Anonymous wrote:op - i'm sorry you are getting shredded. this board can be ridiculously mean.
yes we all feel like this. it's freaking hard and exhausting and dispiriting.
Anonymous wrote:op - i'm sorry you are getting shredded. this board can be ridiculously mean.
yes we all feel like this. it's freaking hard and exhausting and dispiriting.
Anonymous wrote:I love being Gen X.
That is all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have gazed way too far into your own navel.
+ Was about to say the same but you say it with so much wit! OP, don't be your own worst enemy. It's a choice to be happy. It's easy to make excuses, and blame everything else. I could blame the Great Recession, or whatever, but I have to put energy into it that takes away energy from making today better. You can spend all your time in 2010, or in today. You can't change 2010.
Anonymous wrote:You made a lot of bad choices - most of which have nothing to do with your generation. I'm an older millennial and have none of these problems. I went to a college my parents could afford and graduated with no loans. Then I took out modest loans for grad school. Met my spouse in grad school. (They're technically the youngest Gen-x age but they also went to schools they could afford and had very modest loans post grad school.) We waited till late 20s to get married. Then waited a few years in our early 30s to have our one (by choice) kid. Our loans were paid off before we had kids and we owned our home. We have good paying jobs that are family friendly and we have no problem affording our small and happy family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op - i'm sorry you are getting shredded. this board can be ridiculously mean.
yes we all feel like this. it's freaking hard and exhausting and dispiriting.
According to the replies not ALL feel like this. Just you and Op.
Anonymous wrote:You made a lot of bad choices - most of which have nothing to do with your generation. I'm an older millennial and have none of these problems. I went to a college my parents could afford and graduated with no loans. Then I took out modest loans for grad school. Met my spouse in grad school. (They're technically the youngest Gen-x age but they also went to schools they could afford and had very modest loans post grad school.) We waited till late 20s to get married. Then waited a few years in our early 30s to have our one (by choice) kid. Our loans were paid off before we had kids and we owned our home. We have good paying jobs that are family friendly and we have no problem affording our small and happy family.
Anonymous wrote:op - i'm sorry you are getting shredded. this board can be ridiculously mean.
yes we all feel like this. it's freaking hard and exhausting and dispiriting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No judgment please, so step aside Gen X.
Elder millennial here who was sold (literally) the American dream. You have no other choice but to go to college and you will take out exorbitant loans. Marry in the Midwest by mid-20s. 3 kids by early 30s. On the back of highly taxed retirement withdrawal, somehow put a down payment on a decent home and now house and student loan poor. No chance for college savings for kids.
Add unhappy in marriage, blaming one another for ending up in *this* place. From coming to age in the era of 9/11, graduating college in an economic recession, attempting hope in Obama era to be shattered with Trump. Trying to raise a young family and being slammed with a pandemic. Everything has been terrible, silver lining coming only in the love I have for my kids. Dark cloud over everything post-Nintendo in the basement with my siblings - 1995.
Will a divorce be the final straw? Are elder millennials f**ked forever or am I the special kind that was hit with it all?
You made bad choice after bad choice.
I went to a state school. 1 kid, in my late 30s. Starter home at 30 that we stayed in until I was 45.
Did you never read a book of a newspaper growing up? It was clear to me from the time I was in junior high that having kids was incredibly expensive and made you terribly vulnerable. And having multiple kids stretches people very thin.
Kids are the ultimate indulgence. Don't have any until you have money in the bank and a rock solid marriage.
Your own choices led you to this place. If you were smart you would figure out how to be back on the team with your DH to tackle some of these issues.