I saw one of the rules to be Gen X was served during the first Gulf War? So I guess I am Gen X.Fuzzy Necromancer wrote: ↑Wed Apr 28, 2021 8:18 amIn any generational discourse about Millenials and Boomers, Gen X will weigh in simply to remind us that Gen X exists.
So this is what I told the kid (17) that works near me. Mark Twain once said "When I was twenty my father was dumber than a post. When I was thirty I was amazed at how much he had learned." You have spent your whole life being told what to do. You are about to go out into the world and make your own decisions. And most anything I tell you will be ignored till you learn the lessons everyone before you has made. This I will recommend. When you get your first place. Apartment or house. Have your utility bill on a monthly plan so it is the same every month. Sure some months you might use less. But I promise you will turn on your AC in the summer, and run heat in the winter. Monthly bill is easier to plan for.
I have told that to a few people moving out of their parents' home for the first time.
I guess that is the wisdom I can pass on that will be heard.
As to my parents generation and the generation after mine? My father is a Boomer I suppose and he blames computers for ruining everything. And to an extent he is not entirely wrong. "Yes dad the computer in a car can foul up. But when was the last time you got a tune up? Or worried the car would not start on a cold day? Yes the digital signal on TV can glitch and pixelate. But you never see ghosting or rolling anymore. Everything has a cost."
To the younger generation, do we have to change things for the sake of changing them? I get improving function. I get fixing what is broken. What was the point of moving where certain buttons are in paint? Or changing the name programs to apps?
And I guess that is my Gen X insert to say I am here. . .