Share what you know about the year you were born.

I was born in 1989, a year that didnβt whisper changeβit announced it.
I didnβt know it then, of course. I arrived quietly, unaware that the world around me was shifting in ways that history would later underline in bold. While I learned to breathe, the world was learning to break old walls and imagine new possibilities.
1989 is often remembered as a year of transformation.
The Berlin Wall fell, not just as bricks and concrete, but as an ideaβthat division could be challenged, that long-standing barriers werenβt permanent after all. Across the globe, people were questioning systems, voices were growing louder, and change felt inevitable.
Technology, too, was taking its first confident steps. The foundations of the digital world were being laidβslowly, imperfectly, but with intention. The internet was still a quiet idea then, nowhere near the constant presence it is today. Life moved at a human pace. Letters mattered. Waiting was normal.
Culturally, it was a time before speed took over everything.
Photos were physical. Music came on tapes. News arrived with a delay. And somehow, that slowness gave moments room to settle.
Knowing I was born in 1989 feels symbolic now.
A year of endings and beginnings.
A year that proved change doesnβt always arrive gentlyβbut it does arrive.
I like to think that some of that yearβs spirit followed me into lifeβthe quiet adaptability, the ability to stand between the old and the new, the comfort with transition. Growing up alongside a rapidly changing world taught me flexibility before I even had words for it.
I wasnβt just born in a year.
I was born into a turning point.
And maybe thatβs why Iβve learned to accept changeβnot as something to fear, but as something that shapes us, slowly and deeply, over time.
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