I have two grandsons and five granddaughters, ranging in age from 18 to 30. All are potential candidates for "millennialhood", but so far only one of them has achieved it.
Grandson #1, 30, dropped out of college to explore the wacky world of standup comedy. He (or his audiences) decided he was not wacky enough, and he has returned to school at the University of California at Berkeley, studying biology and economics. He has a marvelous long-term girlfriend who is a very successful playwright (at age 26) who is now writing for Netflix until The Plague ends and legitimate theater returns.
Granddaughter #1, 29, graduated at the top of her class with a Doctor of Pharmacy degree, and is the ICU pharmacist in a major hospital in the Kansas City area.
Granddaughter #2, 28, is our "millennial". She graduated from college with excellent grades, and though she has worked and lived on her own, she currently prefers to live with her mother and does not work.
Grandaughter #3, 27, is an M.D., who is in her second year of her residency in internal medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin Hospital.
Granddaughter #4, 23, is in her second year of the doctoral program in physical therapy at the University of Kansas.
Grandson #2, 22, is in his first year at Harvard Law School.
Granddaughter #5, 18, is just finishing high school, so her millennial status has yet to be determined, but she's really smart and artistically talented.
So six out of seven "non-millennial" grandchildren ain't bad! Maybe there's hope after all.