Anonymous wrote:My mother was born in 65 and she considers herself a Gen X’er.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overall, I find generations to be too large. Generations would be more accurately depicted if they were broken down by decade. Millenials span from like 1980 to 2000, which is way too large.
This. As an early 80s millenial a lot of the generalizations don't really apply. And when my early 40s colleagues complain about millennials they don't seem to realize this includes people who are solidly into their 30s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, if you remember the jfk assasination, you are a boomer. After, gen x
Yeah, that's the quintessential boomer question. "Where were you when Kennedy was shot?"
Anonymous wrote:Born in ‘63 and don’t feel part of either the Boomers or GenXers. Parents are Greatest Generation and we lived in a large city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, if you remember the jfk assasination, you are a boomer. After, gen x
Yeah, that's the quintessential boomer question. "Where were you when Kennedy was shot?"
Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, if you remember the jfk assasination, you are a boomer. After, gen x
Anonymous wrote:I was born in 72, so definitely a generation Xer, and I always find it strange when demographers consider people born in the early 60's as baby boomers. I mean technically they may have been born during the time of an elevated birth rate, but they have nothing else in common with older baby boomers. It seems to me that generations should consist of people who shared a common culture when growing up. My parents were boomers born in the late 40's and they spent their high school years in the pre-drug, pre-sexual revolution era. People born in the early 6o's can't even remember that world. I've always considered those born in the early 60's to be honorary Xers.
Good point. I was born in 1955 - which I think is supposed to be the middle of the baby boom. But people keep going on about baby boomers like we all came out of school into a fabulous job market which was not the case for people not in the leading edge of the boom. I came out of school into a weak job market affected by stagflation.Anonymous wrote:Overall, I find generations to be too large. Generations would be more accurately depicted if they were broken down by decade. Millennials span from like 1980 to 2000, which is way too large.