Are you better off or worse off than your grandparents were?
I mean, my grandparents lived into their eighties, which is over the average life expectancy today, and they owned their own houses.
Granted, they didn't have computer games and twitter, but I suppose we all have hardships to bear.
If all goes well, I might be able to buy a house this year. Maybe. Which means at the age of 45, I would finally have bought a house. It will be smaller than the house I grew up in, cost an amount I'm more familiar with seeing in the sweepstakes winnings pages, and will have been bought two decades after when my grandparents bought theirs (the ones on my mother's side at least, my father's side were in british army housing in Tralee from the Royal Munster Fusileers days). This is despite earning more than my father ever did, and more than my grandfather could have counted to easily. Laugh at millenials all you want (especially since I predate them) but they're facing lives a lot harder than you'd think based on the idea of each generation always having it easier than the last, because that stopped working as a model for how things are somewhere between GenX and Millenials. (Also, I say "facing" like they were kids, but Millennials are now in their mid-30s to mid-40s and have kids of their own, because linear time is a cruel mistress).
My grandparents also didn't have to cope with a pandemic (they were born years after the last one) or climate change. And they missed out on the Irish civil war by a few years too. So they lived blessed lives in many ways.
Now, if you want to go back a century, that wouldn't be grandparents, that'd be my great-grandparents (want to feel old? Stay alive for a decade
) and to be fair, mine got shot in the somme where they'd been sent after surviving V beach and before they went home as a British Army colour-sergeant to train the IRA, so they probably had a more interesting time of it than their children did