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Is The “”Gen Z Stare” Actually The Right Response?

As someone who is completely burned out by the idiocracy of the Trump regime and all of its related insanity, I have begun to wonder if the Gen Z Stare is actually a proper sanity saving response in the face of rampant ignorance and trolling. Has anyone tried it? If so, was it effective?

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by Anonymousreply 40September 3, 2025 1:24 AM

I'm also tired of the woke Gen Z idiocracy and all of its related insanity. The Gen Z stare is part of this stupidity. Staring out into space like you have dementia isn't the solution to the world's problems.

by Anonymousreply 1August 25, 2025 3:24 PM

They're not used to human interaction.

by Anonymousreply 2August 25, 2025 5:38 PM

If young people would rather stare out into space like they’re having a mini stroke than give their two cents about politics then I say OK.

I am sick of social media and how it allows everyone to give a hot take on whatever issue is big that day.

by Anonymousreply 3August 25, 2025 6:13 PM

It’s all about context.

If they’re asked a rude or confrontational question like “Do you do that Woke Pronouns shit?” then sure.

If asked by a customer “Do you take AmEx?” then no, not ok. Even if there’s an AmEx sign within the customer’s eyesight.

by Anonymousreply 4August 25, 2025 6:36 PM

I think these responses are spot on. You have to use that fucked up stare cautiously, or you will be labeled a mental patient. Only use it as a reaction to outrageous behavior, not as R4 correctly points out, when someone asks a reasonable question.

by Anonymousreply 5August 25, 2025 6:56 PM

No, it isn't appropriate to blankly stare at people as a restaurant host, cashier, etc.

by Anonymousreply 6August 25, 2025 7:08 PM

Did any of you understand OPs intent? He is suggesting a good use for the Gen Z Stare. Not knocking it.

by Anonymousreply 7August 25, 2025 7:26 PM

There is no good use for it.

We are knocking it for them.

by Anonymousreply 8August 25, 2025 7:45 PM

And they think they deserve 100k salaries and to be able to own homes at 22. Yeah, good luck with that.

by Anonymousreply 9August 28, 2025 6:07 PM

You could also just blind yourself and gain some inner peace

by Anonymousreply 10August 28, 2025 6:35 PM

Gen Z Stare is very common I've noticed.

Gen Zs are a cohort whose baseline is quasi-Spectrum Disorder and both emotional as well as verbal cues cause them to short-circuit, thus the "stare".

Before even comprehending a conversation they've already started thinking of who might be offended by this conversation, feeling victimized themselves, and feeling duped because they were told this was "supposed to be a safe place"!

by Anonymousreply 11August 28, 2025 7:14 PM

That sounds like therapistspeak. If they’ve been enabled with that no wonder they do it. I bet if you cut off their food and water they’d suddenly learn to ask for some immediately. It’s a miracle!

by Anonymousreply 12August 31, 2025 8:32 AM

The person in OP’s photo is likely on the autism spectrum. The eye gap gives it away.

by Anonymousreply 13August 31, 2025 11:41 AM

The first cinematic Gen Z stare

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by Anonymousreply 14August 31, 2025 12:21 PM

I think it should be renamed The Dementia Stare.

Bruce Willis has that stare now.

My uncle had that stare when he was in the last stage of Alzheimer's Disease.

My family doctor had that stare in the late 90s right before he died from Lewy Body Dementia.

And now Gen Z has it. How lovely to have an entire generation that thinks it's cool to look brain dead.

by Anonymousreply 15August 31, 2025 1:58 PM

I heard if you do it too many times your face freezes like that forever

by Anonymousreply 16August 31, 2025 2:11 PM

Nothin a good slap can't fix. Snap out of it! - Loretta C.

by Anonymousreply 17August 31, 2025 2:15 PM

I'm far beyond Gen Z (whichever one that is) but I find that this stare just comes naturally to me on occasion. Like yesterday, as I approached the front door of the supermarket, where 2 middle-aged women were trying to decide which cart to take into the store -- both big fat ladies, blocking everyone else's access to the carts & the door. They were standing there when I drove up, parked, & walked toward the building -- & they continued to stand there debating the relative merits of the big cart vs the smaller cart, totally oblivious to other people streaming by & crowding around them. I'm much too polite to shout "MOVE IT ALONG, TOOTS!" & too tired to trudge all the way over to the other door at the far end of the supermarket (which doesn't have a line of carts parked near it), so what am I to do? I found myself staring at them as if I'd been struck dumb, which indeed I had been. And it worked! And I felt a little better, so there's that.

by Anonymousreply 18August 31, 2025 2:15 PM

I experienced the Gen Z stare 1 week ago at Five Guys. All of the employees were Gen Z alien pod people. They just waited for me to give my order and didn't say anything. Then, while I waited, they all stared at me. I now understand why the movie The Invasion of The Body Snatchers was remade 3 times. There are 4 versions of this movie. Someone knew this was going to happen. Wait until Gen Zer's start pointing and screaming at people.

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by Anonymousreply 19August 31, 2025 2:18 PM

It probably would have been better to say, “excuse me, I’m in a hurry”

by Anonymousreply 20August 31, 2025 2:22 PM

To me it reflects how they are socially awkward and inept. They grew up on phones and being anxious about the future. Their parents coddled them and they are lazy. I fear for the future when they are in charge but hopefully they’ll be skipped over in Influence.

by Anonymousreply 21August 31, 2025 2:26 PM

R21 Gen Z has a tough road ahead of them. Really tough.

by Anonymousreply 22August 31, 2025 2:27 PM

I’m falling into a spiral, destination unknown

Help, I’m slipping into the Twilight Zone

by Anonymousreply 23August 31, 2025 2:43 PM

Resting Blank Face 😑

by Anonymousreply 24August 31, 2025 3:33 PM

I've noticed they don't know that one should greet people like the above cash register people. Just staring creepily in your face is pleasant enough for them. The thought of being "friendly" is disdainful to them.

by Anonymousreply 25August 31, 2025 3:52 PM

Hey, at least they’re out there working

by Anonymousreply 26August 31, 2025 3:59 PM

[quote] I found myself staring at them as if I'd been struck dumb, which indeed I had been. And it worked! And I felt a little better, so there's that.

That’s not the Gen Z stare. They weren’t speaking to you. The Gen Z stare comes when some kind of polite verbal response is called for.

If you had done the proper thing, and sought to resolve the bottleneck with “Move it along, Toots!” and their leader had turned to face you and responded with a curt “Fuck you” as expected, and THEN you looked at them with a blank stare, that would have been closer, but still not quite it because all bets are off in an altercation.

by Anonymousreply 27August 31, 2025 4:18 PM

So when I'm 85 and needing a diaper change, will they give me the stare?

by Anonymousreply 28August 31, 2025 4:33 PM

Being proactively friendly to customers and speaking to them first is soooo cringe. .

by Anonymousreply 29August 31, 2025 8:03 PM

[quote]To me it reflects how they are socially awkward and inept.

You may be right, but it registers as contempt to me.

by Anonymousreply 30August 31, 2025 8:05 PM

Circa Parkland, the media was fawning over them, making bold declarations that they were going to be young leaders and saviors. What happened to all of that?

by Anonymousreply 31August 31, 2025 9:40 PM

R19 My version of that film was obviously the best version.

by Anonymousreply 32August 31, 2025 9:50 PM

The most effective way to end the Gen Z Stare is a vicious face slapping, up *and* down (slap, slap!).

by Anonymousreply 33August 31, 2025 9:51 PM

They are, except for the idiots among them, aware that they have no future, that there will be no jobs for them, and that the planet will become less and less habitable in their lifetime. The ones that went into many of the business and tech fields that were safe bets five years ago now find AI taking over the entry-level jobs. The ones who do customer service jobs are facing ruder and more violent people. Their brains have been rewired by smartphones, TikTok, and the algorithms that make choices for them. Their dumbass parents gave them tablets and phones to use as children and businesses and local governments in a lot of places have basically criminalized allowing your kids outside without supervision.

They also came of age during and after Trump. The eldest among them may have memories of the Obama Era, but largely they've only known fascism and COVID.

So yeah. They spend a hell of a lot of time dissociating. It infuriates me when I encounter it, but it's not surprising.

by Anonymousreply 34August 31, 2025 10:00 PM

R34, maybe those are some things they should have considered before pulling for Trump?

by Anonymousreply 35September 1, 2025 1:07 AM

[quote] The Gen Z stare comes when some kind of polite verbal response is called for.

If you ask Gen Z, they'll say that the stare people are referencing is often because the person is saying something stupid, but ...

[quote]No, it isn't appropriate to blankly stare at people as a restaurant host, cashier, etc.

They do this because they can't actually confront you and say something or they will lose their job.

However, there are some socially awkward Gen Zers who can't communicate properly because of various issues like too much tech growing up, social media and COVID.

From having to deal with them a lot at work, I've never gotten the stare. I've seen them do it to other people, usually when they get too much information at once. Sometimes they do just blank out completely. What I've also noticed is that they absolutely, positively, can not handle any actual confrontation or criticism.

by Anonymousreply 36September 1, 2025 1:23 AM

r36

[quote]they absolutely, positively, can not handle any actual confrontation or criticism.

So they do something that invites confrontation and criticism.

by Anonymousreply 37September 1, 2025 1:37 AM

my college students can take feedback and criticism because that sort of thing is baked into prof-teacher. BUT. A lot of them ignore and discredit feedback and criticism as completely irrelevant. It is pretty important to say something nice but true to them. That gains trust. "Your answer is complete and developed, and interesting to read. Let's talk about some writing techniques to improve your style...." (means it's 9th grade writing skill and I'm appalled).

by Anonymousreply 38September 1, 2025 1:43 AM

I actually have encountered the stare a few times,but I never realized it was a generational thing. When I have encountered it I shut up and stare right back. That forces them to respond. Ive had whole transactions where the clerks have never said a word. That used to irk me but now I just respond in kind.

by Anonymousreply 39September 1, 2025 4:07 AM

The fallout from helicopter parenting.

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by Anonymousreply 40September 3, 2025 1:24 AM
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