Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"now I am 30 and make 180k and can't afford to buy a the equivillent sized boomer house because I bought after 2005 and can't sell my current small one."
And of course none of the boomers understand why this is happening because to do so would admit that THEIR having these things is the result of luck and not just their hard work.
My in laws bought a house in N. Arlington for $35K 30 years ago. My FIL went right out of college into a cushy job and was head of his division without 10 years. He retired making over a million dollars with a BA.
Whereas me and DH have grad degrees and are struggling, making less than $100K. Of course ILs don't get it, since $85K was a lot to them when they started. We are always being asked why we don't buy a house someplace a little further out, like Del Ray, or why we don't just save a little? They literally DO NOT GET IT.
I'm so tired of me and DH being made to feel like losers because I didn't have the opportunities and LUCK they did.
Step two: learn how to properly use pronouns.
This may be why you aren't making a lot of money, seriously.
This is part of the boomer mindset, they have no real skill to create products so they will nit pick at things like grammar and spelling. While the younger generation is done communicating 500 ideas quickly and done implementing them, the boomer is still trying to work on the problem number one.
Anonymous wrote:If there's such an immense crisis in Social Security and Medicare, why are all the reform plans post-dated a good decade-plus?
"Maybe you should ask them to share their cushy $20K a year in Social Security with you. Boo hoo."
My mom and dad are both Feds. When they retire in a few years in their late 50s they will receive around 80+% of their salary for the rest of their lives. Then on top of that, they both get an extra $20K in SS? They don't need it. I'm paying for part of it--and I can barely afford to make ends meet because my Fed job was cut last year.
How is this fair to anybody?
I'm a boomer and worked for every single thing I've ever had. Our generation didn't feel entitled to things we couldn't afford. Now, everyone has a cell phone, computer, tivo, cable, etc. Get a second job if you can't afford things...that's what we did.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sick of millenials who want flexible jobs and high salaries but don't want to put in the time to succeed.
Anonymous wrote:The skills of the younger generation surpass the boomers expesically since the boomers still use old business processes and communications that are obsolete. So yes can't wait till you all go away.
Anonymous wrote:I never know what I am. Am I a baby boomer or a Gen X? I was born in 1967. I am 44.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a boomer and worked for every single thing I've ever had. Our generation didn't feel entitled to things we couldn't afford. Now, everyone has a cell phone, computer, tivo, cable, etc. Get a second job if you can't afford things...that's what we did. Plus, we never went out to eat in college...now all college students seem to.
Anonymous wrote:"now I am 30 and make 180k and can't afford to buy a the equivillent sized boomer house because I bought after 2005 and can't sell my current small one."
And of course none of the boomers understand why this is happening because to do so would admit that THEIR having these things is the result of luck and not just their hard work.
My in laws bought a house in N. Arlington for $35K 30 years ago. My FIL went right out of college into a cushy job and was head of his division without 10 years. He retired making over a million dollars with a BA.
Whereas me and DH have grad degrees and are struggling, making less than $100K. Of course ILs don't get it, since $85K was a lot to them when they started. We are always being asked why we don't buy a house someplace a little further out, like Del Ray, or why we don't just save a little? They literally DO NOT GET IT.
I'm so tired of me and DH being made to feel like losers because I didn't have the opportunities and LUCK they did.