For those 45+, how good were the 1990s, actually?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Im 40. I was age 16 by the year 2000.

I don’t know why you want 45+. What about 43 year olds?

I loved the 90s. I now see it as a carefree-ish time that we didn’t appreciate, before 9/11/2001.



Well of course you were carefree because you were a child.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I bought a nice starter townhouse for $95,000 in 1995, which was a little less than 3x my salary at the time. I was 28 years old. Nice neighborhood. It was small but just 7 years old at the time. It didn't appreciate for 8 years and then in 2004-2005, its value ballooned and I sold it for $202,000.

I did it on my own. That's how amazing the 90s were. I was solid middle class and single, and was able to buy. I ache for young folks today.



Same. I earned $60,000 in 1995 as a 27 year old. As a single woman, I took my $40K signing bonus and convinced my parents to loan me the the rest of what I needed. Then I bought a small house in Chevy Chase DC for $249,000. The mortgage rate was around what it is now, so it was a stretch to make that mortgage payment, but with a roommate, I made it work.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I bought a nice starter townhouse for $95,000 in 1995, which was a little less than 3x my salary at the time. I was 28 years old. Nice neighborhood. It was small but just 7 years old at the time. It didn't appreciate for 8 years and then in 2004-2005, its value ballooned and I sold it for $202,000.

I did it on my own. That's how amazing the 90s were. I was solid middle class and single, and was able to buy. I ache for young folks today.



You did it with the help of a property boom in the early 2000s
Anonymous
I'm 40 and was 14 in 2000 so Gen X is 50+ now
Anonymous
I’m in my 50s. There was a lot about the 90s that wasn’t great. One of those was epitomized by Pamela Anderson. The way she was exploited, then harshly judged, then trashed by society was gross.

We’ve evolved somewhat as a people since then, but not far enough, imo.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’m in my 50s. There was a lot about the 90s that wasn’t great. One of those was epitomized by Pamela Anderson. The way she was exploited, then harshly judged, then trashed by society was gross.

We’ve evolved somewhat as a people since then, but not far enough, imo.


In some ways, yes.

And then in other ways, we have regressed big time.
Anonymous
It was better.
9/11 was when things went south
2007 crisis added to the mix
Smart phones and social media got the drain circling
Covid pandemic was the toilet flushing
Trump 2.0 is the stuck turd

Someone get the plunger
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I bought a nice starter townhouse for $95,000 in 1995, which was a little less than 3x my salary at the time. I was 28 years old. Nice neighborhood. It was small but just 7 years old at the time. It didn't appreciate for 8 years and then in 2004-2005, its value ballooned and I sold it for $202,000.

I did it on my own. That's how amazing the 90s were. I was solid middle class and single, and was able to buy. I ache for young folks today.



You did it with the help of a property boom in the early 2000s



I SOLD with the help of a property boom. I purchased on my own, in an attainable market. I was perfectly content to live there forever.
Anonymous
I loved the 1990s. I was single the entire decade and 22-31 years old. DC was a fun place--anyone remember the skating rink in Adams Morgan where you could see concerts at night? All general admission.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP needs to keep in mind that in the 1990s the white middle class suburban demographics was the majority, if not by far the biggest single demographic cohort in the country. If you want to take the stance that if you were white and middle class then you only have an biased perspective of life in the 1990s, you're ignoring how the majority actually experienced the 90s, which means you're risking seeking out a minority and biased perspective of the decade. And contrary to what some youngsters like to believe, gays and minorities weren't persecuted, you'd have to go back much earlier.

That aside, there were huge ranges in how people "experienced" the decade as well as variations within the decade itself, from the brief 1991-2 recession to the boom of the end of the decade (which incidentally set up the framework for the great recession in the long run). I remember plenty of uncertainty and fears about everything, which is utterly typical for every decade and every generation. Some things feel better about the 90s, especially the pre social media era. There's been a great deal of cultural changes in larger society, some for the better, some that are neutral, and some that simply means a different kind of future than previously assumed. I actually think Europe actually is having a much harder time with this than the US.

I will say technology improvements, for all its benefits, has sped up the pace of how things are done and lived these days compared to the 1990s, which did move at a fast pace of its own. It seems like the more technology we have, the faster we have to live our lives. The pace is breathtaking nowadays and the ability to step out of it to a slower lifestyle seems impossible, at least without significant economic implications.



It is pretty sweeping to say gays and minorities weren't persecuted.

Just because you didn't experience it personally, does not mean it is not true.

Yes many people had the good life in the 1990s but there was still discrimination.


Mid 60’s here. Graduated from HS in 1978 so lived through both the 80s and the 90s as a lesbian. Here’s my take. The music and the clubs were like nothing that exists today. We had Black Sabbath, Queen, MeatLoaf, . . . Gay clubs in virtually any larger city were so full of energy and life. I don’t know that any generation will ever experience the wonder that was ours every single day if we weren’t too afraid to go.

But, gay clubs were hidden and you had to be afraid to go in. They were in undesirable (dangerous) neighborhoods, so safety was a concern. And, if you were seen entering, you risked your livelihood - losing your job and your housing, particularly in the early era of AIDS. Men got paid more than women just because they were men. Getting married wasn’t even a dream and if you lived with a partner, you set up a separate bedroom so you could pretend you weren’t together since that was vital for your safety and financial security.

And, finding people like yourself was like finding an underground community. You got publications like Lesbian Connections delivered in brown paper so no one would know what it was and the second it was delivered, you devoured it because you were so desperate for connections. That’s how you found out about things like the Michigan Women’s Music Festival.

I am white so I only observed the treatment of those who weren’t. But non white people were forced into their own communities. If they dared to buy a house in a white area, they had to worry about their kids being beaten up at the bus stop. Our parents didn’t allow us to play with non white kids or bring them around our house ever. There were segregated pools and grocery stores where the “colored” shopped. We were taught to be afraid of them.

And, once you hit a certain age, somewhere between 16 and 18, you were expected to move out and take care of yourself. Parents weren’t financing their kids’ college or their kids’ lives after HS graduation. We all pounded the pavement for jobs by the time were were 14 because our parents weren’t giving us money, but back then, 10 year olds could babysit your kids and parents went out often so there was that.

Oh, and don’t forget that women couldn’t get credit cards until the 1980s, couldn’t sign contracts, had difficulty renting apartments, etc. So, you were stuck in bad and abusive marriages. I remember when my friend’s parents divorced, my dad had to find her mom an apartment because women couldn’t apply or advertise for an apartment (back then, you advertised that you needed one, landlords didn’t advertise that they had availability).

So, do I miss the music and the clubs? Definitely yes. It was a gazillion times better than today. But, life today is so much better. As a society, we treat people the same regardless of race, sexual orientation, gender . . . I could finally get married and by the time it was legal in DC, we had been together almost two decades with kids, dogs and a house. Yes, school is more expensive for my kids than it was for me, but as a society, we generally help our kids whereas that wasn’t the case when I went to college. And, we all have health insurance without ridiculous conditions and high deductibles. HMOs and PPOs are amazing and people don’t even get what a huge change that is. And, while people criticize insurance companies, if you lived through the 80s and 90s, you’d understand how it was borne out of over treatment. Before conditions were set, people would stay in the hospital for weeks for a minor surgery and months or years for mental health issues.

And while the internet has its downsides, it sure does make finding people, travel, jobs, and everything else so much easier. Even social media has its upsides, like being able to stay in touch with family and watching them grow up when you live far away.

Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Now I’m going to go put on some hard rock while I go about the rest of my morning.


I graduated from high school in 1985, so I'm a few years younger than you. But I have a hard time believing that things changed so drastically in only 7 yrs, because what I bolded was not my experience at all. Maybe location played a role? I graduated from high school in Nashville. My first boss (1983, high school job) was openly gay. I went to gay clubs and bars with friends all through my college years (also in Nashville) and all of my friends were out. I'm sorry you hard that part of the experience. You're spot on about the music and dance scene. Nashville had (probably still does) an amazing music scene totally unrelated to country.


I'm sure location was part of it, but also I'm sure industry did as well. I worked as a social worker and moved on to law. I think it was in the mid 1990s that I was able to be out for the first time at work and that was when I moved to DC.

Also, I'm sure that location is significant when it came to safety around gay bars, but I was in big cities and the best places were in the worst areas. Remember Tracks? I know people who were robbed outside of there at gunpoint in the late 1990s and I don't know if that area ever became safe before it closed. But it was amazing and there is nothing I've seen like it in decades. Are there even gay bars today?


I'm straight and went to Tracks. It was everything I hoped going out in DC would be like.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It was better.
9/11 was when things went south
2007 crisis added to the mix
Smart phones and social media got the drain circling
Covid pandemic was the toilet flushing
Trump 2.0 is the stuck turd

Someone get the plunger


I don’t know why I find this hilarious.

Laughing and crying!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’m in my 50s. There was a lot about the 90s that wasn’t great. One of those was epitomized by Pamela Anderson. The way she was exploited, then harshly judged, then trashed by society was gross.

We’ve evolved somewhat as a people since then, but not far enough, imo.


It was supposed to be a post-feminist time, but sexual harassment and objectification of women was still rampant, as was homophobia.
Anonymous
There was one priority in the 90s: be at your TV on Thursday by 8pm or you are missing out on everything for the next week.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The 90s were great, rent was cheap and there was much fun to be had. It was the generation to be young in.


This.
Had disposable income. Travelled. Met people in real life.
Then 9/11 happened
Anonymous
I'm mid genX so I was a teen in the 80's and college/post-college in the 90's. it was pretty great. The music was awesome, the fashion was pretty forgiving and things weren't so expensive. You could still get cheap drinks at bars, and people actually talked to each other in public since we didn't have cell phones yet. Porn wasn't as readily available so guys weren't as influenced by it in dating.
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