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Being Gen-X is like having one foot in the past and the other in the digital age, and honestly, I love it. I grew up in a world where the internet didn't exist, TV had only a handful of channels, and phones were attached to walls—not to people. If you wanted to hang out with a friend, you didn't text, you just showed up at their house and hoped they were home. And if they weren't? No problem. You'd just wander around town, looking for something to do.
It was a time when drinking straight from the garden hose was totally normal, and if you left the house, your parents had no idea where you were until you came back—yet somehow, we all survived. But at the same time, I was also part of the first generation to experience video games, home computers, and the rise of technology that would change the world. I still remember playing with sticks in the woods, but also gathering around a TV to battle it out in Street Fighter II.
That's what makes Gen-X unique—we lived in both worlds. We appreciate how easy life is today, but we also know we can survive without it. And honestly? That balance feels like a superpower.