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What is the happy reality of our generation?

Last Updated: 17.06.2025 05:06

What is the happy reality of our generation?

The big Cities have gotten bigger and is almost unlivable now, traffic wise.

The first flush of aaya rams and gaya rams were creeping into the body politic of our legislature and that is when I left for the USA and that was almost 50 yrs. ago.

We had to wait for everything. Cars, Scooters, you name it. Nehru’s socialism meant that like the Soviet Union that he admired: There was a wait list for everything.

Why do good-looking men date homely women?

It was very very hard for the general category people to get seats in the few Engineering and Medical Colleges in the State, let alone the IIT’s.

Import Substitution was the mantra.

Thank you for the question. Ms. Priya C.

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5 Star hotels are dime a dozen.

Young Kids have a lot of money these days and are getting married much later.

> We grew up basking in the first flush of the pleasant prospect of an “Independent” resurgent India.

Would you raise your children like your parents raised you?

Growing up in this decade.

Indian industry started to make cars and other goods.

The first flush of enthusiasm of the Nehruvian age soon turned into despondency as Public Sector Industry after Public Sector Industry were all running in losses.

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Schools were fewer. Universities even fewer.

The middle class was small, but not that stressed from inflation etc.

Nehruvian: I belong to the Nehruvian Generation.

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Live in relationship; Divorce (almost unheard of in my youth) don’t raise an eyebrow.

Medical Insurance have proliferated along with US style expensive Doctor Bills.

Hindi Cinema had some great songs and tunes, even if many of us in the South especially didn’t understand such words as Ishq, Waqt, Zulf in the Hindi songs.

Which country has the best and strictest legal system in the world?

There was no TV… Doordarshan of very poor quality only reserved for New Delhi.

And then we did not have Google, Facebook, Whatsapp, Instagram.

I will also assume that this question is posed vis a vis my generation and compare that to conditions faced by generations today.

I gave him everything. He said he loved me. Why?

Five Star Hotels were not as ubiquitous as today.

Live-in, LGBTQ, none of these made the headlines.

As far as the vast majority of Indians, who lived from hand to mouth, there was hope and relief in a plethora of laws passed.

Have you ever witnessed a remote beach show where hundreds of turtles crawling to the water?

IIT’s had just been established.

There is a general atmosphere of intolerance towards minorities, with people unafraid to say things that would’ve been unthinkable in my day.

> Indian Political leaders, for the most part, were all men and some women of the highest educational and moral Calibre at all levels.

Why do people always talk about Ohio as it's a dangerous city?

Also, the Indian Economy while growing fast, is not able to provide jobs for sizable number of young men in the nation and that is a problem.

Newspapers also heavily censored themselves- clashes were referred to as “communal disturbances” between two communities. No details.

There are Engineering Colleges in almost every street corner, it seems.

Has anyone ever participated in a gang bang and what was it like?

Women in India seem to have more freedom, even as they feel more afraid of the general environment.

Education has gotten so much more expensive.

Life went on in essentially as a late 19th/early 20th century mold.

Libtards argue Obama deported more people than Trump, but if that were true why weren't they comparing Obama to Idi Amin?

Now of course,Today Secularism to many is a dirty word and so is Socialism;

South Indian Cinema had great actors and story lines that we could relate.

Study of Law (so important in my Dad’s generation gave way to Engineering and Medicine)

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Boys and Girls these days are not afraid to be friends to each other (My opinion overall a good thing)

2014- Present ( Modi).

Hospitals everywhere in India, with excellent care offered.

How would you spank me if I had been sent home from a school camp because of my poor behavior?

1991- 2014 ( P.V. Narasimha Rao/ MMS)

Everything is available today without any delay. You have the money, you got it in today’s India.

On a personal level.

Computers were just creeping in and opposed by the Labor Unions.

Govt. careers, such as IAS, IPS etc. very quickly gave way to Engineering /Medical degrees in the newly developing India (At least in the South).

Boys and Girls were strictly segregated.

There are also proliferation of IT cells that offer an altered reality of the world, as they would like to see it and not as it really is.

Redefined

1964- 1984–1991 ( Roughly Indira/ Rajeev Gandhi)

Foreign goods, forget about it, mostly sold in black markets.

Pluses:

1947–1964 ( Post Independence Generation). (Roughly Nehruvian)

I’m going to attempt to taxonomy “Generations” in India as below.

South Indian Films have now gained an All India Traction and seems to be edging out Bollywood, as it portrays less of a fake India than Bollywood.

Now folks on Quora have undoubtably heard the so-called term “Boomer Generation” used in the US. Interestingly enough these time periods dovetail quite nicely with “Indian Conditions” as well.

> India’s population was around 365 million.

I will first attempt to use the nomenclature used to distinguish “generations” -albeit from a Desi Slant.

People got married the old fashioned way (mostly).

Your parents chose your career path and also your profession. Aptitude be damned.

Love marriages were all to be ‘gasped at’ so rare were they at that time.

2014- Present

Ministers etc. were the only ones to have the Indian Flag on their bonnets. (Don’t know why?)

Foreign Exchange were so hard to come by in case you had to go abroad.

It was to me, anyway, a relatively chaste period.

Indian Media is being controlled by a few business houses and the news especially foreign news is presented in a slanted way to suit the way, the Govt. would like it to be seen or not seen at all.

> Idealism reigned supreme, about the Govt. and it people and why not?

The Airports have gotten better and nicer.

> The horrors of Partition meant that the Govt would make sincere efforts to put all that behind us and accommodate all faiths.

Many Indian Journalists have now been co opted so that they too are now in the money making business and currying favor with the powers that be. So how objective can their writings be?

Even though inflation was rising, there was a semblance of stability in the daily routine of everybody. The institutions and arms of the Govt. worked for the most part. Judiciary, Police, Govt bureaucracy etc.

> “Secularism” was dinned into our ears until it became “second nature”, to most of us anyway.

> Leaders such as Nehru, Rajaji, Morarji Desai etc. were held to the highest standard and they fulfilled that expectation. The idea that they were corrupt was unthinkable, any more than the thought that one’s parents had sex with each other. It was an age, in retrospect, of “innocence” and not just at the level of us kids.

Very few boys strayed and even fewer girls.

Bank Jobs were highly sought after.

>Both Central and State. Most of the Leaders were educated in the finest traditions of liberalism, often at Oxford and Cambridge and they had sacrificed their ‘cushy futures” for the cause of independence. When country’s rule passed into their hands, what would one expect?. Little if any corruption at the highest levels, or at least the perception of it.

> River Dams, Public Sector undertakings, Five year Plans galore, HMT, HAL, ITI etc. gave us the aam aami the euphoric feeling that we were on the right track to our deserved place as a great power in the comity of nations.

I know that some will cavil that I am ignoring I. K. Gujral, Chandrasekhar, Deve Gowda, Morarji Desai, even the redoubtable A.B. Vajpayee’s stint as PM. But bear with me, for the moment. This is done on purpose and to make comparisons simpler.