The ‘Xennial Kid’ social media project, aka “your neighborhood nostalgia dealer,” is fairly new. It was created in July 2024, and in just a year and a half, it amassed 470k followers.
Xennials, also known as Xillennials, are a micro-generation. They include people who were born on the cusp of Generation X and Millennials (aka Generation Y).
How someone interprets a generation or micro-generation depends on the researcher, the country they’re studying, etc. But broadly speaking, Xennials include people born in the US from 1977 to 1983. Of course, some researchers broaden this timeframe.
Typically, Xennials had an analog childhood and a digital young adulthood. They are almost exclusively the children of Baby Boomers and came of age during the 1990s.
Xennials are not to be confused with Zillennials, which are a micro-generation of folks between Millennials and Generation Z.
Zillennials are individuals born between 1993 and 1998. That being said, some researchers believe that this micro-generation encompasses people from as early as the 1990s all the way to the early 2000s.
Baby Boomers include people born between 1946 and 1964. Generation X refers to individuals born between 1965 and 1980.
Millennials were born between 1981 and 1996. Generation Z, aka Zoomers, are folks born between 1997 and 2012.
Generation Alpha includes kids born between 2013 and the mid-2020s. The newest generation, Generation Beta, aka Gen Beta, refers to children born from 2025 all the way to 2039. The latter still seems like the far-off future, writing this now in early 2026.
If you ever hear someone older grumbling about ‘kids these days’ and referring to them as Millennials, they’re probably thinking about members of either Gen A or Gen Z, not Gen Y.
While inter-generational tension is inevitable to a certain extent, we can all strive to be more accepting of others despite our differences.
Broadly speaking, each generation tends to think that those preceding them are too old-fashioned and behind the times, while those that come after them supposedly don’t have the right values, work ethic, etc. anymore. It’s a tale as old as time.
Nostalgia has lots of benefits, but in larger doses, it can be quite harmful, too. We tend to feel the most nostalgia for our youth, when we were full of energy, had fewer responsibilities, and felt like we were unstoppable.
On the positive side of things, reminiscing about the past and nostalgic content can make you more resilient in the present. What’s more, nostalgia can help you fight off feelings of existential anxiety and loneliness.






















