Gen Z's 'lazy girl jobs' trend hits back at hustle culture, but critics warn outcome could be problematic

'Lazy girl jobs' trend encourages Gen Z employees to take on easy jobs with decent wages to curb stress and anxiety

Move over "Bare Minimum Mondays" and "quiet quitting" and make way for Gen Z's latest work trend – "lazy girl jobs."

The TikTok and tech-savvy generation is leaning into the latest social media trend of finding well-paying often fully or partially remote jobs that require minimal effort to cut back on the stress and anxiety they say is harmful to mental health. 

"[I'm] going out on walks, going out places, getting food, going shopping, just like, [doing] daily day-to-day things that I need to get done that, if I was working a job where I didn't have the flexibility to do that, I wouldn't be able to do that," one woman told FOX Business.

"[I like to] do yoga, go out for walks and just do little random things like whatever seems fun that day," another said. 

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Gen Z is leaning into a social media trend of finding remote jobs that require minimal effort to cut back on stress and anxiety.  (iStock / iStock)
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While it might sound enticing to do yoga, grab some food, walk your dog or go shopping on the clock, not everyone is on board with the concept.

"I spoke to a psychiatrist over at the Langone Medical School [about this]… Her argument – and it makes sense to me – is that, as boomer parents did everything they could to make their children's lives perfect, they removed sources of anxiety," NYU business professor Suzy Welch, who recently wrote a piece discussing the trend in The Wall Street Journal, told FOX Business' Neil Cavuto on Tuesday.

"In that case, you don't have any experience with it, and you fear it, and you run away from it instead of doing what I did, or many people did… you sort of plow through it, and you think, 'Oh, that didn't kill me? I can take anxiety. That's just part of being a grown-up. And I don't love it, but I'll work through it.' I call it paradox management." 
MENTAL HEALTH BREAKS SHOULD BE A PRIORITY DURING THE WORK DAY down

 the trend that many argue is feeding America's "lazy" youth and perpetuating existing stereotypes that they have been coddled for too long.

"Remember how Sheryl Sandberg said to lean in? This is like sister, lean out. That's what's going on, and they're [Gen Z] just saying, 'We don't want it. We want the kind of easiest job we can have.'"

Though the trend is associated with "lazy girls" by stereotype, many speculate the issue isn't gender-exclusive and can be applied across the Gen Z spectrum. Reno Davis, a 22-year-old entrepreneur and real estate expert, for instance, told Fox News Digital he thinks his entire generation is lazy and, while the trend of finding more laid-back jobs might work for them right now, trying to take the easy way out could have consequences in the future.

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