Emotional survival in 2025. When world events get overwhelming, Gen Z doesn’t turn away, they turn it into content. In 2025 alone, we’ve seen glowing turmeric water go viral on TikTok, war jokes flood every feed, and yet another round of nostalgic TV clips from the 2000s. At first glance, these trends seem random. But together, they tell a story about emotional survival.
Take the “glowing water” trend. It’s literally just turmeric or vitamin B2 in water under a flashlight. That’s it. And yet, it took off across millions of screens in June 2025, especially among parents filming their toddlers’ amazement. The draw? It’s cheap, wholesome, and feels like magic. In a year marked by rising conflict, inflation, and climate anxiety, it gave people something rare: wonder.
When reality feels too much, we light up the water. The viral Water Glow Effect trend captures how Gen Z turns science into soothing spectacle.
On the other side of the emotional spectrum, WWIII memes made a comeback again. This time after ceasefire talks between Israel and Iran collapsed mid-June. Instead of panic, the timeline filled with jokes: “Better get boba before conscription,” or “WWIII loading… pls hold.” It’s not that people aren’t scared. It’s that humor helps. Psychologists call this emotion-focused coping, using humor to reframe stress so it feels manageable, even if nothing else is.
These trends are more than just escapism. They’re survival tools. When the outside world feels out of control, people reach for small things they can still control: skincare routines, beauty aesthetics, or whether their SPF is re-applied every two hours. The current sunscreen obsession is part wellness, part anxiety loop. But it gives structure to the chaos.
Emotional Survival in 2025 – And let’s Not Forget Nostalgia.
There’s a reason Vampire Diaries, Sex and the City, and Gilmore Girls have all found their way back into the Gen Z spotlight. It’s not just retro fashion, it’s emotional time travel. Rewatching childhood shows is a way to feel grounded when the present feels too fast, too unstable, too much.
According to researchers, these behaviors aren’t shallow. They’re adaptive. People aren’t just avoiding the news, they’re processing it sideways. By turning panic into a meme or anxiety into a face mist tutorial, they create emotional buffers. It’s performance, sure, but it’s also community, identity, and release.
So when you scroll past a glowing water video or a joke about missile strikes, you’re not just witnessing a trend. You’re watching a generation fight for joy, humor, and normalcy. In a time when everything feels uncertain, maybe that’s the most human thing of all.
Refferences :
Gross, J. J. (2015). Emotion regulation: Conceptual and empirical foundations. In J. J. Gross (Ed.), Handbook of emotion regulation (2nd ed., pp. 3–20). The Guilford Press.
Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W.W. Norton & Company.
Vaterlaus, J. M., Patten, E. V., Roche, C., & Young, J. A. (2021). #SoothingContent: Young adults’ use of TikTok as emotional self-regulation. Computers in Human Behavior, 122, 106847. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2021.106847
Bunting, M., & Kross, E. (2022). Digital calm: Coping mechanisms in an overstimulated age. Journal of Media Psychology, 34(1), 12–25. https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000295
Feeling seen in the silence? Keep going:
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June 24, 2025
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Life Hacks & Thrills
Emotional survival in 2025. When world events get overwhelming, Gen Z doesn’t turn away, they turn it into content. In 2025 alone, we’ve seen glowing turmeric water go viral on TikTok, war jokes flood every feed, and yet another round of nostalgic TV clips from the 2000s. At first glance, these trends seem random. But together, they tell a story about emotional survival.
Take the “glowing water” trend. It’s literally just turmeric or vitamin B2 in water under a flashlight. That’s it. And yet, it took off across millions of screens in June 2025, especially among parents filming their toddlers’ amazement. The draw? It’s cheap, wholesome, and feels like magic. In a year marked by rising conflict, inflation, and climate anxiety, it gave people something rare: wonder.
On the other side of the emotional spectrum, WWIII memes made a comeback again. This time after ceasefire talks between Israel and Iran collapsed mid-June. Instead of panic, the timeline filled with jokes: “Better get boba before conscription,” or “WWIII loading… pls hold.” It’s not that people aren’t scared. It’s that humor helps. Psychologists call this emotion-focused coping, using humor to reframe stress so it feels manageable, even if nothing else is.
These trends are more than just escapism. They’re survival tools. When the outside world feels out of control, people reach for small things they can still control: skincare routines, beauty aesthetics, or whether their SPF is re-applied every two hours. The current sunscreen obsession is part wellness, part anxiety loop. But it gives structure to the chaos.
Emotional Survival in 2025 – And let’s Not Forget Nostalgia.
There’s a reason Vampire Diaries, Sex and the City, and Gilmore Girls have all found their way back into the Gen Z spotlight. It’s not just retro fashion, it’s emotional time travel. Rewatching childhood shows is a way to feel grounded when the present feels too fast, too unstable, too much.
According to researchers, these behaviors aren’t shallow. They’re adaptive. People aren’t just avoiding the news, they’re processing it sideways. By turning panic into a meme or anxiety into a face mist tutorial, they create emotional buffers. It’s performance, sure, but it’s also community, identity, and release.
So when you scroll past a glowing water video or a joke about missile strikes, you’re not just witnessing a trend. You’re watching a generation fight for joy, humor, and normalcy. In a time when everything feels uncertain, maybe that’s the most human thing of all.
Refferences :
Gross, J. J. (2015). Emotion regulation: Conceptual and empirical foundations. In J. J. Gross (Ed.), Handbook of emotion regulation (2nd ed., pp. 3–20). The Guilford Press.
Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W.W. Norton & Company.
Vaterlaus, J. M., Patten, E. V., Roche, C., & Young, J. A. (2021). #SoothingContent: Young adults’ use of TikTok as emotional self-regulation. Computers in Human Behavior, 122, 106847. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2021.106847
Feeling seen in the silence? Keep going:
Woman of the Hour: Why Survival Doesn’t Always Look Like Screaming
Sometimes surviving means staying quiet. Other times, it’s knowing when to walk away.
Women and Murder Media – The Quiet Art of Survival (Part 1)
We binge the crime shows – but rarely admit why. A dive into how women use media to process survival.
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Emotional regulation isn’t just a mental health buzzword. It’s what holds us together – quietly.
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