The Millennials Are Still Here
- Kas

- Apr 8
- 4 min read
Updated: Apr 14
I saw a quote the other day while I was doom scrolling. I don’t remember if it was on Instagram or Threads or TikTok, because at this point all the apps blur together into one long stream of opinions and hot takes.
But the quote said something like:
“Millennials aren’t creating content anymore. Gen Z is the only influence on the platforms now, and they’re all learning how to live from a generation that’s barely lived.”
Or something along those lines.
And it stuck with me.
Not because I thought it was entirely true, but because it made me pause for a second and think about where I’ve been lately.
Because the truth is, I love creating content.
I love writing. I love documenting life. I love capturing little moments and turning them into stories or posts or videos.
That part of me has always been there.
But somewhere along the way I buried it.
Not intentionally. Not in some dramatic “I quit the internet forever” kind of way. It was quieter than that. It was excuses stacking up on top of each other. It was mental health getting heavy. It was burnout. It was overthinking every little thing until the idea of posting anything at all felt exhausting.
And suddenly months pass.
Then a year.
And you’re sitting there thinking, I used to do this all the time.
Millennials were the first generation that really grew up with the internet as a social space. We were the MySpace kids. The MSN screen names. The early YouTube era where people were just filming things in their bedrooms because they felt like it.
Content didn’t have to be perfect back then.
Half the time it was blurry. The audio was bad. The editing was questionable at best.
But it was real.
And that’s something I think we forget sometimes now.
Because if you scroll through most platforms today, everything feels… polished. Strategic. Optimized. Everyone is trying to beat the algorithm or go viral or turn every moment into a brand opportunity.
And listen, I get it. There’s nothing wrong with people building careers online.
But sometimes I miss the chaotic, slightly unhinged energy of the early internet. The part where people were just sharing things because they wanted to share them.
No content calendar. No engagement strategy. Just vibes.
Which is why that quote stuck with me.
Because the idea that millennials just quietly stopped creating isn’t entirely true.
A lot of us didn’t stop because we lost interest.
We stopped because life got heavy.
We got jobs. Bills. Responsibilities. Trauma to unpack. Therapy appointments. Relationships to navigate. Existential crises about turning thirty and realizing adulthood is just a long series of emails and grocery trips.
And somewhere in the middle of all that, the creative part of us got pushed to the side.
Not gone.
Just buried.
Under exhaustion. Under self doubt. Under the voice in your head that says, Who cares what you have to say anyway?
I know that voice well.
It’s been loud in my head for a long time.
Because I do want to create.
I want to write more. I want to vlog again. I want to document my life the way I used to when the internet felt like a giant messy scrapbook instead of a performance stage.
But every time I think about starting again, my brain immediately starts listing reasons why I shouldn’t. You’re too late. The internet has changed. Nobody cares. Gen Z already runs everything.
And maybe they do.
But here’s the thing.
Millennials have lived through a lot.
We were teenagers during the early internet boom. We watched social media grow from something weird and experimental into something that literally shapes culture. We lived through recessions, rapid technological change, and a world that feels like it’s been accelerating nonstop for the last twenty years.
We have stories.
We have perspective.
We have the kind of lived experience that only shows up when you’ve had enough time to screw up, learn from it, and do it all again slightly better the next time.
Gen Z deserves their space online. They’re creative, chaotic, hilarious, and wildly self aware.
But that doesn’t mean the rest of us have to quietly fade into the background.
There’s room for all of it.
There’s room for younger voices figuring things out for the first time. And there’s room for people who’ve already been through a few cycles of life and have something different to say.
And honestly, I think the internet needs both.
So lately I’ve been thinking about that quote again.
About millennials disappearing from content creation.
And I realized something.
Maybe we didn’t disappear.
Maybe we just got tired.
Maybe we got overwhelmed.
Maybe we convinced ourselves that our time had passed before we even gave ourselves a chance to keep going.
And I don’t want to be part of that story.
I want to create again.
Not perfectly. Not strategically. Just honestly.
I want to write blog posts that feel like conversations. I want to pick up the camera again and vlog pieces of my life. I want to share the messy, mid-thirties reality of trying to figure things out in real time.
Because the truth is, I’m still learning how to live too.
We all are.
And maybe the best thing any of us can do is show up and document the process.
So if the internet thinks millennials are done creating, that’s fine.
But I’m not.
Not yet.
Not even close.
we didn’t fail the timeline. the timeline failed us.
talk soon, kas
☕✨



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