Anonymous wrote:Xennial here (1980), or Oregon Trail microgeneration (I've heard this discussed as 1978-1982). I think I'm closer to the Millennials than Gen-X. Too young to really experience the 80s and came of age in the 90s. I'd consider myself an older Millennial rather than Gen-X since I never really got the disaffected, slacker part of that generation. The 90s were fun and optimistic overall. Defining generational experiences were the internet as a teenager, Napster in college, 9/11 at 21 and back to back financial shocks (Dotcom crash and Great Recession). I fortunately had a long enough start to my career so that it wasn't derailed at the outset like many later Millennials.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither.
My parents were the Silent Generation, right before the Boomers.
I identify with them. They were also a small generation—self-sufficient, independent and non-whiners.
Born in 1970
My husband born in 1971, me in 1970, were just saying the same thing. Our parents were silent generation born between 1941-1943 and it makes sense their kids were Gen X as the generations were both small and characterized as independent and self-sufficient.
The Silent Generation helped shape 20th century pop culture, with pioneering rock musicians, iconic filmmakers, television legends, beat poets, gonzo journalists and groundbreaking political satirists.
Generation X is independent, resourceful, and self-sufficient. They value freedom and responsibility in the workplace. Many in this generation display a casual disdain for authority and structured work hours. They dislike being micro-managed and embrace a hands-off management philosophy.
Hell yea— I work from home and my husband is an independent consultant.
My kids are Gen Y. They are fairly cynical/practical. The 14-year old started his own lawn business to make $. They are less about social media than their 20-something millennial cousins.
I thought the silent generation were born in the 30s- too young to fight in WWII, but old enough to fight in Korea. I think those born in 1941-43 were too young to fight in Korea.
Anonymous wrote:Born in ‘65 and can not stand the boomers - their music and culture. So tired of it being jammed down your throat and told how great everything boomer is.
Millennials...I think they are going to be a very bitter generation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1978 here. I think a lot of us younger Gen Xers bridge the gap between the Boomers and millennials. There are aspects of both that we can’t relate to, but a lot that we can. It’s a unique position to be in, really. We are the pragmatists who can deal with both sides - if they cared to listen to us, that is. Shrug.
This is why I think the micro-generation 1975-1985 ish makes sense. The "Oregon Trail" generation or the "Bridger" generation, sometimes Xennials. Basically those of us who grew up without the internet and cell phones, etc. but were introduced to these things early enough to adapt to them fairly easily.
/older Millenial
I think 1980-1985 would be more appropriate
Anonymous wrote:[b]1971 and I am more of a Millennial because I appreciate they they ushered in the flexible schedule and the casual-dress workplace.
My parents are typical selfish Boomers who tick all the boxes:
Didn't save enough for retirement
Can't figure out how to recycle so don't bother
Need constant desktop support for basic life
Self-involved to the point that they are checked out of grandchildren's lives (and not just mine)
Anonymous wrote:I am in the microgeneration between x and millennial - the xennials.
In reading the definitions of the microgeneration, it explained why I never truly felt like a gen xer