35 Older People Reminisce About The Moments They Miss That Gen Z Will Never Get To Experience
Technological advancements can be great. I honestly don’t know what I would do without my air fryer or my smartphone, and I’m grateful every day that I don’t have to fiddle with paper maps when traveling. But the days before we had constant access to the internet weren’t all bad, and some Reddit users have recently been reminiscing on their favorite aspects of “way back when.”
Below, you’ll find a list of things that Gen Z and all of the generations to come will never get to experience, from answering the phone without knowing who’s on the other line to being unable to contact Mom and Dad while playing at the park. Enjoy scrolling through this nostalgic list, and be sure to upvote the experiences you wish your grandchildren could have!
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here was a high standard in journalism. Striving for facts and objectivity was required. We had a limited number of channels on the TV, so all three broadcast news programs chose and reported pretty much the same news stories with identical, essential facts. Opinions of political parties over bills and whatnot were reported, not critiqued.
i_hate_this_part_85:
Back then, our journalists were actually held to a standard and would get fired if they knowingly lied. Yes, there were more gatekeepers, but there was much less divisiveness built into every damn thing.
The freedom that comes with your parents not really knowing where you were. We just rode our bikes, all with out being tethered to a cell phone.
listenyall replied:
That whole 'delaying the inevitable' period of time when you knew that your parents were probably already mad because you were late, but you stayed out anyway because they couldn't yell at you until you were home!
Albums and perusing record stores. The posters, album artwork and the incense smell.
Record stores are still here, and it's young people buying a lot of the vinyl.
Well said Erin! Vinyl has does & always will have a special way of connecting listeners with music.
Load More Replies...Actually getting to own the music, and often some great artwork as well.
And, the wonderful and illuminating liner notes!
Load More Replies...My mom gave me a vinyl record of John Denver for my 17th birthday last Sunday!
You can't argue against the smell. Record stores just oozed some kind of athmosphere that is irreplaceable.
The ones in basements of buildings were especially cool. You can still go to at least one chain in Australia that has records, cds etc, but you don't get the smaller indie ones anymore
This is someone who chose to move on, not the format. If you loved it so much (as I do) you find the places, there have been some stalwarts who maintained their stocks, collected the second hand stuff, carried on. Just look for it, it’s out there.
New vinyl is being manufactured. I saw a new, sealed Hendrix LP at Best Buy for $20
Load More Replies...Like typewriters, record players are still quite popular, especially in gen x/y
Can still do that in my local HMV, though the albums are a lot more expensive now
One of the best place to hang out i think since the place provide free music...
and the back room of thre record shop where they had teh black light posters and bongs,
I "discovered" a lot of good bands for myself, just by flipping through the cover art.
That's another thing I miss...the amazing creativity of album covers. Some of it is f*****g iconic.
Load More Replies...There are still record stores though, it's even common in some circles
Or more collectible shops with things like old video games and consoles and animes and mangas
Music festivals where everyone is just sitting and enjoying the vibes. No recording, no filming. Why can't we do this again? Prohibit devices at live venues.
Being able to buy tickets at concert venues without having to worry about associated fees and s**tty broker companies. KonaKathie replied: We met so many people while waiting in line to buy tickets. Oftentimes, they became good friends.
Walking a loved one all the way to the departure gate and watching their plane take off.
chasonreddit replied:
And meeting them at the gate when they returned.
Simple, cheap cars that any ham handed shade tree mechanic could fix.
Wing windows.
Hand in hand with the flat-topped window glass that would hold the tray when you got your meal 'for here' at Sonic.
Analog controls in cars and appliances — touch screen and digital displays are far less functional than knobs and springs and stuff —
Waiting for the mail to see if you had a card or letter
I used to have pen pals from all over the world and I loved it! 🥰 It's a shame we didn't stay in touch though... 😥
The communal experience of television or radio entertainment. Growing up in the 70s and 80s we didn’t have cable. We had like 4 TV stations. Everyone was pretty much watching the same thing in the evenings and folks would discuss the shows at school or work the next day. Same with radio - as teens, we all tried to catch Rick Dees or Kasey Kasem on the weekend so we knew what was cool and new.
It drew the country together; everyone had the same cultural touchstones!
Phone booths. The feeling of privacy while making a call was unique to the time - being able to step out of the noisy world for a moment and still see it in motion, living, pulsating. The quiet desperation of taking notes on scraps of paper, or worse, on a page of a phone book, then ripping that page out to keep the note.
The disappointment of hearing your only coin go 'Thunk!' into the reject tray...
Road maps. The person in the passenger seat would tell the driver where to go, etc. There was almost always a stop at a gas station for directions on long trips thru unfamiliar areas. Great times, always an adventure!
Slamming the phone receiver down as hard as you can when you're mad and hanging up on someone.
Party lines on the telephone. Literally sharing a phone line with someone else and being able to listen in on their phone conversations. It was also annoying when the 'other party' was using the line and you needed to make a call.
Being gone all day and no one could reach you.
Encyclopedias and other reference books - not many left now except ones on subjects students might need. There used to be books for everything, and you'd always end up learning about more things than you opened the book to find.
My google as a kid was the reference section and a card catalog. It was all there- you just had to find it.
They will never know the anticipation of waking up, seeing snow on the ground, turning on the radio and waiting for the announcer to say if your school will be closed or not. He'd have a list and be reading it and you'd wait for him to get to your school... almost there... here it comes... and then YESS!!!!!!!
My dad actually worked as a DJ at a radio station which did the school closings. They had a list of passwords given to each school, so that when the school called the radio station, they could verify it was not a prank. The passwords were literal words, like "daisy" or some such.
Looxury. In my day, even if t'were 20 foot of snow, we still had to walk 25 miles to school. And we didn't have shoes cos our parents were poor. Kids of today...
Sitting at a red light jamming to a good song on the radio and looking over to notice the neighboring driver is jamming to the same song, so you both start an impromptu jam session until the light turns green.
I came close to a similar vibe this summer. It was hot, I was stuck in city traffic and a guy in a convertible came alongside me from the opposite direction. A dance track had just finished on his (loud) system and so I asked him, 'Have you got any classic rock mate?' and he said, 'No.'. Wild.
Going to a cell phone free concert
pbrooks19 replied:
No cellphones at theme parks, or any place of interest, really. So many people nowadays just shoot self-absorbed videos or just get in the way and distract everyone by being annoying with them.
The satisfaction of flipping open a newspaper and bending it just so, so that it would stay open in front of you while you held it, crinkling slightly (and turning your fingers black.) I didn't realize I missed this until recently when I needed to use some newspaper at work and there was a stack of them, and I flicked open a double-page expertly despite not having done it for...decades?
This is actually from the late 90/early 2000s, but I still really, really miss it:
cell phone manufacturers competing over who could have the SMALLEST cell phone. It was REALLY NICE to have a phone you could actually put into your pocket!
Stereos weighed a lot back in the day, for sure. But they sounded fantastic. People today think earbuds are high-fidelity sound.
The newer generation will never know the feeling of slamming a phone down when someone pissed you off on a call, then slamming it two or three more times for good measure. Hitting a button on a touchscreen to hang up on someone's stupidity just doesn't give the same satisfaction.
They just whack the phone against a wall or into the lake or something.
I bought a homemade ice-cream maker -- the old kind with a cedar bucket that leaks salt water over the porch, and a hand crank. I'd been telling my kids how much better it was, so they told me to just get one. Lo-and-behold, found one on an auction site. We pull it out a couple times a summer, and the ice cream IS as good as I remembered from childhood.
Taking most of Sunday to read the Sunday paper with the big crossword puzzle. Having to look up clues in the encyclopedia or dictionary. Reading all the sale inserts. Now I get the paper in an iPad don’t work the puzzles and no Sunday inserts.
When i was little and we would get the newspaper i would take the comics away as soon as i could and spend all of Sunday morning reading the comics
I kinda miss the 80’s - early 90’s computer era. It was fun to try and figure stuff out without having the internet to help you. Plus people really figured out how to squeeze some fun games out of those computers. Trading games with your friends was fun.
diabooklady:
I miss the early internet in the mid-1990s, when there weren't all these ads!
I miss the early WWW when websites used the Internet for what it was originally designed for. Sharing information. Instead of trying to be over technical, artistic and hard to navigate like now, they were simple, displayed information clearly and finding contact details was not the equivalent of solving the da vinci code.
Sitting alone in your room sobbing over some guy when you are 16, moving that needle to play the same sad song over and over again on your record player while your Bonne Bell black eyeliner and Yardley of London white lipstick melts down your face, until your father screams at you to “come downstairs and eat dinner for Chrissake and stop crying or I’ll give you something to cry about!”
No caller ID that allowed me and my punk friends to do some amazing telephone pranks.
I recieved a prank call once, from a girl in my class telling me how much she loves me and if we should date. I knew it was a prank call so I handeled it respectively... Worst part was, I really had a crush on that girl :(
Cleaning the carburetor and adjusting the points on a truck engine with an engine compartment big enough you could stand inside it.
Smelling mimeographs.
Getting that distant FM radio station tuned in *just right*.
Checking your answering machine when you got home.
Folding up a manual convertible top in the rain. (or leaving it at home and driving in the rain getting stared at by all the other cars thinking you were the idiot that you were)
The cha-chunk sound an 8-track made in the middle of a long song.
Collecting points for the Radio Shack Battery Club.
(maybe not totally obsolete, but not done) Drinking water out of any random neighbor's hose in the summer.
Making Christmas wreaths out of folded punch cards and spray painting them gold.
Souping up your bicycle with baseball cards attached to the wheels with clothespins.
Shoot, to remember any more I would need a bong hit. Oh! Home made Bongs. Cleaning pot on record covers.
I still have a carburettor on my classic. Have to take it off, clean it and change all the gaskets periodicallys. Fascinating piece of technology - very few moving parts but for the throttle butterflies and on mine, a mechanical pump on the bottom. Whole thing works by air pressure alone.
It's a weird one but I miss not being able to hear songs or knowing what they are. Any song you want now is a click away, but it used to take sometimes decades to find a track or even how to start to look for it.
So true. There was a song that stuck in my head literally for over 40 years having only heard it once on radio that I never knew what it was called but now thanks to Youtube I can now identify (it was "Gangsters" by The Specials)
Never knowing who was calling until you picked up the phone. Back in 60s and 70s, there weren't even answering machines, so if you didn't pick up, no idea who called.
And on the other side of that coin, when you called somebody and they didn't answer, you know it's not because they didn't want to task to you. It's because they weren't available.
Hitchhiking to out door concerts back in the 70's.Freedom. When we had to get somewhere- we would hitchhike. Violence made it obsolete.
I miss the friendly arguments that we used to have about who was the better ballplayer. Nowadays you can look up statistics immediately, but in the 70's and 80's it was your word again your buddies as to who was better.
Nostalgia forgets how bad things were too. I like the hear and now. The future will be cool too
The here and now isn't a particular great place imo.
Load More Replies...If you grew up in a remote, rural area, you had very little conceptual awareness of urban life. TV and movies rarely showed things like mass transit, how to hail a cab, how to identify the safest walking routes, how to choose affordable and amazing restaurants, how to find apartments, etc. The learning curve was steep and often scary!
Film projection! Digital projection is convenient but sucks (except Dolby Cinema)!!!
You youngsters will never know the engagement of polite conversation after entries on Bored Panda listicles, now that they get amputated and sent to the cornfield in a few hours with no recall button
Boom boxes sounded differently on a warm spring or summer day that just sounded like summer. And kids didn't need to swap phone numbers; you only needed each others' Dad's name, because the phone company doxxed EVERY adult male. (In the suburbs and rural parts, you could even know if someone was from your neighborhood by the first three digits of their phone number.)
I'm 72 and I miss only a couple of these (24 and 25 eg) the rest, not missed at all. I really, really don't miss the computers of the 80-90s as I was IT support and had to carry those suckers up and down stairs in some buildings.
For context I was born in the early 80's so I'm speaking of mid 90s experiences. TV seasons & movie releases. TV wise from September to May "these" shows are broadcast. Summer was reruns or Summer season shows only. So you always knew how long you had to wait for your show to come back. Unlike now "This" show premiers in February 10 episodes are released instantly. The next season of the show could start in October, or a year or two later. It's unpredictable and always up in the air. As for movies first it was released in theaters, the a few months later it was released for rental, finally a couple of months after that you were finally able to purchase the movie. If you missed it in the theater you hoped that you could rent it from the video store because only so many copies were available so it was pure luck. It was annoying yes but the anticipation was part of the fun.
Gen-X were born between 1965-1980, so certainly older than those born after 1997 (Gen-Z). I'm a millennial ('91) and don't share most of these experiences.
Load More Replies...The *ding ding* when you pulled into the gas station. The smell of the gas.
Forreal, though? I’m nostalgic about a time when people weren’t so forking pressed about cell phones/devices.
Darn these cell phones! Back in my day we used to drink our beatings from the hose in a grandfather clock’s truck bed with no seat belts!!
Whoever made the title of this post should get a whack to the back of the head. 35 》OLDER《 people...?! Thanks for making me feel like a fossil...
I grew up in a rural area listening to an AM rock station which had to redirect it's signal to the north (away from me) at sunset. There was a short delay while the sun set further before WLS from Chicago would come in. Eventually, a high powered FM in the area switch to a Top 40 format so listened to them. I don't listen to the radio at all anymore, I can't stand commercials.
Nostalgia forgets how bad things were too. I like the hear and now. The future will be cool too
The here and now isn't a particular great place imo.
Load More Replies...If you grew up in a remote, rural area, you had very little conceptual awareness of urban life. TV and movies rarely showed things like mass transit, how to hail a cab, how to identify the safest walking routes, how to choose affordable and amazing restaurants, how to find apartments, etc. The learning curve was steep and often scary!
Film projection! Digital projection is convenient but sucks (except Dolby Cinema)!!!
You youngsters will never know the engagement of polite conversation after entries on Bored Panda listicles, now that they get amputated and sent to the cornfield in a few hours with no recall button
Boom boxes sounded differently on a warm spring or summer day that just sounded like summer. And kids didn't need to swap phone numbers; you only needed each others' Dad's name, because the phone company doxxed EVERY adult male. (In the suburbs and rural parts, you could even know if someone was from your neighborhood by the first three digits of their phone number.)
I'm 72 and I miss only a couple of these (24 and 25 eg) the rest, not missed at all. I really, really don't miss the computers of the 80-90s as I was IT support and had to carry those suckers up and down stairs in some buildings.
For context I was born in the early 80's so I'm speaking of mid 90s experiences. TV seasons & movie releases. TV wise from September to May "these" shows are broadcast. Summer was reruns or Summer season shows only. So you always knew how long you had to wait for your show to come back. Unlike now "This" show premiers in February 10 episodes are released instantly. The next season of the show could start in October, or a year or two later. It's unpredictable and always up in the air. As for movies first it was released in theaters, the a few months later it was released for rental, finally a couple of months after that you were finally able to purchase the movie. If you missed it in the theater you hoped that you could rent it from the video store because only so many copies were available so it was pure luck. It was annoying yes but the anticipation was part of the fun.
Gen-X were born between 1965-1980, so certainly older than those born after 1997 (Gen-Z). I'm a millennial ('91) and don't share most of these experiences.
Load More Replies...The *ding ding* when you pulled into the gas station. The smell of the gas.
Forreal, though? I’m nostalgic about a time when people weren’t so forking pressed about cell phones/devices.
Darn these cell phones! Back in my day we used to drink our beatings from the hose in a grandfather clock’s truck bed with no seat belts!!
Whoever made the title of this post should get a whack to the back of the head. 35 》OLDER《 people...?! Thanks for making me feel like a fossil...
I grew up in a rural area listening to an AM rock station which had to redirect it's signal to the north (away from me) at sunset. There was a short delay while the sun set further before WLS from Chicago would come in. Eventually, a high powered FM in the area switch to a Top 40 format so listened to them. I don't listen to the radio at all anymore, I can't stand commercials.