The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit.
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The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

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The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

@bengesko Even more: in today's economic landscape it is unaffordable. Total bullshit.
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The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

@bengesko this is why I'm touchy about the "midlife crisis" framing. No I'm not having a crisis I just have some free time for the first time in n years
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The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

@bengesko I've defintely become more domestic in my late 30s, but in the way that Baba Yaga was quite domestic.
Comfortable in my personal den of weirdness. -
The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

@bengesko Amen to that, fucking *resist*
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The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

@bengesko plus you have a good chance of losing some of the sillier inhibitions and fears that kept you from being yourself when you were younger.
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The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

@bengesko any amount of "more normal" I display in my 30s is the result of the system grinding me down and making me tired =(
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@bengesko *zoomers* are saying this? if it was boomers or gen xers i'd understand
as a millenial, the idea of adulthood we were sold was an absolute lie, made all the more apparent by how it was denied to us by many of its markers (like home ownership and career progression) were made unobtainable. a great deal of who our generation is comes from the reject6ion of the old idea of adulthood. fuck it, we'll watch cartoons and play with toys untiil we're in the grave
@Yza @bengesko You see, my father is a boomer, and he would watch cartoons with my brothers and I all the time. He was also a big nerd and was into almost any kind of science fiction or fantasy be could get his hands on.
I didn't realize this as a kid, but he was into comics when he was growing up, and still paid some attention to the movies and shows that came from them when I was growing up in the 80s and 90s. The last time he visited, he mentioned how he was really into comics in the 70s, and at that time he preferred the art style of DC over Marvel. He also tried to have a conversation with me about how he resented the Marvel movies making Iron Man being just about on par with Thor, but I couldn't add anything to the conversation.
If there's one thing I want my kids to understand, it's what "being true to yourself" means. I never stopped playing games, and I collect Transformers. Don't let age stop you being yourself.
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The expectation of becoming a "normal married person with only a job" once you're over 25 is bullshit. Your passions and interests don't magically disappear.
Normal is overrated and borderline oppressive in today's political climate, anyway.
Stay weird and unmarketable.

@bengesko honestly, I think a lot of the problems with older generations is that they did this. They gave up everything when they became adults, and now that they’re retiring, they have nothing.
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@Yza @bengesko You see, my father is a boomer, and he would watch cartoons with my brothers and I all the time. He was also a big nerd and was into almost any kind of science fiction or fantasy be could get his hands on.
I didn't realize this as a kid, but he was into comics when he was growing up, and still paid some attention to the movies and shows that came from them when I was growing up in the 80s and 90s. The last time he visited, he mentioned how he was really into comics in the 70s, and at that time he preferred the art style of DC over Marvel. He also tried to have a conversation with me about how he resented the Marvel movies making Iron Man being just about on par with Thor, but I couldn't add anything to the conversation.
If there's one thing I want my kids to understand, it's what "being true to yourself" means. I never stopped playing games, and I collect Transformers. Don't let age stop you being yourself.
@jhooper @bengesko for sure. while i generalized about generations it's very worth saying people have always been like this. people have always loved games and toys. who do you think was making toys throughout history? it was going to be adults a lot of the time, and not just to shut the kids up. making toys is a hecking craft. adults made soft toys with a deep love for them. and who made cartoons? adults! often for other adults! adulthood and what it entails are social constructs. nothing more