Why People Born in the 60s and 70s Trust Experience More Than Trends and Why It Matters Now

There is a quiet impatience in the way many people born in the 1960s and 1970s look at the world of instant hype. It is not grandstanding. It is a preference carved out of repeated disappointment and small wins. They have watched movements crest and collapse, seen fashions and platforms burn bright and then dim, … Read more

How People Born in the 1960s and 1970s Learned to Solve Problems Without Technology and Why It Still Matters

Growing up before the internet rewired attention and expectation taught people born in the 1960s and 1970s a different grammar of fixing things. This is not nostalgia dressed up as analysis. It is an attempt to trace a set of habits and attitudes that shaped how an entire cohort approached knots of daily life when … Read more

Why Psychologists Say Growing Up in the 1960s and 1970s Built Better Frustration Tolerance

There is a stubborn, slightly uncomfortable observation circulating in psychology circles: people who spent their childhoods in the 1960s and 1970s often display a steadier capacity to sit with annoyance, delay gratification, and absorb small humiliations without immediate meltdown. This is not a nostalgic paean to vinyl or a claim that everything was better then. … Read more

How Growing Up in the 60s and 70s Taught a Quiet Emotional Strength That Still Works

There is a stubborn idea floating around that the children of the 1960s and 1970s were either hardened by scarcity or mollycoddled by freedom. Both stories skip the middle ground where most real learning happens. I want to argue something less tidy and more useful. Childhood in the 60s and 70s produced forms of emotional … Read more