-1995- | Memories
But my personal reels are quieter: the sound of a lawn sprinkler in July, the feel of a magazine’s glossy pages, the smell of a freshly printed TV Guide . We wrote notes on folded paper. We memorized phone numbers. We got lost on purpose, because without GPS, getting lost was just part of the adventure.
My visual memory of 1995 is grainy, slightly over-saturated, and framed in 4:3. It was the year of the O.J. Simpson trial—faces glued to the TV in every waiting room. It was the year of Clueless , where the clothes were plastic and the wit was sharp. memories -1995-
We played Mortal Kombat III on a Sega Genesis plugged into a bulky CRT television. If you wanted to play a friend, you had to bike to their house, knock on the door, and look their dad in the eye. There was no “airplane mode” because we were all already offline. But my personal reels are quieter: the sound
But my memories aren’t of the charts. They are of sitting cross-legged on a bedroom carpet, the orange glow of a stereo display lighting up the dust motes in the air. I remember the ritual of music: saving up allowance for a CD, peeling the plastic off the jewel case, and reading the lyric booklet front to back because there was no phone to scroll through. Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill wasn’t just an album; it was a shared secret for every confused teenager that year. We got lost on purpose, because without GPS,
Musically, 1995 was a crossroads. On one side, you had the last gasps of Seattle’s heavy flannel. On the other, a British invasion of Britpop was kicking in the door. You couldn’t walk down a high street without hearing the swagger of Oasis’s “Wonderwall” or the cool detachment of Coolio’s “Gangsta’s Paradise.”
We didn’t have Google. We had encyclopedias, library cards, and the vague advice of a friend’s older brother. Information was earned, not searched. And somehow, that made knowing things feel like treasure.