Quote from: Kirsteneklund7 on March 18, 2019, 07:07:19 AM
My parents were baby boomers, born at the end of ww2. ( inthe 40s). I am generation X born in the 60s. As generation x we were raised on blue jeans and rock and roll. For many of us Xs industrial rock and roll is a thing ie Status Quo, AC/DC, Deep Purple ect. Part of a working class scene that is now defunct.Many of us qualified in industry and trades that are now farmed out overseas and we had to re- qualify into newer industries.
As a generation we use computers to do everything but find the older paper based systems easier and more reliable. The new generation dont know anything but computers.
We straddled an era between doing it all with slide rules and rules of thumb to an era of totally electronic.
We can build and repair in wood & metal and repair & maintain cars we can prepare meals from bare ingredients & cook & sew & make clothes. Our offspring know computers and social media but we are a bit indifferent. Life without mobile phones was actually better.
We were trained one way but had to live another.
Now I am in my fifties my friends like rock & roll & metal. The younger generation hates it and wants gangster rap & hip hop.The older genreration wants Elvis & dance hall music. We did disco & nightclub & New Order & the New Romantic era & heavy rock & heavy metal.
Generation X is fewer in number than boomers but big on life experience and straddling the eras. We have broad tastes.
We were the last generation to question the establishment. That doesnt happen so much anymore.
Best wishes from all Xers, Kirsten.
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I too am a Gen Xer born in the '60s as well, but perhaps because I am African American, some of my experiences were different. My parents are Silent Generationsers, born in the '30s, so they had many of the traits, but again, being African American, many things were different for them.
I remember occasionally seeing distrust and some fear in my Mom's eyes when I was a really young child and she had to talk to a white person. When I started dating my (now ex-)husband at age 20, I remember her calling me into her bedroom where she was grading papers to talk to me. She asked me "are you
sure you want to be with this (white) man?" I didn't think anything of it until years later when I realized that she was worried
for me and any children we might have. Worried about the problems of being an African American "woman" married to a white man in the 1980s.
I grew up with Motown playing in the background, at least until my Mom became a born again. I loved disco and remember dancing in the living room to the music of Solid Gold and the Solid Gold dancers at age 14. Rock and roll, and later New Wave, Alternative music and what ended up becoming "classic" Gothic music became my mainstays back then. I still love disco and dance music, although now I listen to mostly Japanese dance music.
I remember watching Emergency and cheering for Squad 51's Paramedics Gage and DeSoto whenever they saved a patient. That TV show is what made me decide to become a career Paramedic. Even now that I disabled due to a work-related injury, I am still a licensed Paramedic, something which I can't see myself ever giving up.
I had a TRS80 color computer and have basically had computers my entire life since, yet I have never learned how to program. Sure paper is "more reliable," I remember thinking "we'll save trees because we'll need less paper." That doesn't seem to have happened, butt I still tend to go paperless whenever possible, since I trust both computers
and paper.
Sure I can cook, and repair and sew, but I'd rather have someone that actually enjoys doing that stuff to doing it myself. It takes away from my computer time, Netflixing or gaming time if I do it myself.
I would rather die than have my cell phone taken away. My entire
life is on mine, especially since I just got a new one.

I still question the establishment, and even now I fight against what I see is wrong. I'm active in the local transgender community as a volunteer, not only as a support group facilitator, but by helping to change some of the laws as to how LGBT+ kids and adults are treated here in my adopted state.
And I rejoice in the knowledge that there are teenagers that are also active in these fights. It seems that there
are members of Gen Z that are also wiling to take up the fight for what is right.
After all, it's their future that we are all fighting for.
Ryuichi