Generation X

https://regenamex.com/uwllv26t Ambien Sleeping Pill Online Great article at Business Week. Oddly enough, I never knew I was part of “Generation X” — I guess you learn something new every day…

17 thoughts on “Generation X”

  1. https://www.ordovicianatlas.org/h9g3d6585 And oddly enough, I just don’t identify with the characters in the novel https://olashirt.com/5dxfdplqyw1 Generation X. Shampoo Planet, however, could be a roman a clef of some parts of my life. https://www.nhgazette.com/2025/02/01/ex2mbk3 Microserfs hit too close to home, I have friends that have been with MS since the mid 80s and early 90s.

    Klonopin Cheap Oh, what, we’re not discussing the works of Douglas Coupland? Sorry…

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  2. https://baixacultura.org/2025/02/01/p86lfweyc Sorry Nathan. You’re a definitely a Baby Boomer.

    https://www.beecavebee.com/hgrgqaay 1946 to 1964 is the Baby Boom. (We discussed the Baby Boom in every single Gerontology class I took.)

    I’m Generation X–except for that whole fear of technology thing.

    Buy Clonazepam 2Mg And how depressing is this? We had “The Greatest Generation” followed by “The Baby Boomers” then “Generation X” and then “Generation Y”

    Buy Clonazepam Cheap Without Prescription At least Generation X had a specific meaning, in that the demographers couldn’t figure us the hell out. Generation Y is just kinda sad, like they couldn’t come up with a relevant cutsey name.

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  3. https://olashirt.com/qbdim5ii As a 66er, I’m in that “not a Boomer, not really an Xer” crowd. Sure, they adjust the dates to make them contiguous, but really, how much does someone born in 64 have in common with someone born in 46? How much does someone born in 65 have with someone born AFTER disco? But yeah, us (gosh darn it they lump me in there anyway) Xers certainly have gotten the fuzzy-end of the lollipop most of our lives, sandwiched between the Boomers and their demon-seed.

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  4. From what wikipedia said nothing defines Gen Y except that we use computers more than the last generation. That’s not much to be remembered by.

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  5. Steve,

    https://electroseleccio.cat/u37ul4ztw0 Technically it has to do with population rates more than anything else. Well, that and the fact that your parents were likely to lived through WWII.

    https://www.nhgazette.com/2025/02/01/6us9qla51c Gen X are the kids of those born during WWI and of the earliest baby boomers–those who got married and had kids young (a relatively small population) and we were the first latch key kids, the first kids for which divorce became commonplace, and the first generation to suffer through “quality time”

    Ambien Online Visa No, not all Gen Xers went through this, but chances are we had good friends who went through those things if we ourselves did not, whereas the Baby Boomers were more likely to have a stay-at-home mom or another relative with whom they stayed instead of going to a Day Care Center.

    In my experience, GenXers have tended to wait to get married and having kids, having see what our parent’s generation put their kids through. But that’s just what I’ve seen–I have no empirical data for that. 🙂

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