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Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Traditionalist or Baby Boomer?






My brother-in-law was here a while back and he got to talking about the generations. Apparently he had heard a talk recently where they described the different generations from the Traditionalists to the Baby Boomers to Generation X (Baby Busters) to the Millenials (or Generation Y). This is some of the info he passed on to me.

I know there are books about this, but I haven't read any. However, it is interesting. Since we were born in the summer of 1945, DH and I actually fall right between the Traditionalists and the Baby Boomers. But since we were infants in 1945, we consider ourselves Baby Boomers since we really grew up during that period... graduating from high school and starting college in 1963.



familiar reader


still have my mom's table... just like this but white
remember these?



The following information shows the events and experiences that formed these groups... as well as the characteristics that became a part of each. 

I found it interesting reading. Thought you might also.



Find your generation:


1. Traditionalist – Born 1922-1945
(DH and I were born the summer of 1945)

2. Baby Boomers – Born 1946-1964

3. Generation X or Baby Busters – Born 1965-1979
(Our 3 children were born during this time)

4. Millennial or Generation Y – Born 1980-2000


Events and Experiences of Traditionalists: (1922 - 1945)

Great Depression
New Deal
World War II
Korean War

Events and Experiences of Baby Boomers : (1946 - 1964)

Civil rights
Sexual Revolution

Beatles (& Elvis!) • Cold War
Nuclear Bomb Drill in School
Space travel
Assassinations

Events and Experiences of Gen Xer’s: (1965 - 1979)

Fall of Berlin Wall
Watergate
Women’s liberation
Desert Storm
Energy crisis

Events and Experiences of the Millennials: (1980 - 2000)

Oklahoma City Bombing
Bill and Monica
Columbine Shooting
September 11, 2001
Technology
Child Focused World



Characteristics of Traditionalists: (1922 - 1945)

Resourceful Savers
Pay With Cash
Communication 
Face to Face
Handshake
Family Traditional 
Nuclear
Hard Work Obligation 
Duty Before Pleasure
Survival Mode

Characteristics of Baby Boomers: (1946 - 1964)

Driven
Wealthiest Generation
Competitive
Work Hard-Earn Reward
Communication
Call Me Anytime
Television Generation
Information Delivered
Justice for All
Civil Rights
Opportunity
Life is an Adventure
Time to Ponder
Possibility


Characteristics of Generation X: (1965 - 1979)

Adaptable
Grew with Technology
Service Economy Accepting
Ambitious
Over 60% Attended College
Achieve 'On Their Own Terms'
Flexible
Cherish Time with Family, Friends
Don’t Like Structure
Hands Off
Independent
Values Freedom
Self Sufficient
Responsibility
Less Team Oriented
Fun!!


Characteristics of Millennials: (1980 - 2000)

Achievement Oriented
Pampered by Parents
Confident
High Expectations
Question Authority
Connected
Daily, Instant
Tweets, Blogs, FB
Smart Phones
Diverse
Merged Families
Most Accepting Group
Family Centric
Work/Life Balance
Flexible Schedules
Tech Savvy *
Attention Craving
Feedback
Guidance
Praise
Team Oriented
No Child Left Behind
Seek Input 

I wrote this post a while back and never posted it - actually forgot about it until recently reading rants about Baby Boomers on another's blog where they blamed the world's problems on BB's. Well, I'm not political and dislike people who complain but have no solution themselves... (putting blame is an easy out) so their rants didn't sit well with me. But that's neither here nor there.

I just wanted to say that although DH and I were both born in the summer of 1945, we grew up as Baby Boomers and our kids are definitely Generation X. DH and I worked and went to college, got married, and soon became parents. We both continued to work and raise our children all 3 of whom went to college, and now have good jobs and families of their own. So, I find it difficult to understand exactly where we went wrong. Now that we're retired, we aren't wealthy, but have managed to pay off our home and live a comfortable, if not affluent, life. 

I do agree that it's harder for Generation X to save, and it seems necessary for both parents to work - but I'm not sure why the blame of this can be put on the Baby Boomers. It seems to me that each generation faces their own challenges and must take up the gauntlet to meet it. I don't see how finding fault with the previous generation solves anything (IMO).

... just my 2 cents