'Adulting' Classes Teach Millennials How To Be Grown-Ups
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MIAMI (CBSMiami) — How did you learn to become an adult? Typically, it involves some life lessons learned the hard way.
Well now there are actually courses in growing up.
"As sophisticated diners, we cut one piece at a time and put it in our mouth," etiquette expert Myka Meier explained.
As Meier puts it, cutting all your food at once, into little pieces, is for babies. So is asking someone for a date by text.
"Now it's sending a little emoji with heart eyes that shows communication that they're interested," she said.
Meier teaches those life skills and many more in several wildly popular classes at the Plaza Hotel in New York.
"Everything from social graces, business etiquette, networking, dining, advanced dining, we have wedding etiquette, dating etiquette," she said.
Millennials are her biggest clientele.
"It's a generation that's growing up on tech devices so they are losing soft skills. They're losing the face to face interaction, the eye contact, the body language," she said.
Katie Brunelle and Rachel Weinstein are also in the business of teaching life's lessons.
They're hosting 'adulting courses' designed to school the 30-somethings set in everything from cooking dinner to figuring out health insurance, and changing the oil in their car.
"Everyday things I know my parents could do, my grandparents could do, but when it comes to me, I'm like, I have no idea," Sara Daigle said.
Experts said the fact that many young adults lack this basic knowledge may be the fault of their over-protective parents, but it's never too late.
"Just because you learned something the hard way, doesn't mean everyone else should," Weinstein said.
One millennial was picking up a particularly useful life skill.
"Oh my gosh, probably interacting with other people," she said.
The classes are in essence, training "millennial aliens" how to live on the planet that the rest of us inhabit. But are they getting it?