Someone Asks Older People “What Is Something Today’s Youth Would Never Understand” And 35 People Deliver
There's a term called the generation gap and it refers to the differences in experiences, opinions, habits, and behavior that separate age groups.
To learn more about this phenomenon, Reddit user MatsGry decided to look at it from another perspective. One that is often neglected and ridiculed on the internet. Baby boomers. So they made a post on the platform, asking the elders: "What's something today's youth would never understand?"
People immediately started sending in their replies, listing all the things that millennials and zoomers — in their opinion — can't wrap their minds around. Of course, some of them are up for debate, but that made the comment section even more interesting.
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History Channel, Discovery Channel, The Learning Channel, and a bunch of other cable networks that are now dedicated to absolutely bottom-tier garbage reality TV shows used to be amazing nonstop documentary TV.
People could not always get a hold of you and it was a good thing.
No work calls at ungodly hours because you were expected to sleep with your phone on the pillow.
Needing to do a report on a topic. No internet. No encyclopedia on CD. Going to the actual library to find someone in your class already grabbed the one book on the subject.
Opening up the newspaper to look at the TV guide to see what was on that night.
Going to the bathroom during a commercial break and hearing the dreaded “IT’S ON!!” when you’re not done.
The relationship between audio cassettes and Bic pens (or pencils).
omg smoking EVERYWHERE! In theaters, planes, offices, hospitals, trains, restaurants, schools... just everywhere (and the outrage when it was finally banned lol)
The excitement of going to a video rental store on the weekends to get to pick out a movie.
Actually picking one out was just as exciting as watching the movie.
So, the title of this article will ultimately change and make this comment a bit pointless, but at the time of writing the title is something along the lines of "Boomers list things that Gen X and Millennials won't understand" and I have to point out that Blockbuster only ceased to be a thing well into a Millennial's teenhood. Millennials have experience of picking out rental movies. Gen X certainly did.
Calling the movie theatre to hear the recording with the movie times on it.
When you left work you left work. There is an emergency? Oh well, I guess we can solve that problem tomorrow.
The sheer joy of receiving a handwritten letter from someone you haven't seen in a long time. I really miss the days when I had a nice stationery set, and I would write long letters to friends and relatives.
Taking photos using those little rolls of film and having to take them into a shop for processing. You often wouldn't know if any of the photos were good until a couple of months later.
You also had to manually wind on the camera after every shot.
Picking up or saying goodbye to airline passengers right at the gate
Watching a draft lottery to see if your number would be low enough that you will be drafted to fight in a war in Asia
This one should be higher, it's the first one that actually fits the title, in that it happened to (US) boomers and it is almost unimaginable for most people in the west today. Most of the others would fit better in a list of 'things which people at the younger end of Millennial might not have known, but will have no problem understanding once told'.
Hovering over your stereo with your fingers ready to hit play and record simultaneously while the radio DJ intros the song you've been dying to hear.
Recording movies straight off the TV onto VHS tapes and having the dedication to stop the recording to cut out the ads.
I was pro at doing the cuttings, I should have been a video editor!
Be kind rewind.
Smoking or nonsmoking
I left a message but I think the tape cut out.
So when should I call?
Get off the line!
I got to swing by and drop off some film.
I tried calling but I think he's online right now.
Everything glass is brown and that's normal.
Making plans ahead of time (meet you in front of the theater at 8:25, okay?) and if said friend was late to show up, you had no idea what happened to them. No changing plans last minute, no finding out where they were, just you standing in the meeting place, wondering how long to wait, if you should just tell the ticket seller to let your friend know you’ll be inside etc... (we all had one of those friends).
Buying a home at 3-6 times your annual salary and being able to get by on a single income
1980 Mercedes Benz 450sl, nice car to drive. Rust in the front lower guard, common problem. Also V8 engine is very thirsty.
Asking for and writing down directions to somewhere, or even looking up and following directions on a map.
This I was really good at, I don't think I have ever been lost in my life.
Your friends used to just show up unannounced, and you'd have to hang out with them. It was called a pop in, and it was totally normal.
If there were 2 shows on tv at the same time and day you had to make a choice. No dvr no vcr no on demand
Lining up the carbon paper so you could get two copies of the document you were writing in the typewriter. And then how annoying it was if you made a mistake and had to break out the Twink.
How kids at one point were just everywhere with no supervision. Hell, when I was little it wasn't uncommon for a group of us under the age of 12 to just disappear into the forest/woods/desert for the entire goddamn day. As long as you were back before the streetlights turned on and didn't come back injured your parents just did not give a f**k so long as you were out of the house and out of their way.
Also, and this is definitely a guy thing, but every friend group had that friend with an older brother who at a certain point would bequeath their entire porn collection onto the younger kids, usually by telling them where it was hidden. I've seen hollowed out trees with hidden trap doors that had entire libraries of ancient playboy, hustler, and misc porno mags in them. Now if a kid wants to look at porn and their parents don't lock everything down, they just go to any of the millions of available sites for it.
I think youth do understand mundane things like landline phones and B/W TVs, but I don't think they understand how different the life felt back then. I'd say mobile phones and Internet caused the change somewhere in 2000-2005. We went from unconnected to always connected.
The world back then felt much slower. The days that were simply boring and nothing to do were super common. Today? I can't remember when I was previously really bored. Everything is so available and entertaining.
I also remember how small the world felt. Like, there's your family, guys at work, relatives and that's about it. Someone might have had a pen pal. You couldn't follow your idols, instead you just imagined how they were through their work and perhaps a poster.
Personally I'm super glad that I got the change to see both worlds.
Boredom is good though, it stimulates the brain to be more creative. We need more boredom these days. The constant stream of stimulation shortens your attention span and has other negative effects. I was born in 1990 and would give anything to go back to the days we were not constantly connected to everyone and everything. I want the slow days back. That peace was something else.
Getting in your vehicle and driving to your friends house to see if they were home. No cell phones, gas was cheap. Driving was freedom.
I miss not knowing where anyone was on a Friday night. You just had to drive around to all the regular spots looking for your friends. You didn't always find them but sometimes you met other cool people and had other adventures. There's less chance for serendipity when everyone knows where everyone is 24/7.
When I was a teen in the mid 90s growing up in NW London, whatever we were doing, everyone would end up at a particular bakery as it was the only one open at 2am to get beigels. Then we would see all the other people we know. It was a mass gathering every Saturday night. Was a lot of fun
Having to call your best friend on a landline and the ensuing anxiety that:
A. Their mom might answer. B. They might not be home and who the hell knows where they are?! C. Nobody answers and how long do I wait to call back???
The worst is when you called a landline looking for a friend and mum answered. "Is Jim there?", you ask. "No, he told me he was out with you today. I wonder where he's gone and who he's with?". You instantly know you're friend is about to be grounded forever the second he returns home. Sorry, dude.
Putting the empty glass milkbottles outside your door at night to have the new ones delivered in the morning.
Leaving school and having absolutely no idea what happened to school friends.
No idea what they looked like now, where they lived, what they did for a living, whether they were married, whether they had kids. Nothing at all.
After leaving school it was 20+ years later before I knew any of this stuff.
You saw them once every 10 years, if you and they went to your school reunion.
All the Christmas specials were on once a year and if you missed them, you didn’t see them for a year.
Better than repeating the SAME special for 7699886453745 times until your sick of seeing the special-
Driving down the road and seeing the sparkling brown innards of a cassette tape that had been eaten by someone's tape deck in their car strung at least two blocks long. God, I hated ejecting my cassette and seeing the tape still inside.
Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery
And having to fill out forms by hand, and mail them to the company to place an order!
How much you would argue with your friends about facts that you couldn't easily Google.
Being stuck on a toilet for a little bit and reading the shampoo bottles, packages on bars of soap, and whatever else might be within grabbing distance of the toilet.
A phone book where the names are listed in alphabetical order…by last name.
Before plastic bottles took off for beer and soda pop everything was bottled in glass. There was broken glass everywhere. Moms wee always yelling about watching out for broken glass.
In a bar or on a party you could dance on the table, piss drunk, pants on you knees, helicoptering your wiener. The next morning categorically deny that it ever happened and no one, absolutely no one could ever show you video on their phone that it did happen... Damn...those were the days.
Drive-in restaurants with car hops. A line of parking places under a canopy. Each had a speaker. They brought the food on a tray that attached to the driver’s open window. Dad ate off the tray. Mom opened the glove box and used the door for a tray. It had little indentations for cups. The kids just ate off their laps.
We could have eaten inside, sitting at a table, or taken the food home, but this was more fun.
Having people have no idea where you are or what you are doing.
When you didn’t want to pause the movie for too long because you were worried about the tape getting ruined.
“Be kind. Rewind”
Simply being limited to what is on the radio or your tape/cd collection
A few things I remember as a kid in the 70's:
getting our first microwave
getting a VHS player and actually being able to watch movies at home.
getting an Atari 2600 and being able to play games at home
We had a party line. Would not recommend.
411 for directory assistance
Having a number to call for time and temp
we only had an antenna and could get 3 channels (NBC, ABC and a fuzzy CBS, if the weather was okay)
Getting booted off the internet if someone picked up the extension in another room, and maaaaybe you could reconnect right away, if it wasn't at peak time, and by "right away" I mean at least five minutes later, probably longer.
If your sibling made you mad earlier in the day, it was a revenge best served cold.
It took an hour to download an mp3.
Do any of these people even know how old millennials are? We grew up with most of these things.
I think the "Boomers" they asked about this are the same people that see teenagers loitering around and shout about how "those bloody lazy Millennials are on my lawn again!", not realizing we've been adults for over a decade.
Load More Replies...As an older millennial, I recognise the majority of these from my childhood. This is a "Gen X and Millenial" list. If it was boomers it would be more like "I remember steam trains and getting messages by telegram".
I'm a younger millennial entering my 30's but I remember most of these... My brother is younger millenial and he does too...
Load More Replies...Do any of these people even know how old millennials are? We grew up with most of these things.
I think the "Boomers" they asked about this are the same people that see teenagers loitering around and shout about how "those bloody lazy Millennials are on my lawn again!", not realizing we've been adults for over a decade.
Load More Replies...As an older millennial, I recognise the majority of these from my childhood. This is a "Gen X and Millenial" list. If it was boomers it would be more like "I remember steam trains and getting messages by telegram".
I'm a younger millennial entering my 30's but I remember most of these... My brother is younger millenial and he does too...
Load More Replies...