By U Khin Maung Myint
IN OFFICES, tea shops and family homes across Myanmar, one often hears a familiar concern: “Young people today are always complaining.” They complain about bureaucracy, low pay, routine work, demanding supervisors, lack of promotion, and jobs that do not match the dreams they formed during their education.
It is easy to dismiss this as laziness or lack of resilience. Yet that judgement may be unfair. Behind many complaints lies a genuine psychological struggle: the difficult transition from student life to professional life.
At school and university, the path is relatively clear. Study hard, pass examinations, obtain certificates, and progress to the next stage. Young people are often taught, directly or indirectly, that achievement will bring recognition and opportunity. When they enter employment, however, they may discover a different reality. The first years of work can involve repetitive tasks, paperwork, routine duties, office politics and limited authority.
This gap between expectation and reality can create what psychologists call cognitive dissonance: an uncomfortable conflict between what a person expected and what they actually experience. A young graduate may think, “I have worked hard and gained qualifications; why am I spending my day doing tasks that seem unimportant?” The complaint may not be a sign of idleness. It may be a sign that ambition has not yet found a practical direction.
However, constant complaining can become a trap. Sharing frustrations with colleagues may initially provide relief, but repeated negative conversations can gradually create an atmosphere in which every difficulty appears larger and every opportunity smaller. When people bond mainly through dissatisfaction, they may begin to see themselves as victims rather than learners.
This does not mean that young employees should remain silent about unfair treatment, poor working conditions or exploitation. Genuine concerns must be heard. Employers have a duty to provide reasonable pay, respectful management, proper training and a clear path for development. A workplace that demands loyalty but offers no guidance or recognition should also examine its own failures.
Yet young professionals must also understand that mastery begins with ordinary work. The doctor first learns basic clinical routines. The teacher begins with lesson preparation and marking. The engineer studies details before leading a project. The businessperson learns administration before managing an enterprise. No craft can be mastered without patience.
A routine task is not always a dead end. It may be a foundation. Small duties, performed carefully, teach discipline, reliability, communication and attention to detail. These qualities are often less visible than academic certificates, but they are what eventually build trust and leadership.
Employers can help by explaining the purpose behind routine work. A manager who merely gives instructions may create resentment. A manager who explains how a task contributes to the wider organization gives the employee a sense of meaning. Young people do not only want money or titles; many also want to know that their effort has value.
Families also have an important role. When a young person returns home frustrated after work, parents and elders should listen sympathetically. But instead of encouraging only anger, they may ask constructive questions: “What did you learn today?” “What skill are you developing?” “What could you do differently tomorrow?” Such questions can turn frustration into reflection.
Myanmar needs capable, ethical and resilient young professionals. They will be the doctors, teachers, engineers, civil servants, entrepreneurs and community leaders of tomorrow. Their complaints should not simply be dismissed, but neither should complaint become their identity.
The challenge is to move from moaning to mastery: from seeing work only as a burden to seeing it as a training ground for competence, character and service. The future will not be built by those who never complain, nor by those who complain without action, but by those who learn, adapt and steadily improve.


