@emstyle18 Yes exactly! I saw another comment you made and I totally agree, “they take the I know my worth and stretch it so far it hurts my brain”—- 1000x over. I had a friend that got offered an art commission slightly above market value in a medium they were inexperienced in. They didn’t even have to apply and it landed in their lap because they were drawing in the establishment. They have little experience and formal training. However, they felt it wasn’t enough money for their time and demanded a higher rate and basically fumbled the commission after they had already agreed to the terms. They gave a long rant to me about “I know my worth” and the employer trying to “take advantage” of them by wanting to meet a few times to get sketches approved. This person had no art education, and the commission was one a ton of people from my art university would’ve been glad to take.
I feel that this mentality has a lot to do with how much the internet has pushed the narrative of “stick it to employers”. It’s super valuable because yeah, a lot of corporations take advantage of employees, but this doesn’t apply to every situation. At the end of the day, if your family isn’t paying for your basic necessities you’re going to be a hell of a lot more motivated to make money and you’ll learn professionalism real quick.
My husband and I run a convenience store, and we’ve seen this mentality a lot in recent applications from younger people. A recent one wanted to be paid 20$ an hour for a cashier position, no experience, and 5 hours a week. That’s the rate I was paid as a behavioral therapist for children with learning disabilities, for Pete sake.
No ones saying that young people should slave away at jobs they hate. Asking to not ghost a mother who you’re being asked to nanny for is hardly expecting people to “never have fun and not enjoy their youth”. Mind boggling how extreme these comments are.