Anonymous wrote: No. There are always birth years between generations that don’t feel they belong. For example early 1960s- not baby boomers & not GenX. Also, early 80s - not GenX and not Millennials (although close to millennials, I would hazard?)
Anonymous wrote:Harvard:
Anonymous wrote:Plenty of sources use 81 as the starting year for Millennials.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was born in 81 and prefer “elder Millenial” (thanks for that Iliza Schlesinger).
But you're not. You are a Gen Xer.
Anonymous wrote:![]()
By Cmglee - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=91612069
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was born in 81 and prefer “elder Millenial” (thanks for that Iliza Schlesinger).
More than Xennial?
You are missing millennial by a few years with any classification. And are still middle aged like X.
The definition of millennial typically starts in the early 80s, but many people born in roughly 1981-1987 feel very different from people born in the 90s, hence the term elder millennial.
Snort. But you don’t see the nuance with other generations, just your own. You’re closer in age to someone born in ‘78 than ‘87.
When did I say that?
You didn’t need to.
Plenty of sources use 81 as the starting year for Millennials.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was born in 81 and prefer “elder Millenial” (thanks for that Iliza Schlesinger).
But you're not. You are a Gen Xer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was born in 81 and prefer “elder Millenial” (thanks for that Iliza Schlesinger).
More than Xennial?
You are missing millennial by a few years with any classification. And are still middle aged like X.
The definition of millennial typically starts in the early 80s, but many people born in roughly 1981-1987 feel very different from people born in the 90s, hence the term elder millennial.
Snort. But you don’t see the nuance with other generations, just your own. You’re closer in age to someone born in ‘78 than ‘87.
When did I say that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was born in 81 and prefer “elder Millenial” (thanks for that Iliza Schlesinger).
More than Xennial?
You are missing millennial by a few years with any classification. And are still middle aged like X.
The definition of millennial typically starts in the early 80s, but many people born in roughly 1981-1987 feel very different from people born in the 90s, hence the term elder millennial.
Snort. But you don’t see the nuance with other generations, just your own. You’re closer in age to someone born in ‘78 than ‘87.
Anonymous wrote:1979
Anonymous wrote:I was born in 81 and prefer “elder Millenial” (thanks for that Iliza Schlesinger).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was born in 81 and prefer “elder Millenial” (thanks for that Iliza Schlesinger).
More than Xennial?
You are missing millennial by a few years with any classification. And are still middle aged like X.
The definition of millennial typically starts in the early 80s, but many people born in roughly 1981-1987 feel very different from people born in the 90s, hence the term elder millennial.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t find the comment, but someone earlier made the point that as technology started changing more quickly, generational periods might get shorter — to reflect the very different cultural experiences from one generation to the next. As a tween with a bus pass, before cell phones, I really had a startling amount of autonomy and freedom compared to many tweens today.
I’m curious about what general historical markers people feel are aligned with generational cohorts. I think the explosion of news sources and options for communication has had an enormous impact on generational experiences.