Who Are You? What is Gen X Watch?

Polaroids and a polaroid camera

Can a moment in a car with a friend shape your sense of self? What does this have to do with defining Gen X Watch? What is GenX watch and what can it be and how can you help define it?

In 1987 I was driving a friend home from an Alateen meeting. Alateen was a 12 step group for teens who had family members that are addicts. I would love to tell you that it helped. What it did was help me become a better codependent and prepare me to be a functioning addict later in life. Some of the people I was in there with had the same experience I did.

The person I was driving home lived near me, but we both went to meetings two towns over. There were meetings in our town but the first time I went to the local one was the first time, Jackie, the person I was driving home, did as well. Her ex boyfriend was in the meeting. He was abusive to her and was one of my bullies. After that first meeting he said horrible things to her in the parking lot and left her a crying mass of human flesh. As his Camaro drove off into the night I awkwardly offered comfort and we ended up going to the one two towns over together. In the sprit of Alateen we kept all of this anonymous.

We were in different cliques. She was a popular girl and my crew was…different. But we were bound in a secret friendship of being in a group that spoke of our trauma with an addict for a parent. On the drive home we would have conversations about life, the universe, and everything. We were talking about something innocuous and London Calling came on the radio.

As the Clash played in my ’77 Monte Carlo she cranked up my radio and jammed to the music. I was lost in the moment of seeing her lost in the music. I envied her lust for life sometimes. As the song ended I told her I never would have expected someone like her to like, or even know, The Clash. She replied, “I’m more than what they think. I know who I am. Who the hell is Pat Green?” I did not have an answer. There was silence. After a few moments she simply added, “That’s what I thought.” I felt gut punch and gave the only answer I could at 17. “I’m trying Jackie. But I’m lost.” Without missing a beat, she replied. “You’re right here. Whoever you are now, just be that and make sure you know who you are and aren’t.”

As I dropped her off at her house she rifled through her bookbag and pulled some polaroids out looking furiously for one. She handed it to me. It was me. I was wearing my bomber jacket and shades with a shy smile on my face. “He’s right here, Pat. He’s a good guy. Get to know him.”

I lost touch with her after high school. I saw her once at a party about a year after we graduated. A few years after that she was my waitress at a diner in a small town. I never knew what prompted this conversation and I never told her how much it impacted me. In the moment I was hurt and scared, but also felt seen. As I raised my child and still come to grips with who I am in middle age, I come back to that moment a lot. It has helped me ensure my adult child grew to have a sense of self and helped me realize that finding yourself is not always a deep quest, but right in front of you. But you need to accept that and define it. Who am I? Who are you? What defines you?

What Gen X Watch Isn’t

I find comfort in nostalgia and am drawn to retro stuff. Most of the GenX related content out there makes me uncomfortable. It makes me feel that some of them need to be forced to sit down and rewatch ‘The Breakfast Club’ and have an intervention.

Content that speaks about how star spangled awesome we were while throwing the younger generations under the bus ignores so much of our music and movies that defined us. We knew our plight and a major part of our angst was driven by our parents’ and grandparents’ generations collectively shitting on us and dismissing us. Many of us were latchkey feral children left to our own devices. Ignored.

When we were noticed, childhood trauma that would haunt many of us into adulthood came with being noticed. To create content where we smugly shit on the generation of our children is totally missing the point and lame. This isn’t a place where we confuse nostalgia and celebration of what never was to harm the next generation.

The past helped create the now and that path continues into the future. This is not just about Memphis patterns and MTV and Saturday Morning Cartoons. It is a part of it, but it is a vehicle that I will speak about shortly.

What GenX Watch Is

GenX Watch is an experiment that I hope will connect GenX and GenZ using nostalgia as the vehicle to have important discussions about now and the road ahead. Nostalgia for those who lived in a time and a place and retro love of an era is a fascinating intersect.

When I was a teen in the 80’s I was fascinated by the 1950’s. The music and the television and a dash of ‘Back to the Future’ inspired an interest. In that interest I discovered beatnik poetry that would advance not just pop culture, but society and how we see the world. And in that interest there was a shared moment that could have connected two tribes, but didn’t. There was a missed opportunity when I was young and my parents were alive to talk about ‘Rebel Without a Cause’ and compare that to some poignant Brat Pack movies. Could that have created moments where we could have learned from each other? Understood each other? Found a better future seeped in common ground?

Gen X Watch is using the lessons of the past and pop culture as a vehicle to make a better tomorrow. And hopefully we will have fun doing this.

The Beauty and the Beast of Nostalgia

Nostalgia is comfort. But it also has the danger of being idealized and becomes a mask for who we really are and what we really experienced. The music and the movies and the clothes were sometimes our escape from what was happening in life. Some of us cranked up the music when our parents were yelling in the next room. Seeing a movie had you forget about pain for awhile. The same is true of getting lost in a book. The clothes were a means of expressions and celebration of self. You were told to act like an adult, but the biggest decision you were empowered to make was what outfit you were wearing. So you wore it and you rocked it! Just the other day I learned one of my prom dates went full ‘Pretty in Pink’ on her prom dress! She made her prom dress out of a bridesmaid’s gown! She chopped it up, added more satin and tulle, and even got shoes dyed to match and complete the ensemble! That is expression and celebration of self and amazing.

But the darker side is we can sometimes think our escapes were the reality. The good old days weren’t always good and tomorrow ain’t as bad as it seems. Being a cold war latch key kid had some dark moments.

I love the music I blasted in my walkman to silence the background noise. But I cannot forget or dismiss the noise I was driving out and if I see my kid drowning out some noise, I need to not focus on the airpods and the phone, but on their heart. Our kids are doing the same thing we were, the medium has changed.

The Branches of Gen X Watch

The blog will be the regular space you can read the stories of life that shaped now. But I do not want it to be just my stories, I want your stories in there too. I hope you will reach out to me with the contact information in the site, our facebook page, or the insta. I would love to have guest columnists or permission to share your stories and polaroids in the book bag of your heart.

There will be a magazine! Starting in February of 2024 there will be a 20 page magazine in PDF and print versions. It will embrace the nostalgia of 80’s teen magazines with a twist of now. Every magazine will have a cover pop culture icon. Their story will focus on how they have helped shape a better now and invite us all to make a difference. Another key element will be then and now. Poignant thoughts of things we did then that we now know better. And in the now how we can help clean up the mess we made with the generation enduring the impact of then…now. There will also be fun product reviews of things you can still buy today like Swatch Watches, and music and movie reviews of moments of pop culture we may want to revisit, rediscover, and talk about. Finally, there will be Yearbook splash pages featuring your images and the Buzz of your thoughts and insights.

‘Members Only’ Patreon Page. Patreons will get free PDF copies of the magazine, discounts on upcoming merch and print mags, backstage content, and other perks. Yes, it funds me and my team, but I want you to get value for this, value that enriches you and moves you.

GenX/GenZ Vids. In a few months my adult child, who looks almost exactly like me, and I will be putting together short videos to showcase on TikTok and Reels and other spaces. They will be funny and feature a GenX middle aged Steve Harrington like guy and his kid and their misadventures of being a little lost and found in love. They will be funny and also have a point.

You! We need you to not only enjoy the content, but be a part of it. This is not here for the likes and the comments. It is here for the engagement. It is here for us to learn from each other and move one another. Join the Patreon. Share this with your friends. Share with us your stories. In the stories about then in the now, we will make a better tomorrow. The next 3 entries are based on discussions in our social media. Gen X Watch is just beginning and we get to shape it together.

Banner Photo Credit: Cyril Caton (Some Rights Reserved)

17 responses to “Who Are You? What is Gen X Watch?”

  1. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    I grew up on military bases. The culture was similar, but a bit different. My high school ‘crew’ wasn’t homogenous; I was the nerd / intellectual, there was a popular kid, a sporty kid, and a metal kid.
    When I went back to school (after 2 years away) as an older teen in an adult re-entry high school I was mostly a loner with one close friend – an artsy bi woman. I was friendly with everyone there, though.
    I was always someone else’s something; I was my parents’ kid, then I was someone’s ‘steady’ / partner, then I was a young parent. I didn’t really know who I was / am for some time, though there were times when I was able to show / explore that. I chose art and photography classes (along with my mandatory / core classes). The teachers really encouraged me to find myself and what brought me joy.
    Then as a graduate/ young adult I worked at a company called Telepersonals (now LavaLife). I worked with customers to ‘write’ voice personal ads, did research / statistics, and (my favourite) did the voice work to create the system prompts (ie: “Welcome to the New Telelpersonals on 778-5555…” “press 1 for…” , and “please try again, etc…
    As an adult I explored my creative side by making all natural bath and beauty products, and one of a kind artistic jewellery with antique beads / charms / focal points.
    When I was making the bath and beauty products I also worked with a community centre aiding other entrepreneurs; I helped curate a small gallery in an eclectic market. I was also featured in a documentary about the space.
    Later, I took singing classes at a music studio. A couple of times we put on paid performances for small audiences.
    These days I paint.
    I have always been creative, and now that I am too disabled / chronically ill to work, my art brings me comfort and a way of interacting (online) with others who do similar work or who appreciate it.

    Long story short, who I am is a musical, empathic, neurodivergent artist.

    1. Pat Green Avatar

      My oh my! Thank you so much for commenting! You gave us so much and I hope everyone who reads the article reads this comment. It is powerful, sublime, and sometimes painful. I wish I had the words to say how much I appreciate your story and you right now.

      As an aside, I wonder if I heard your voice at some point in my life as I navigated a phone tree. Wouldn’t that be something?

  2. GenX_RN Avatar
    GenX_RN

    Love it!!

    1. Pat Green Avatar

      Thank you ever so much for taking the time to not only read, but comment. Hope to see you on our social media and hear more insights from you!

  3. Dùghlas Avatar
    Dùghlas

    i love your approach to nostalgia. i love the music of the Eighties today, just like i loved the music of the Fifties then. i’d listen to the Oldies radio show as much as I would listen to current music. now the local radio station focuses on the 70s, 80s and the 90s, nothing from the new millennium. it frustrates me, because we live in a rural area and the three radio stations are Country music, Christian and an Eighties station. the youth of the area are not visible in the commercial radio world. what message does this send to them? that they have to leave the area to have anything that is reflecting of their generation. as an area, we are musically stuck in the past.

    1. Pat Green Avatar

      I am not sure how many of the GenZ foks listen to the radio. But that brings an interesting question. If we had DJ driven radio like we had when we were young, would they tune in if there was a voice that listened to them and spoke to them? Radio has become mostly corporate. In the chicago market we have a dinosaur radio station where the content is still dj driven and it is so much better than the other stations owned by Evergreen media and other monoliths.

      Thank you so much for your thought provoking input.

      1. Dùghlas Avatar
        Dùghlas

        The corporate model would certainly believe that younger people in rural areas are not listening. But in a rural area (where cell service is not so readily available), I choose not to stream and when driving from place to place, the radio is still the oasis. But corporate marketing knows best when they set things up. They know their listeners, and don’t care about those not tuning in.

        When I go to the capital city of my province, I quickly tune to Campus Radio. It is the epitome of small, DJ driven content. It is community radio, and a good source of indie music.

  4. Briala Avatar
    Briala

    I think being Gen X in Australia was both subtly and widely different than in the US, mostly due to pop-culture differences. Oh, we had a lot of American stuff, but we had our own Aussie stuff, too.

    And yet a lot of it still passed me by and I don’t really know why. What has happened is that I picked up on multiple pop-culture waves over the years. The main sign of this is that my taste in music is atypical for a Gen X person – I have a few artists I love from the 90s and early 2000s, plus a range of Korean artists as I found Kpop in 2012. That’ not a Gen X thing!

    This might be related to the fact that I’m neuro-divergent. Or that I’m transgender… Both of these things actually seriously mess up personal identity and the paths to finding oneself that normally happen as someone traverses adolescence into adulthood.

    1. Pat Green Avatar

      Hi Briala and thank you so much for posting. FOr whatever it is worth, I have a lot of friends from our generation that REALLY love Kpop, KOrean music and movies and other things of that nature. One of my friends who is a mel. She said this in regard to Korean media. “I think part of the reason I started watching Korean shows in the last year was because American media was feeling too saturated in nostalgia and new runs of old shows. Parts of it were fun, but I was hungry for new stories and experiences in my media. I wanted both.”

      And I am proud to say that I have many friends who are neuro divergent, trans, and in some cases…both. I hope you continue to post your insights and reflections here. It may encourage others (and me) to explore new things. I also hope that as I get into movies and music that matter reviews I can offer you some new content from bygone days that may bring new discovery as opposed to nostalgic. Thank you so much for taking the time to post and read and I hope to see more of you.

      1. Briala Avatar
        Briala

        I suspect what happened is that Korean media has become far more adventurous than Western media often is. Or rather, Western media has gotten a lot less adventurous…

        1. Pat Green Avatar

          Recycle instead of innovate is the model these days it seems. Well said!

    2. Dùghlas Avatar
      Dùghlas

      I’m realizing that I was ahead of the curve on Kpop. I lived in Korea in 1997, and that year drove my parents to buy their first home computer. I never kept up with any of the Kpop from that time, but it made me smile when Gangnam Style came out. When I lived in Seoul, I was in Gangnam multiple times a week.

  5. Jen Finstrom Avatar
    Jen Finstrom

    I loved reading this and having the opportunity to think about my self awareness then (and now) and how I would have answered the question of who I was. I’ve also lately thinking about what “sticks” among the many hobbies and interests I’ve had since the 80s when I really developed a sense of self, what books and music and aesthetics remain with me. I’m sure I’ll have more to say as the journey continues, but thank you! This connects on many levels with my own self-reflection.

    1. Pat Green Avatar

      Fascinating insight and thank you for sharing it with us. I am also rediscovering things I did not invest in back in the day as my friends tell me why they love it. I recently lost a friend to the mortal coil. She is the reason I am now a Rick Springfield fan in my 50’s. Do you know what was going on in the background as you found these comforts that hold you true decades later? That is one I have to ponder.

  6. Scott Edwards Avatar
    Scott Edwards

    I think the biggest thing that people forget when they bash the younger generations is this:

    We made them what they are. “These kids today” don’t know how to do something? That’s our fault for not teaching them. “These kids today” never heard of something? That’s our fault for not introducing them to it. “These kids today” don’t have any respect or self-discipline? That’s our fault for not instilling it in them.

    If our children didn’t turn out just like us, or didn’t turn out the way we hoped they would, we can’t immediately blame them. We should look in the mirror. When your pancakes don’t come out right, do you blame the pancake or do you blame the cook? Hmm?

    1. Pat Green Avatar

      Yes. This. This so hard! Thank you for expressing it as well as you did!

  7. […] a previous article in Gen X Watch, “Who Are You? What is Gen X Watch?” I wrote about the beauty and the beast of nostalgia. “Nostalgia is comfort. But it also has […]

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