The teens call it “going Nadir.” The rest of us call it what it is: the sound of a generation screaming into a dark room, only to realize that in the absence of an audience, they are terrified of the echo.
The third rule is the one that haunts the child psychologists.
But culturally, the verdict is clearer. The “Bacanal de Adolescentes” is not an outlier. It is a symptom. In the months since the story broke, similar “unwitnessed gatherings” have been reported in São Paulo, Lisbon, and Miami. The template is always the same: no phones, no adults, no rules.
The teens call it “going Nadir.” The rest of us call it what it is: the sound of a generation screaming into a dark room, only to realize that in the absence of an audience, they are terrified of the echo.
The third rule is the one that haunts the child psychologists.
But culturally, the verdict is clearer. The “Bacanal de Adolescentes” is not an outlier. It is a symptom. In the months since the story broke, similar “unwitnessed gatherings” have been reported in São Paulo, Lisbon, and Miami. The template is always the same: no phones, no adults, no rules.
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