At first glance, this seems absurd. But economists explain that these numbers are tied to the income levels Gen Z grew up watching, particularly among the wealthy. In other words, their benchmark for “success” was set so high during their teenage years that reality will almost always feel like failure.

So are expectations motivating Gen Z, or breaking them? The truth lies somewhere in between. Ambition can fuel growth, but when goals are unrealistic, or when they’re imposed without choice, they don’t inspire, they suffocate.

If parents, educators, and society continue to demand perfection without room for failure, we risk raising a generation that feels accomplished on paper but hollow inside. The challenge, then, is to create space for Gen Z to define success on their own terms – to fail, to grow, to be messy, to heal.

Because sometimes the bravest thing a young person can do is not to meet every expectation, but to simply say: I’m figuring it out, and that’s enough for now.