Tristalyn wrote:I'm an 80s child and I like dark gothic vampire stuffs. Doesn't mean I didn't wear hot pink and green bangles with jelly shoes and sang my head off to Debbie Gibson.
Well, considering goth was born in 1979 and peaked in the early 80s, "gothic vampire stuffs" are very much a downplayed but intrinsic facet of 80s culture. Same goes for what is historically recognized as punk fashion and culture, though the real punk crested and then died about '82 or '83...
You are a child of the decade that moulded and defines you, not neccesarily the one in which you were concieved -- All of those things you have carried forward in time, sometimes kept through decades and hidden in your "closet" from childhood that comfort you when no one else can see and judge come from that era that clings to you like a unique identifying scent or a fingerprint.
I remember Ronald Reagan speaking at my highschool. I still have both versions of DK's California Uber Alles. I thought Balki was hot and cylons were cooler than jesus and I just yearned with a nearly crazy desire after the Lost Boys. I remember when MTV was cool, in the very beginning and I just SUCKED at PacMan, though I'd feed the machine every weekend with my friends... these are things that define me and that will not change as the decades fly by. I know why most actual children of the 80s are at least vaguely geeky because it's something we all have in common. It's part of the stamp the decade left on us.
But this isn't something most kids who were BORN during the decade remember and those who were from the first years of the decade recall with the same horror and sense of WTF that those who were shaped by the 80s have for those things 70s. And more perversely, children of the 90s, born in the mid to late 80s LOVE all things 70s revisited, yet every time some 80s thread or mail pops up they jump on the 80s nostalgia bandwagon -- nevermind that all they remember of the decade is strawberry shortcake and reruns of the Dukes of Hazzard.
So why?