When the 26-year-old Liv Cox goes to bed at a festival, she doesn’t just crawl into her sleeping bag and calls it a night. Oh no. She uses her examination masks to prevent dark circles, takes out her earplugs of the daily loop and puts her sleeping earplugs. She puts on her silk eye mask and dates some water that is laced with the contents of a bag prevention of hangover.
If she cannot sleep, she uses aromatherapy scooter ball on her wrists and takes a touch to nod her. When the sun appears, she takes her dietary supplements (“Magnesium, 5htp, turmeric,” she says) and washes it either with an ginger shot or a glucose shot. For a good extent, she also attracts a sheet metal mask from which it helps to repair her tired skin barrier.
“I just don’t enjoy any complaints,” explains Liv. “I fight to search fatigue or hangover. At a festival, I would like to give myself the best possible chance of having a great time. Especially at Camping, there is already a level of complaints that comes from sleeping in a tent, so I am simply determined to sleep as well as possible.”
LIV says that her sleeping time and morning routine give her a piece of “normality” at festivals that she feels at home.
(John Moeses Bauer)
While the festivals have been in the past of debauchery and letting go, Liv is one of many gene ZS that inspire a new approach. Documenting festival preparations to this end is the last anger on Tikkok, in which videos of the personal packing lists of users achieve hundreds of thousands of views and tens of thousands of likes.
People from 13 to 28 years are the first age group for whom a 16-stage skin care routine is the norm
Some Tikkker deserves his livelihood with such “additional” festival visitors. We take, who goes with the user name @Festival styled, 440,000 followers and a total of over 33 million likes for your videos. Beckah’s unique selling point is her undivided commitment to festival events: whether this is to film your multi-step process (GRWMS), your packaging adventures or too detailed what you keep in your “Rave Bag” (electrolytes, energetic and a mini hair brush).
The organizational requirements of gene festival visitors should not be a surprise: this is the first generation that grew up in wellness culture. People aged 13 to 28 are the first age group for which an influencer is a legitimate job aspiration and 16-step skin care routines are the norm. They are also the generation that the dandruff invented: the removal of oral tape, hair pp.
Gen z is usually more health -conscious, especially when it comes to partying. Up to 28 percent of young adults in Great Britain do not drink, and Forbes reports that 13 percent of the gene ZS tried to drink alcohol and give up alcohol.
A study showed that gen z in Great Britain currently drinks 20 percent less than millennials at the same age. The Time Magazine found that this may be due to more managed alcohol consumption, whereby Gen ZS has taken care of being “healthy”.
“If you look at alcohol marketing, no longer say that it is healthy to have some drinks, but that drinking can be part of a healthy lifestyle,” Sybil Marsh told family medicine and is looking for:
It is becoming increasingly clear that younger generations expect more from their festivals. Take Reading Festival, which a horde of Gentgen ZS will welcome for the first festival of all time on August 21.
New reading camping places offer yoga and meditation sessions, GRWM (Get -With ME) stations, run clubs and film screenings
While the idea of reading the festival usually causes visions of beer can and teenager drunkness, the expectations of the participants seem to change. Reading has reported a remarkable interest in her new and improved campsites this year. The new campsites offer yoga and meditation sessions, GRWM stations (Get Freead with me), run clubs and film screenings.
A yoga meeting at the Reading Festival (Sarah Louise Bennett)
Z also has a new category of holy grail articles for your weekends. The key festival of most millennials and gen Xers is undoubtedly a robust camping chair. But for Izzy, a 27-year-old who lives in Finsbury Park, it is capsules by the Ayurvedic herbal ashwagandha-Um to get rid of these annoying morning disorders. The addition, she says, “keeps me calm and exhibits my serotonin.”
In the meantime, others are on the train of pear juice in doses, a Korean tactic to prevent a hangover. “You saved me at Glastonbury,” says Hannah Fraser, 27. “To be honest, you worked insanely that I was so impressed. Obviously, it did not exclude a hangover, but the sick feeling. [Me and my friends] Didn’t even feel sick. “
Some of them can be the work of the placebo effect. Clarissa Lenherr, a leading nutritionist who heads a clinic in the Harley Street in London, told the standard: “While mixtures in the hangover and after the party supplement can sound very appealing, the evidence that supports their effectiveness has very limited. But if gen ZS is of the opinion that it works, then it may be good enough for you.
For many gene ZS, it seems to expect a certain standard of living in any environment, no matter how remote or exposing. While Millennials and Gen Xers were once satisfied with the mushy shoes and dirty fingernails that were necessary for a three-day camping festival of the camping festivals, many gene Z decided that it is only possible to have a good time while they also look good and feel good. Even if it takes 40 minutes to measure yourself in a tent to achieve it.