AustinTink
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2009
- Messages
- 12,688
That’s me everyday about most things.we’d all just roll our eyes & be like “Whatever.”
That’s me everyday about most things.we’d all just roll our eyes & be like “Whatever.”
I don't think it's an official term or anything just something people my age throw aroundI've never heard this term. Interesting.
Ha, yes, we're that. We're also the first true "latch key" generation. Many of us may have started with Mom at home, but at some point she headed out into the workforce....and somewhere along the line all of the parents decided that their pre-teen/teen kids were fine at home for several hours a day without supervision....lol. DH and I both experienced this in our homes.What's the stereotype? Gen X'ers hates the Baby Boomers for creating all the world's problems and hates the Millennials because they are too lazy to do anything about it? Something like that? GUILTY Gen X'er here.
Just wondering out loud here.....you speak of latch key kids. I wonder what it was like during WW II, when so many women went to work with men overseas. What did the kids do? Anyone know?Ha, yes, we're that. We're also the first true "latch key" generation. Many of us may have started with Mom at home, but at some point she headed out into the workforce....and somewhere along the line all of the parents decided that their pre-teen/teen kids were fine at home for several hours a day without supervision....lol. DH and I both experienced this in our homes.
So we're known as the "independent" generation. Gen X-ers had to figure it out on our own. And so that's why we're so likely to roll our eyes at the other generations....the boomers were out there consuming everything.....their kids (the millennials) were always whining about something. Gen X is over in the corner rolling our collective eyes at them.
All generalizations folks....don't get mad at me.
Just wondering out loud here.....you speak of latch key kids. I wonder what it was like during WW II, when so many women went to work with men overseas. What did the kids do? Anyone know?
Millennials.Boomer here (1954) the baby sibling of five. Son (1982) and daughter (1984). Not sure if that makes them Gen X??? Four grandkids 6, 5, 5 and 3.
Exactly!! <3
We’re the Reality Bites generation… the snarky slackers.
And maybe because we’re also the forgotten generation or because there’s, relatively speaking, not a lot of us, nobody ever hates on the Gen-X-ers or blames us for stuff like they do Boomers or Millennials.
Or, even if they did, we’d all just roll our eyes & be like “Whatever.”
I like how this graphic completely misses a group of people!
That was the point.I like how this graphic completely misses a group of people!