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Heckyoubuddy

@holyfuckmrfree-blog / holyfuckmrfree-blog.tumblr.com

-I'm Ellie-I'm 18
- just a sad teen getting by
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a 90’s kid? don’t you mean sad adult?

70,000 people have reblogged this but no one is trying to defend themselves

There is nothing to defend

This is the most solid explanation of our decade I have ever heard.

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fakenasty

Oh my god

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retr0philia

Just to add onto that, our childhood wasn’t even technology based. We grew up knowing of chalk, skateboards, jump rope, street hockey, playgrounds, butterfly collecting, etc. Slowly technology took over our lives and now there are hardly kids playing outside in the summer. We can clearly remember our childhood as it was and now we can see the clear line between it. We were the generation right smack in the middle of it all. Our parents were of non-tech and our children/young siblings will be all tech.

Not to mention, ours was the last generation that grew up with all those bright promises of “work hard, go to college, and you’ll have a successful life,” only to find those hopes abruptly dashed when the housing bubble burst. Milliennials have grown up expecting that disappointment, because for them, the problem has been there since Day One.

So 90s kids aren’t just nostalgic…we’re BITTER. And we ache for those days when we could still think that the world was boundless and full of the opportunities we were promised since the first day of kindergarten.

Every time someone adds to this i have to reblog.

This though.

And of course we’re the generation that saw horror unfolding live in real time.

If you’re a 90s kid, you witnessed:

-the Collapse of the WTC on live tv, which meant you saw hundreds of people choose a “cleaner death” by jumping from burning towers, watched thousands die as the towers collapsed on them, and can listen to Kevin Cosgrove’s death screams on YOUTUBE -the Attack on the Pentagon -United Flight 93, where flying the plane into the dirt was the only good option -the War on Terror, now on every channel all the time -the Anthrax Attacks -The London Bombing -The Indian Ocean Tsunami -the uncountable number of terror attacks worldwide, including Afghanistan, Pakistan, Belgium, Paris, Kenya, Nigeria, Tunisia, and so many more I can hardly conceptualize them -Hurricane Katrina and seeing the bodies of the deceased floating in the drowned streets in August heat while Bush vacationed at his fucking ranch -Robert Picton Paedophilia scandals in the Catholic Church -the rise of the Evangelical Right-Wing -school shootings like Columbine, Dawson, Sandy Hook, and about a hundred more -mass shootings like Aurora -the Japanese Earthquake, Tsunami and Fukushima Meltdown -the Israel/Palestine conflict(s) -global warming and the Sixth Mass Extinction -mass famine in sub-Saharan Africa -Daesh -Syria -the Global Financial Crisis -the PATRIOT Act -WikiLeaks, NSA wire taps -Guantanamo Bay -the Balkan War(s) -Rwanda Genocide

…we’re nostalgic for “the good old days” for a reason.

Holy shit. I’ve never seen all of the terrible things that have happened since I turned 11 (just old enough to be aware of it all) listed together in one place before. No wonder I’m so angry all the time. Oh my god.

The scary thing is, those are just the ones a beige girl from the first world could rattle off the top of her head.

Imagine all the ones I MISSED.

You could make a decent argument that our entire generation shows symptoms of trauma.

Wow. It makes a lot of sense.

I’m not sure if I should tag this for all of the things AIA listed, and if so, what, so if anyone has a suggestion hmu.

#bad shit happens to good people?

Other than that, I didn’t provide links for a reason. But because we live in a hyper-connected planet, things that would otherwise have been localized or ignored are now readily accessible.

Our parents never had to deal with Bataclan survivors live-tweeting, and they DEFINITELY never had to deal with first-person video of mass shootings/natural disasters/political strife from fifteen different angles in high-definition iPhone audio/visual.

The 90s kids are the first people in history to have what essentially amounts to a collective consciousness via cloud computing. I’d like to believe that an attack on one is an attack on all–and indeed, many of us do have that mentality–but between the criseses, we’re all holding our collective breath to see what goes wrong next.

No wonder we’re neurotic.

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