AARP Hearing Center
When my 13-year-old son came home from school last week, I asked him the same question I always do: “How was your day?”
“Skibidi toilet,” he said.
It’s the only answer I’ve been getting from him lately, and I’m never sure how to respond. “OK, uh … that sounds … is that a good thing or a bad thing?”
He shrugged. “Skibidi,” he repeated.
It can feel like talking with a hormonal alien. He speaks in a weird gibberish that only he and his friends understand. I recognize the “toilet” part but “skibidi”? Unless it’s followed by “doo-dah, skibidi-day,” I don’t have the faintest idea what he’s trying to tell me.
And skibidi is just the tip of the Gen Alpha slang iceberg: “rizzler,” “mogging,” “mewing,” “sigma,” “gyatt” and “Fanum tax,” to name just a few. Just listening to my son talk with his friends stresses me out.
I’m not alone in my anxiety. According to surveys released over the last year by language education platform Preply, over half (53 percent) of boomers and 30 percent of Gen Xers are mystified by the slang used by younger generations. And 54 percent of us are worried that we’re using slang the wrong way and making fools of ourselves.
Thankfully, there are plenty of resources out there to help you identify what these new words mean. But that doesn’t always clear up the mystery. A Google search revealed that “skibidi toilet” originated from an animated YouTube series with the same name. But I challenge anybody over 50 to watch the videos and not walk away thinking, Am I having a fever dream right now?
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