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Millennials are approaching “middle age,” with the oldest in the generation now 43 and the youngest nearly 30.
Millennials have gotten a bad rap over time, chastised by older generations for spending their money on frivolous things such as avocado toast and coffee.
But with the upheaval of the financial, housing and economic markets in 2007, the careers of many millennials got off to a rocky start, if any. Coupled with record-breaking student debt and the pandemic’s recession, millennials aren’t finding themselves in the same spot in life as generations before.
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In fact, with all these uncertainties, one in ten millennials said in a new survey that they’ve already experienced a midlife crisis around the age of 34.
And 1 in 2 expect to have a midlife crisis in the future, with most anticipating it happening around the age of …