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I’m Feeling the Generation Gap

It is more like a chasm!

By Calvin LondonPublished 13 days ago 4 min read

Funny thing, as you get older, everything changes. We start to regress. I call it the cycle of life. We start out as infants who are dependent on our parents. As we get older, we regress and become dependent on our children. Now, I don’t have children, so I am going to be in real strife in the not-too-distant future.

We also go backwards in our behaviour. Some call it senility. I prefer to think it is more a problem of data overload. I have accumulated so much data (knowledge) over the years that it takes me longer to find it in my brain. That may also be why you go deaf: all that data puts extra pressure on your inner ear, so it does not work as well.

Aging gracefully is just a nice way of saying you’re slowly looking worse. However, when you consider the alternative, it’s not really that bad.

I tell people that I am becoming a grumpy old man. Truth is, I am already there. I just don’t get the younger generation. For me, the generation gap is becoming more of a chasm than a gap.

Baby boomers vs. the rest of the world

I’m a baby boomer (1946-1964). Hardworking, loyal, competitive, and goal-oriented, I am motivated by recognition and achievement.

Looking back on my years, I would say I spent too much time focused on success. I spent over 16 years (full-time and part-time) at the university to earn qualifications. Yes, they served me well in terms of employment, but I missed out on a lot of life in doing so.

I was definitely goal-oriented and hardworking. At university, I was a workaholic. I got my qualification more from hard work and persistence than anything else. At the height of my career, I spent way too much time working. My average day started at about 6 a.m. and went until after 7 p.m.

I grew up with significant technological change and learned to leverage available resources. Resource options are so much greater these days than when I was growing up. Technology has spoiled younger generations. They expect it as an answer, not a privilege. Cars, phones, and computers are a few examples.

Later generations have no concept of life without a mobile phone, for example. The thought of not having fifty TV channels to select from does not compute.

I came from a generation where, for the most part, ethics were an important behavioural trait. Violence was much lower back then. People respected each other's lives and property. Graffiti was non-existent. Today, it is rampant.

I don’t judge anyone, but I’ve struggled with the idea of two people of the same sex being “married” and having kids. I do not frown upon, nor am I saying anything negative. Simply, it is a different world now, and I accept that. Growing up and in my early work years, homosexuality was hidden. It was frowned upon and rarely discussed.

Baby boomers believed it was important to do their best and get the most out of life. Success was measured by the size of your house, the make of the car you drove, and the amount of money that you had.

You had to be successful unless you were left an inheritance from your family. You purchased a house through hard work and saving, and it is a priority.

The next generations

Later generations—Gen X, Millennials, Gen Z, and Gen Alpha—each have unique traits. Their key behaviours and beliefs naturally arise from changing global circumstances.

Gen X (1965 – 1980) was born into a world of change. AIDS hit the world. Divorce rates rose in many countries. Both partners began to work more out of need and survival, not just desire. They became the glue of society. Many Gen Xers later became key leaders in tech.

Millennials (1981-1996) are today the biggest component of the global workforce. Hey are just entering the phase of their wealth accumulation. Many are burnt out from the relentless pursuit of getting ahead, such as buying a house. They also have a false sense that everything will be alright.

This is also the generation where many still live at home. As a baby boomer, moving out of home was one of those goals that you wanted to achieve as soon as possible. Today’s millennials do not have, either by desire or necessity, the same luxury.

Gen Z (1997 – 2012) has the biggest challenges. They have been born into a world of technology and social media, and all the influences that come with them. They question everything and trust nothing. Who can blame them with the state of the world as it is?

A lot is made of the generation gap. The term “generations” was coined in the 1960s by sociologists. They tried to explain why people of different ages think and believe differently.

I certainly do not envy the most recent generations. Things are different now, and that is probably the best way to explain the generation gap (chasm). It is nobody’s fault. It is simply life in motion. We all respond to circumstances differently; that is human nature.

Generational differences in beliefs, politics, language, and values can cause misunderstandings and tension.

The generation gap results from differences in how we see the world based on our experiences. They will always be different. I see the world differently than a 25-year-old would. A ten-year-old now will see the world very differently in fifty years.

Then again, maybe I'm just becoming a grumpy old man!

Till next time,

Calvin

Stream of Consciousnesshumanity

About the Creator

Calvin London

I write fiction, non-fiction and poetry about all things weird and wonderful, past and present. Life is full of different things to spark your imagination. All you have to do is embrace it - join me on my journey.

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  • Shirley Belk7 days ago

    I loved this, Calvin! I wrote something similar to this not long ago because my grands (mostly Gen Zs) started in on the Boomer stuff.

  • Andrea Corwin 12 days ago

    Wow, Calvin, you laid this out perfectly. I’m with you there cause I’m a boomer too. Life is hard for the younger people now - it’s not like it was when we were young. I mean it was hard than too, but like you said, many can’t afford to live out on their own. I wanted to get out as soon as I could. I do worry that with all the technology and the ease invented things have created in our lives, that if it were gone, the younger people would not know how to get on. Could they boil some water without a microwave? Can they stay warm if the heat goes out or their electricity isn’t available; what would they do if their cell phone coverage went down? Honestly, it made my brain tired thinking of how you had to lay all this out to write this story. Great job.❤️

  • Sara Wilson12 days ago

    I'm a millennial and I moved out at 15. I've worked my whole life doing a huge assortment of random jobs. I've worked at subway, luxury hotels, lodges, I've been a house sitter, baby sitter, I once was a door to door sales person and have even done professional modeling and makeup artistry. All of that has left me with no savings lol. Probably because I was with someone who was taking every dollar I made from me. I currently am a homeschooling mom of 3. I stay home and do the house wife thing while my husband works. My only income comes from writing and stuff like that. It's not much. I have a constant pull to go "get a real job" because while my plate is so full that it's overflowing, somehow I've been convinced I'm not doing anything of value and am a "stepford wife". I grew up poor. We had channel 64 and often, no phone line. Lucky to have hit water and food. I was also raised in a house with no dad except the multiple steo dad's my mom brought home from the bar. None of which were kind. Sometimes I feel amazed I'm still here and able to be a good wife and mom because I was never taught how. I worry for my kids only in the advances of anger in people and crazy new technology. I don't feel connected to hardly anyone my age... My friends are my kids and a group of a lot of people older than me lol.

  • Marie381Uk 13 days ago

    Very accurate I love them your the best 🦋🙏🦋

  • I'm a Millenial but even for me it is so hard to keep up with the changes that's happening

  • Boy, these are spot on, Calvin. I’m moving into that crabby old lady…I’m afraid it’s an easier fit than I’d like to admit. Lol

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