If you were born between 1965 and 1980, you lived through a weird and wonderful time that nobody else quite understands. You were the last generation to know life before the internet, the first to master Nintendo, and somehow survived childhoods with zero supervision and bikes without helmets. These 30 memories are like a secret handshake – from staying up late to watch MTV actually play music videos to the anxiety of waiting by the radio to record your favorite song. Sure, the younger folks think you're ancient and Boomers think you're slackers, but you know the truth: you had the perfect balance of freedom and just enough technology to make life interesting.
#1

Being the last unreachable generation. There were hours where no one knew where we were and our parents has zero way to contact us.
20points
#2

For me the most jarring thing is hearing people refer to records as "vinyls".
THEY'RE NOT CALLED VINYLS. THEY WERE NEVER CALLED VINYLS. CALLING RECORDS VINYLS IS LIKE CALLING CDS "PLASTICS". FFS, STOP THE MADNESS!!!
Records. They're called records. 12" records are also called LPs, short for Long Playing Records. 10" records are EPs, short for Extended Play Records, or 78s (if they are 78RPM). 7" records are 45s (because 45RPM) or singles.
GET OFF MY LAWN.
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19points
#3

Being old enough to remember (and appreciate) life before the Internet and cellphones but being young enough to transition into that world without a hitch.
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18points
#4

I admit to getting tired about hearing how easy it was for me to get through college and such 25ish years ago. I also remember the 70s and 80s, and amazingly, my parents could not afford a giant house with one person working as a coffee shop attendant.
Every generation has some hardships, and today's young people have been screwed over in some ways, but they go way overboard with how easy it was for everyone before them.
I was there. I literally have social security tax records since I was 12, because I had to work. It was not some magical paradise.
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17points
#5

Buying something and owning it forever instead of paying an endless monthly or annual subscription.
16points
#6

LOL my oldest kid told me how OJ Simpson may have not committed the crime and the matching DNA was likely his son Jasons. Listen here, I didn’t watch court TV for 6 weeks and read 20 books on the case to have you lecture me about a 10 second Tik Tok clip that “solved” the crime of the century!! You don’t even know who Kato is !!!
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16points
#7

My son came home from High School one year and pulled out his phone so I could hear this great new Band.
Aerosmith....
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16points
#8

Imagine being a person who grew up in former soviet union listening to young people talk about the benefits of communism.
16points
#9

I most recently remember this in 2020, after the election, when Trump was still challenging the results. Even after Biden was declared the winner, I remember seeing posts on Twitter from Trump supporters saying things like "Don't give up! Back in 2000 the liberal media spent a month calling Gore the winner and referring to him as President-Elect, until the Supreme Court declared Bush the rightful winner!" And I was sitting there going, no, that's not what happened at all. How you are lying about something that was 20 years ago? This isn't ancient history?
16points
#10

I'm just on that border between Gen X and the oldest Millennials but my sister is 8 years older than me. We would call the local rock station to request a song then sit there with a tape at the ready to hit record as soon as they played our song. Repeat that about 10x and you've got a nice mixtape.
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16points
#11

Just getting on your bike and being GONE for six or seven hours.
Can't reach me, I'm with friends doing WHATEVER.
The freedom of not being tethered.
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15points
#12

My dad got laid off twice in the early '80s, when I was a kid. It was a rough period for a lot of my relatives also. You never hear about that early-'80s recession anymore, people just go, 'Oh, everyone could buy a big house with just a high school degree.' There were a ton of homeless people in the '80s where I grew up also.
15points
#14

Massive CD collections neatly stored in binders for easy access.
15points
#15

Politics being mundane, and not teeth-grindingly insane and divisive.
I know things were just as bad back then, but it wasn't shoved up our faces sideways with hot sauce in a 24 hour news cycle.
14points
#16

Yup. My favorite is when they are like: "What's your source? You have no proof!" and it's like: "I didn't read about this, I lived it.".
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14points
#17

The fact that our generation was kind if passed over. When I started my career, they wanted us to be deferential to older more experienced co-workers, “pay your dues and wait your turn!” As soon as we became more seasoned, they were like, look at all these amazing millennials and their great ideas! We’re like the Jan Brady of generations.
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14points
#18

I’m a HS teacher and use Lies my Teacher told me by James Loewen as a reference for American history.
13points
#20

I took my son to a dinosaur exhibit, literally everything I learned about Dinosaurs is now wrong, including names of dinosaurs.
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12points




