delb0y
Legendary Member
- Location
- Quedgeley, Glos
It seems like every few weeks there's another article accusing me of being lucky, of being born into a generation that had and has it all, of being one of the lucky ones, etc etc. Today, for example, on the Beeb, I read this extract of a Times piece:
I reckon I took a wrong turn somewhere. No sign of an Audi outside my house. Sure I have a house (or rather the bank does), and that means I've enjoyed (so far) 25 years of paying a mortgage with another 10 still to come, and that in turns means I've never had any spare money. No money in the bank, no holiday each year, still no Audi in the drive. Hell, I haven't even been able to buy the bicycle I'd really like.
Am I not contemplating retirement? Excuse me, but b@@llocks. I contemplate it every day. Can't wait. But over the years the government has increased the retirement age, but trust me I'm not going to keep a Generation X Y Z-er out of employment a day longer than I can help.
No, I reckon I must have taken the wrong train way back, because I keep seeing articles like this and it's starting to feel like I'm the only boomer who isn't living some golden life.
And as for the current generation...don't get me started. In our household there are wardrobes full of designer clothing, month long holidays to Thailand, weekends in European capitals, new iPhones every year, top of the range Apple laptops (and other devices) every year, multiple cars (all newer than mine), meals out every weekend, nights at the pub every weekend, concerts and festivals attended. I don't begrudge them any of it - I really don't. I say live life to the full whilst you can. At that age I was saving (for several years) to get the deposit together that would set me off on a lifetime of having no money. But just don't tell me that I'm the lucky one and they're the jilted ones.
Sorry. Rant over.
But hey, it's good to be unique - the only baby boomer that got it wrong :-)
John Walsh, in the Times2 pullout, examines how the "smug, rich and happy" baby boomers were lucky to have missed WWII, "rode on the coat-tails" of the 1960s counter-culture and went on to befriend their children.
He sees them driving Audis, while the current "jilted generation" ride "Boris bikes" and describes those in their 50s and 60s sitting on huge equity in bricks and mortar, while 20-somethings scrabble together a deposit.
"They won't contemplate retirement - whereas their children in their twenties, are mortally afraid they'll never be able to retire at all," says Walsh.
I reckon I took a wrong turn somewhere. No sign of an Audi outside my house. Sure I have a house (or rather the bank does), and that means I've enjoyed (so far) 25 years of paying a mortgage with another 10 still to come, and that in turns means I've never had any spare money. No money in the bank, no holiday each year, still no Audi in the drive. Hell, I haven't even been able to buy the bicycle I'd really like.
Am I not contemplating retirement? Excuse me, but b@@llocks. I contemplate it every day. Can't wait. But over the years the government has increased the retirement age, but trust me I'm not going to keep a Generation X Y Z-er out of employment a day longer than I can help.
No, I reckon I must have taken the wrong train way back, because I keep seeing articles like this and it's starting to feel like I'm the only boomer who isn't living some golden life.
And as for the current generation...don't get me started. In our household there are wardrobes full of designer clothing, month long holidays to Thailand, weekends in European capitals, new iPhones every year, top of the range Apple laptops (and other devices) every year, multiple cars (all newer than mine), meals out every weekend, nights at the pub every weekend, concerts and festivals attended. I don't begrudge them any of it - I really don't. I say live life to the full whilst you can. At that age I was saving (for several years) to get the deposit together that would set me off on a lifetime of having no money. But just don't tell me that I'm the lucky one and they're the jilted ones.
Sorry. Rant over.
But hey, it's good to be unique - the only baby boomer that got it wrong :-)