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Gen Xers have fun explaining how they survived childhood with ‘no adult supervision’
Generation X occupies an interesting place in the generational timeline. They came after the Baby Boomers, who were raised predominantly in homes with stay-at-home mothers, and Millennials, who are known for having helicopter-style parents that are overly involved in their lives.
Gen Xers, born between 1965 and 1980, were raised in the ‘70s, ‘80s, and early ‘90s, when it became more common for both parents to work, divorce rates were at an all-time high, and many kids took care of themselves before and after school. This unique set of circumstances made GenXers the “last parented generation” in recent history.
How did Gen X kids survive?
Some call Gen Xers “Gen Goonie” because the bike-riding, adventurous feral youngsters in the film embody the spirit of the time. In hindsight, growing up a Gen Xer was a lot of fun. However, younger folks might think that the free-wheeling, come home when the streetlights come on, latchkey-kid lifestyle may have been dangerous, especially since Gen X grew up in an era where crime was at an all-time high.
This prompted Crazy Vibes, a popular X handle, to ask how Gen Xers made it to adulthood alive. “I’ve been watching 80s movies, and I just need to know…WHERE WERE YOUR PARENTS?” they asked. “No cell phones. No helmets. No adult supervision. Just vibes, life lessons, and several near-death experiences. You all weren’t ‘raised.’ You were lightly monitored feral creatures with a bike and unresolved trauma. I’m genuinely shocked there are enough of you left to populate an entire generation.”
Dear Gen X, I’ve been watching 80s movies and I just need to know…WHERE WERE YOUR PARENTS?? Every child was just wandering the earth unsupervised like a raccoon with house keys. Riding bikes across town at midnight, fighting ghosts, investigating murders, befriending cryptids,…— Crazy Vibes (@CrazyVibes_1) May 26, 2026
Some Gen Xers responded to the prompt with a little more information on the parenting philosophy, or lack thereof, that the generation was raised under. The funny thing is that nobody from that era has a problem with it; they loved the laissez-faire attitude of the era.
Yup. Gen X childhood was basically:“Be home when the streetlights come on.”That was the entire tracking system.No phones. No helmets. No supervision.Just bikes, bad decisions, and surviving situations that would trigger a modern neighborhood Facebook group for six straight…— SAMX (@backrowthinker) May 26, 2026
Yes. It was a glorious time to be alive. An unmatched childhood… that no one can understand unless they lived it pic.twitter.com/Tw7GiWcovr— Tesla Barbarian (@TeslaBarbarian) May 26, 2026
Our parents had one rule: “Be home before the street lights come on.” After that, we were basically an unsupervised National Geographic special on BMX bikes — CarePath FINANCIAL (@CarePathFIN) May 26, 2026
Gen Xers got their kicks running (or biking or roller skating) in the great outdoors and on the streets. Being grounded meant that there was little to do besides watching Brady Bunch reruns.
Also when I was growing up “being grounded” was REAL punishment because there was absolutely nothing fun to do at home.— Kathy Glista (@kathy_glista) May 26, 2026
Yes, it was dangerous. But Gen X knew how to take a licking and keep on ticking.
In 1979 Game of Death Came out I was 9. The next day all my friends came outside with home made nunchucks and we proceeded to beat the crap out of eachother with them. Peak GEN X shit. pic.twitter.com/xoVkxKsIvw— David in L.A. (@RealLAnative) May 27, 2026
You know that when the internet stops working one day, Gen X is all you got left to help you survive…— MontgomeryB. (@_MontyBurnham_) May 26, 2026
In the pre-everyone-has-a-water-bottle era, the hose staved off fatal dehydration.
hose water has remarkable restorative powers.— el gato malo (@boriquagato) May 27, 2026
Gen X grew up in dangerous times
Some folks look at the ‘70s and ‘80s through rose-colored glasses, saying it was safer than today, so people let their kids roam free. However, that isn’t the case at all. These days, you may see every crime on the Internet or the news, but crime was much worse in the ‘80s and early ’90s.
The country was simply safer then. You could count on your kid to make it home before the streets lights came on and we traveled in packs exploring and just having adventure after adventure. We didn't have as many violent hate filled people (foreign and domestic) as we do now.— RavenousLioness (@De43189Ready) May 26, 2026
Actually, the country was far more dangerous back then. The sad thing is now it’s actually much safer, but kids are kept inside.— Alex Eckelberry (@alexeck) May 26, 2026
That's not true at all child abductions were actually higher in the mid '80s than they are now. It's just that you never heard about it because there wasn't social media and network TV, there was only local channels and newspapers. pic.twitter.com/JdgXx8N7AJ—