If you were raised in the 1970s, your childhood looked nothing like today’s. You left home without supervision, played outside until the streetlights came on, learned through risk instead of rules, and entertained yourself without screens. That era shaped a generation with deep independence, resilience, patience, and adaptability — but also emotional distance and a complicated relationship with authority. In this video, we break down the psychology of people who grew up in the 1970s: – How an unsupervised childhood built self-reliance – Why boredom strengthened imagination and attention – The pre-digital mindset and face-to-face connection – Risk tolerance, authority, and emotional restraint – How this generation adapted as the world rapidly changed This is not nostalgia. It’s psychology. Subscribe to That Stoic Stick for psychological breakdowns, Stoic philosophy, and deep reflections on how your past shapes who you are today. #Psychology #1970s #70sKids #GenerationalPsychology #ChildhoodPsychology #StoicPsychology #ThatStoicStick #HumanBehavior #PsychologyOfThePast #Independence #Resilience #PreDigital #MentalStrength #DeepThinking