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    "My Dad Will Never Give This Up": These 20 "Boomer Trends" Are Predicted To Vanish, And As A Millennial, I Find These Things Really Weird

    By Claudia Santos,

    7 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1KYplC_0vc3kYja00

    We all know trends come and go. I never could've predicted the return of low-rise jeans, but here we are. That said, some things that were once all the rage just end up dying out. So when redditor u/DioriteLover asked the r/AskReddit community to share the things older generations popularized that will surely vanish , people gave some pretty spot-on predictions. Here's what they said.

    1. "Formal living rooms."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=17a9Pq_0vc3kYja00

    u/vbpatel

    "With furniture you're not allowed to sit on."

    u/vpblackheart

    Terryj / Getty Images

    2. "Not listing the salary on a job posting."

    u/NoeyCannoli

    "I work in HR strategy. I think refusing to post compensation for a job should be illegal."

    u/Harry-le-Roy

    3. "Fancy unused china sets."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=49V5ih_0vc3kYja00

    u/thundering-horse

    "I (40) inherited my grandmother's Wedgwood china. Plain white set. I moved that shit with me for a decade. After my divorce, I made it my daily use. They survive the dishwasher JUST FINE. I use the tea cups for snack bowls."

    u/Ambitious_Clock_8212

    Pamela_d_mcadams / Getty Images/iStockphoto

    4. "TEXT MESSAGES AND FACEBOOK POSTS IN ALL CAPS."

    u/Worchestershshhhrrer

    "GRANDPA DIED, LOL. No matter how many times I tell my aunt that it doesn't mean 'lots of love...'"

    u/Low_Departure_5853

    5. "Porcelain figurine collections."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3RUOzF_0vc3kYja00

    u/nonesuchnotion

    Анатолий Тушенцов / Getty Images/iStockphoto

    6. "Timeshares."

    u/CityOutlier

    "I worked in corporate for one of the largest timeshare companies in the world, and I left believing that it was absolutely a scam. Employee benefits were amazing, but the salespeople will absolutely lie to you to secure a sale. We used to get A LOT of inquiries on exit options.

    These companies will put your unit on a resale market, but it'll never get sold. This will force people to exit via a third party for a faster exit, but the third-party market is littered with scams.

    I've had to deal with so many timeshare owners who are out $50,000+ because they explored the third-party resale market and never actually existed."

    u/DaMilkGod

    7. "The cellphone holder that clips onto the belt."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4PzP6q_0vc3kYja00

    u/Junior-ME14

    "My 90-year-old dad will never give up his 'waist purse.'"

    u/Wattaday

    Pichunter / Getty Images/iStockphoto

    8. "The obsession with work, although I think it's going to get more complicated now."

    u/girlfunky91

    "What I find older managers don't understand is there is no incentive to bust your ass right now. They could work 40 hours and afford a house. I worked 80 hours and could just barely afford the smallest house on the market. After 2020, I don't know how any middle-class person will ever afford a house. So you can work the bare minimum and never afford a high standard of living or work yourself to death and not afford a high standard of living. Seems like an easy choice."

    u/VTAffordablePaintbal

    9. "I think it's already pretty much happened/is in the process of happening, but cable TV in any form. I finally convinced my mom (76) to stop paying north of $200 a month for cable. I had been needling her for years when she finally did it. Was it the literal hundreds per month savings that finally convinced her? Nope! Showing her (on my streaming-only TV) that she could watch Her Story (a soap opera) and Doctor Quinn, Medicine Woman, any time she wanted was the selling point."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2Cp3vD_0vc3kYja00

    u/silliestboots

    Sparky / Getty Images

    10. "Emails with the subject line 'Fw:Fw:Fw:'"

    u/12345_PIZZA

    11. "Balancing a checkbook."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2tScrS_0vc3kYja00

    u/Available_Research89

    "I just learned how to write a check last year because my landlords were old and politely asked if we could pay with a check. I was like, 'Uh, sure?' No clue what balancing a checkbook means."

    u/TheWorstPiesInLondon

    Sampsyseeds / Getty Images

    12. "Calling to follow up about a job application/status AND any hiring information for companies available for access in person — everything is online now."

    u/thegalfromjersey

    "My brother was out of a job during COVID, and a Boomer family member was mad that he wasn't out walking around trying to find a job."

    u/swinty22

    13. " Reader's Digest magazines."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4OHZ2o_0vc3kYja00

    u/catholicbaker

    "Absolutely loved reading Reader's Digest when I visited my grandparents as a kid — so many good articles!"

    u/Florence_Pugilist

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    14. "'I hate my wife' humor."

    u/rfuller

    "Good riddance. As a kid, I was so scared of marrying someone who treated me like the people on those '90s Boomer sitcoms treated their spouses."

    u/N0S0UP_4U

    15. "Affordable, well-made appliances that will last a lifetime."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0DPA1I_0vc3kYja00

    u/facepillownap

    "I was looking for a fridge at a used appliance store near me. They restore antiques and fix up regular appliances. I asked the owner about one fridge, and she said, 'It's less than 20 years old, so it sucks.'

    The fridge that made its way into the garage was used when I originally bought it in '98, and it has outlasted two fridges in the house."

    u/TheEvilPrinceZorte

    M-production / Getty Images

    16. "'Salads' whose primary ingredient is Jell-O and/or whipped cream."

    u/non_clever_username

    "My husband is 41 and still insists on making his mom's 'carrot salad' at Christmas every year. It's orange Jello with carrot sticks and pineapple chunks. He's the only one who eats it. His mom doesn't even make it anymore."

    u/MamaNyxieUnderfoot

    17. "Saying the date and time when leaving a voicemail. Also, voicemails."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0E3sCI_0vc3kYja00

    u/mob_instigator

    "The only time I want voicemails is when I want a message from a medical professional telling me something important. I hate them otherwise."

    u/GuaranteeComfortable

    Erikona / Getty Images

    18. "Homeownership. Boomers are flocking to reverse mortgages, and the high costs of maintaining property, taxes, and insurance are making home ownership impossible. Add in corporations buying up housing with 50-year payback plans."

    u/dee_lio

    19. "Big families."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0Dkwbu_0vc3kYja00

    u/backpackgirl1

    "Skipping forward to millennials and Gen Z: families at all. How many people can really afford to raise one, even if they want to?"

    u/hawkyeager

    Bob Krist / Getty Images

    20. "Cable news."

    u/ocarina97

    "And newspapers. Only Boomers get them now. They are half the size they used to be, and all of the content has been replaced by ads and generic nationwide stuff that's not unique to your area."

    u/Suppafly

    Which "once-popular" trends do you believe will disappear in a few years? Tell us in the comments or fill out this anonymous form.

    Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity.

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    Comments / 40
    Add a Comment
    Erika
    1d ago
    I LOVE that carrot jello salad!
    tutu
    6d ago
    Funny how home ownership always makes the list of negative articles about boomers. What isn’t mentioned is that our annual salaries were sometimes in single digits and we bought a small starter home. As we continued to work 40 hours a week our salaries grew. We cooked and ate at home, no fancy coffees, took a lot of staycations, drove used cars, no designer handbags, etc. We struggled to save and gradually upgraded to a bigger, nicer home and a nicer lifestyle. It’s a process. We earned it. That’s life.
    View all comments
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