A Gen Zer used only tech from the 1990s for a week. Here’s how he felt at the end.
Different generations rarely see eye to eye on many things, but no topic seems to be so heavily debated as how to properly communicate via texting.
In the one camp, youâve got the youngins who grew up with texting specificallyâGen Alphas, Gen Zers, and even millennials to a certain extent. In the other camp, youâve got boomers, Gen Xers, and again, millennials who might not have texted all their lives, but certainly have more working knowledge of basic grammar and written communication.
So whoâs the real authority? Ask a million different people, and youâll get a million different answers. This is certainly the situation we find ourselves in with this story.
Recently, Jason knowsa 22-year-old publicist in New York City, whose content consists mainly of cheeky, satirical PowerPoint presentations, created one centered on educating his parents on proper texting etiquette. Yes. He was attempting to educate them.
The primary learning point? The âexclamationâ or âemphasisâ reaction, aka âtapbackâ that you can attach to a message. According to Saperstone, his parents were using it wrong.
“Mom and Dad, I love you, but you need to get better at texting,” he said at the beginning of his lesson. “So the thing weâre going to be working on today is how to use the emphasis.”
According to Saperstone, you react with an emphasis when:
- You agree with the sender.
- You find yourself in the same situation.
- Someone is ignoring you and you want their attention.
Is this news to you? Are you wondering if Gen Z actually understands what the original meaning behind an exclamation point even is? Or any punctuation, for that matter? Youâre not alone.
We can’t even agree on basic grammar?! media0.giphy.com
Saperstoneâs parents (rightfullyâŠsorry, my bias is showing) thought it should be used to show excitement or enthusiasm. For example, when he let them know that he happened to be in the bar that Alex Cooper, host of the âCall Her Daddyâ podcast, was at, his mother used the emphasis tapback because she was âexcitedâ for him.
âThat would mean that youâre also at the bar with Alex Cooper,” Saperstone argued, saying that she should have âlikedâ the message with a thumbâs up. Which, may I add, was previously labeled as “passive aggressiveâ by Gen ZâŠso why are we giving them carte blanche on all things text communications?
Luckily for Saperstoneâs parents, folks rallied in the comment section either by agreeing with his momâs interpretationâŠ
âDISAGREE with the presenter and AGREE with mom. The emphasis on the Alex Cooper text conveys âholy sh**! Thatâs awesome!ââ
âI kind of agree with Mom here! I use it like âomg, whaaat?â Like in response to someone telling me something wild or exciting.â
âNot us all agreeing with Mom đ if you send me a thumbs up when I send you exciting news imma cry.â
âŠor by declaring that Gen Zers donât hold ultimate authority on this topic.
When it comes to textingâŠthe kids are NOT alright. media4.giphy.com
âTaking communication advice from Gen Z is like taking financial advice from Boomers.â
âOk emphasis is an exclamation point and in grammar (which hasnât changed its rules) it expresses excitement or surprise. So the older generation uses it as intended and the younger generation is making up their own rules.â
âWhat cracks me up is the fact that he thinks his generation gets to decide the meaning of â!!â or any other emoji. Just because thatâs what you have decided thatâs what it means doesnât mean youâre correct, or that another meaning of it is necessarily wrong. It means different things to different generations, and thatâs actually perfectly ok. đâ
And honestly, itâs the latter point that really hits home here. When it comes to texting, we can all agree to disagree with certain nuances. But in no way, shape, or form does Gen Z get to enforce its own made-up linguistic rules upon the rest of the world. Sorry. You can reclaim low rise jeans if you want, but weâre keeping basic grammar.