Anonymous wrote:We also dealt with rapidly rising house prices (as did Millenials but they had much much richer parents who could help them out).
Layoffs were the norm for our generation, as our parents were the first to experience them and being unemployable at middle age and the fall out from that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The article was so depressing, with points that could be extrapolated to so many other industries. Gen X is stuck behind intransigent Boomers and squeezed by entitled, performative Millennials on the other end. We're all exhausted because most of us have been working since age 14, if not earlier (under the table) but we can't retire yet, if ever.
You not be able to retire at your age is your fault with the explosive market growth. Leave it to a Gen X to sit with their thumb up their hiney on the sidelines then whine when the world passes them by.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We also dealt with rapidly rising house prices (as did Millenials but they had much much richer parents who could help them out).
Layoffs were the norm for our generation, as our parents were the first to experience them and being unemployable at middle age and the fall out from that.
My husband and I are millennials and received zero help from our parents to buy a house.
Who paid for your colleges?
Anonymous wrote:My friend was a graphic designer. She’s now a bartender.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We also dealt with rapidly rising house prices (as did Millenials but they had much much richer parents who could help them out).
Layoffs were the norm for our generation, as our parents were the first to experience them and being unemployable at middle age and the fall out from that.
My husband and I are millennials and received zero help from our parents to buy a house.
Who paid for your colleges?
Anonymous wrote:The thing I thought was odd about the article is that while it was discussing careers/jobs “disappearing” today, many of the examples made it clear that the fields were already reducing in scope when the Gen-X subjects were in their mid-late 20’s/early 30’s.
E.g., the guy who was working for Spin in the early 2000’s in NYC making $31K a year. Which would have been quite challenging to live on by then and he was in his early 30’s. My first real job in 1990 in the Midwest paid $22,500 and that was considered a pretty low salary.
The article content seemed relevant in, say 2005-2010, not 2025.
Anonymous wrote:I just finished reading this article two minutes ago.
I think we need to go back to when people had their own businesses. It wasn’t so long ago! The trouble is that America is optimized for large corporations and it’s hard to survive as a mom n pop operation.
Anonymous wrote:The article was so depressing, with points that could be extrapolated to so many other industries. Gen X is stuck behind intransigent Boomers and squeezed by entitled, performative Millennials on the other end. We're all exhausted because most of us have been working since age 14, if not earlier (under the table) but we can't retire yet, if ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We also dealt with rapidly rising house prices (as did Millenials but they had much much richer parents who could help them out).
Layoffs were the norm for our generation, as our parents were the first to experience them and being unemployable at middle age and the fall out from that.
My husband and I are millennials and received zero help from our parents to buy a house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most Gen Xers have Boomer parents and even fewer, Silent Generationers.
I’m one. Born 1970 to parents born in 1934 and 1937.
DH has parents a full decade younger.
Yep. I was born in 77 and have parents from 42 and 46–one Silent, one Boomer.