Let’s face it: childhood in the 50s and 60s wasn’t the Norman Rockwell painting we sometimes imagine.
Sure, some kids had idyllic upbringings. But for many who grew up during that era, it was a time of strict discipline, limited emotional support, and expectations that would seem harsh by today’s standards.
Here’s what fascinates me: psychology research is now showing that those who survived difficult childhoods during this period often developed remarkable strengths they don’t even realize they have. These aren’t just survival skills—they’re genuine advantages that serve us well decades later.
So today, I want to explore nine hidden strengths that people who weathered tough childhoods in the 50s and 60s typically carry with them. You might recognize yourself in more than a few.
1. Remarkable emotional resilience
When I think back to my own childhood, showing too much emotion wasn’t exactly encouraged.
If you fell and scraped your knee, you dusted yourself off and carried on. If something upset you, you learned to deal with it quietly.
Harsh? In many ways, yes. But it built something valuable: emotional resilience.
The experts at Harvard Health Publishing have noted that people who learned to manage difficult emotions early in life often develop stronger coping mechanisms throughout adulthood.
We learned that feelings pass, difficulties don’t last forever, and we have inner strength to weather storms. That’s not nothing.
2. Deep self-reliance
How many of you remember being sent outside to play in the morning and not expected back until dinner?
Kids in the 50s and 60s had far more independence than children today. We walked to school alone, sorted out our own disputes, and figured out how to entertain ourselves without adult supervision.
For those from difficult homes, this independence was even more pronounced. We had to learn self-care because there wasn’t always someone available to help.
The result? We developed self-reliance that’s genuinely impressive. We learned to trust our judgment, solve our own problems, and stand on our own two feet.
3. Creative problem-solving abilities
There’s a reason they call us resourceful.
When you grow up without the internet, without instant answers, and sometimes without much support, you learn to figure things out. You improvise. You make do.
I remember trying to fix my bicycle when I was about ten. No YouTube tutorial to follow, no parent with time to help. I just had to look at the problem and work through it until I found a solution.
That kind of thinking—breaking down problems, trying different approaches, persisting until you figure it out—becomes second nature. It’s a strength that serves you for life.
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4. Genuine gratitude for what they have
Here’s something I’ve noticed about people who had it tough as kids: we don’t take things for granted.
When you grew up without much, or in an environment where good things felt scarce, you learned to appreciate what you did have. A warm meal, a safe place to sleep, a moment of kindness—these things meant something.
That attitude sticks with you. Decades later, I find myself genuinely grateful for things others might see as ordinary. A comfortable home. Good health. Time with loved ones.
The team at Greater Good Magazine at UC Berkeley has found that people who practice gratitude experience better mental and physical health. For many of us, that gratitude wasn’t something we had to learn—it was forged in us early on.
5. Strong work ethic
In the 50s and 60s, most of us learned one thing clearly: if you want something, you work for it.
There were no participation trophies. No one handed out rewards just for showing up. If you wanted to succeed—whether at school, sports, or later in your career—you had to put in the effort.
For kids from difficult backgrounds, this was doubly true. Many started working young, whether paper routes, helping in family businesses, or taking on responsibilities at home that would surprise kids today.
That work ethic became ingrained. It’s why so many of us have been reliable employees, built successful careers, and instilled similar values in our own children.
6. Impressive adaptability
Life in a difficult household meant you had to be flexible.
Plans changed without warning. Situations shifted unexpectedly. You learned to roll with the punches because you had no other choice.
That adaptability is a genuine advantage, especially as we age and face new challenges like retirement, health changes, or loss.
I’ve seen it in myself and others from my generation: we don’t fall apart when life throws curveballs. We assess, we adjust, and we move forward. That’s the gift of having learned early that change is constant and adaptation is essential.
7. Heightened empathy and compassion
This one might surprise you, but stay with me.
You might think that people with difficult childhoods would become hard or uncaring. And sure, some do. But more often, I’ve found the opposite.
When you know what it’s like to struggle, when you’ve experienced pain or neglect or hardship, you develop deep understanding of others’ suffering. You can spot someone who’s hurting because you’ve been there.
Many who survived tough childhoods became the adults who notice when someone needs help, who offer support without being asked, who create the warmth and safety for others that we didn’t always have ourselves.
8. Realistic perspective on life
Viktor Frankl once said: “When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.”
Growing up in the 50s and 60s, especially in difficult circumstances, taught us that life isn’t fair. Bad things happen to good people, and sometimes there’s no one coming to rescue you.
But here’s the strength in that: we’re not naive. We don’t have unrealistic expectations about how life should go. When hardship comes—and it comes for everyone eventually—we’re not blindsided.
This realistic perspective helps us weather difficulties that might devastate someone who expected life to be easy. We knew it wouldn’t be, so we prepared ourselves accordingly.
9. Profound inner strength
All of these other strengths feed into this final one: people who survived difficult childhoods in the 50s and 60s have a core of inner strength that’s difficult to shake.
We’ve already proven to ourselves that we can handle hard things. We did it when we were just kids, with far fewer resources and much less support than we have now.
That knowledge—that deep, bone-level understanding that we are capable of surviving and even thriving despite adversity—is perhaps the greatest gift our difficult childhoods gave us.
It doesn’t mean we never struggle or that we’re invincible. It means we have a foundation of strength to draw on when times get tough.
Final thoughts
Look, I’m not here to romanticize difficult childhoods. Kids deserve safety, warmth, and support.
But if you lived through a tough childhood in the 50s or 60s and made it to where you are today, I want you to recognize something: you’re stronger than you probably give yourself credit for.
Those difficult years forged strengths that many people never develop. And while it would have been better to develop them in easier circumstances, the fact remains—you have them now.
So here’s my question: which of these strengths do you recognize in yourself? And how can you honor that strength while also being gentle with yourself about the wounds that came with it?
