Gen Xers have raised their kids. Now, they're caring for parents
Another visits her widowed mother-in-law every weekend to help with chores around the house, and even pitches in to help an aunt-in-law with dementia.
Meanwhile, my husband and his two sisters take turns going to their father's apartment every weekend to dole out their bedridden dad's medicine, do his grocery shopping, handle his bills and medical care and make sure his home healthcare aides have what they need.
I bring my own father his medicine weekly — a rainbow of pills tidily tucked inside a rotating series of pillboxes. I pay his bills, schedule and take him to medical appointments, and run errands for him as he no longer drives. The place I frequent most often, other than my house, is the drug store.
All of these adult children are Gen Xers. All of our parents have lost their longtime spouses, and we are attempting to help. That's when we're not fielding questions from our twentysomething children about how to handle adulting, like what to do after you have a fender bender and how to deal with one's health insurer.
All of us have arrived at the stage of our lives where we've become the glue holding the generations together. We host the holiday events. We keep everyone up-to-date on family news, like the family town crier. This being-the-glue-of-the-family seems to have happened slowly, then all at once. We went from being the ones with the lives built around raising our children and trying to advance our careers to the ones who've added parenting our parents to our to-do lists.
Nearly every conversation winds up becoming a status update on our parents or our nascent adult children as we exchange war stories and engage in gallows humor, similar to what we did decades ago when we were navigating the early days of childrearing. Our own lives can seem like afterthoughts, which isn't new for the oft-ignored GenX generation.
Yet as we enter this new era of our lives, guidance is sparse. How-to books on raising kids tend to top out at the teenage years. There isn't much guidance on how to give young adult children the support they need while simultaneously respecting their autonomy and trying not to anger them.
Meanwhile, we're doing the same thing with our parents, most of whom are living solo for the first time after decades of marriage. We're trying to give them the support they need while simultaneously respecting their autonomy and trying not to anger them.
It's trickier doing this with your mother or father, who may have developed myriad unhealthy or unwise habits since you left home. Do we refuse to help them obtain unhealthy food? Do we tell them we're not getting them cigarettes or alcohol or intervene if they're drinking is out of control?
If we're paying our parents' bills, do we prevent financial damage from buying things they don't need or spending money on scams? New York magazine recently published a long feature about a writer's failed attempts to prevent his widower father from participating in an online romance scam that cost tens of thousands of dollars; trying to alert his father to the fact that this was a fraudulent website just enraged the 82-year-old and drove a wedge between them.
When I sat down to write my latest novel, 'Louie on the Rocks,' part of my motivation was to explore the role of an adult child, Lulu, and her widower father, Louie, as they clash over his choices, chiefly, about how Louie is spending his money. Louie firmly believes Lulu should butt out, but Lulu takes him to court to try to seize control over his finances, noting his decisions are affected by his spiraling alcoholism. It doesn't end well.
In my own life, years after our mother died, my brother and I started handling most of our father's finances and caring for his house. There were a multitude of uncomfortable bumps along the way. While my dad thanks us for our assistance, he chafes, naturally, at financial constraints. It no doubt feels insulting and infantilizing to have the people whose diapers you once changed suddenly telling you that you don't need that credit card or giving you only $50 instead of the $100 you requested.
Then there's the dementia issue.
A study from the journal Nature Medicine found that two in five people older than 55 will develop dementia in their later years. Given the size of the Baby Boomer generation, the number who'll be diagnosed with dementia is higher than previously thought. The number of cases is expected to double by 2060.
Then, throw in the drinking.
Business Insider recently declared that 'Baby Boomers Love Booze.' That's underplaying it. 'Alcohol use is increasing among adults 65 and older and the size of this population is expanding rapidly,' says a report in the medical journal Alcohol, adding that Boomers drink more than their predecessors in the Silent Generation.
That means a growing number of Gen Xers and older Millennials will probably soon find themselves deeply entrenched in their parents' lives, paying their bills, monitoring their activities (like telling them not to give a credit card number to someone who called claiming to be a grandson who's been arrested and needs bail money), and making sure they're not drinking too much.
Sounds a lot like parenting one's parents, who are likely to rebel just like our teenage children did. Maybe we're the ones who are going to need that drink.
Meredith O'Brien is the author of several books, including the recent novel 'Louie on the Rocks.' She lives in the Boston area.
We love to hear from Texans with opinions on the news — and to publish those views in the Opinion section.
• Letters should be no more than 150 words.
• Writers should submit letters only once every 30 days.
• Include your name, address (including city of residence), phone number and email address, so we can contact you if we have questions.
You can submit a letter to the editor two ways:
• Email letters@star-telegram.com (preferred).
• Fill out this online form.
Please note: Letters will be edited for style and clarity. Publication is not guaranteed. The best letters are focused on one topic.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Plane with three aboard crashes offshore near Monterey County lighthouse
Two people were found unresponsive and rescue crews were looking for a third person after a small plane crashed off the coast of Monterey County on Saturday night, according to the U.S. Coast Guard. Monterey County officials alerted the Coast Guard's Monterey station at 10:55 p.m. Saturday that a twin-engine Beechcraft with three people aboard had crashed about 200 to 300 yards offshore, near the historic Point Pinos Lighthouse in Pacific Grove, the Coast Guard said in a news release Sunday. The plane took off from the San Carlos airport at 10:11 p.m. and was last seen at 10:37 p.m. near Monterey, according to flight tracking data from Flight Aware. The Coast Guard launched a 29-foot response boat that arrived on the scene shortly after 11 p.m. A Coast Guard helicopter and three California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection boat crews also assisted in the search, along with two Cal Fire drones. Multiple local law enforcement agencies also assisted in the response. The Beechcraft was located, according to the Coast Guard. The plane had been scheduled to leave for Gooding Municipal Airport in Idaho on Sunday morning — a two-hour, 48-minute flight — and to fly back to Monterey later in the day. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the cause of the crash. ABC7 News in San Francisco reported that airplane parts, including at least one wheel, had washed up on nearby Asilomar State Beach by Sunday morning. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Yahoo
41 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Passengers evacuate Boeing jet after tyres blow out
Passengers were forced to evacuate from a Boeing flight after the plane's tyres blew out on the runway. American Airlines Flight 3023 was preparing to leave Denver International Airport for Miami on Saturday when it 'experienced a mechanical issue' while accelerating before take-off, the airline said. The incident raises further questions over Boeing's safety record following a number of major failures. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said in a statement on Sunday that the crew onboard the Boeing 737 Max 8 plane 'reported a possible landing gear incident during departure' at around 2.45pm (9.45pm BST) on Saturday. All 173 passengers and six crew 'de-planed safely' but one passenger sustained a minor injury and was taken to a hospital for evaluation, the airline said. Video shows passengers using the evacuation slide to leave the plane as smoke billows from the fuselage, some carrying small children. Several people can be seen falling onto the tarmac as they land. Mark Tsurkis, 50, a passenger aboard the flight, told ABC News he heard 'a loud boom' as the plane was about to take off. 'I said, 'That's not good',' Tsurkis said, at which point the plane began to slow down, he said, and passengers could see one of the wheels pass by. 'When the plane stopped about 30 seconds to a minute later, somebody said, 'Smoke, fire.' And then a lot of people, of course, started panicking,' Tsurkis said. Shay Armistead, a 17-year-old passenger who was headed to Santiago, Chile, for a ski trip told CNN that Saturday's ordeal was 'kind of traumatising.' As the plane moved down the runway, passengers heard a loud bang and believed the tyre popped, Armistead said. 'The plane started vibrating and shaking really bad. We started tilting to the left side of the runway, and then we heard the sound of the wind from them lifting up the brakes of the plane and slamming on them really hard.' The airline said: 'We thank our team members for their professionalism and apologise to our customers for their experience.' The FAA said it was investigating the incident. Boeing has been heavily criticised in recent years over a string of failures. In June the National Transportation Safety Board blasted Boeing's safety culture and its failure to stop a cabin panel getting sucked out mid-air during a flight in January 2024. The board said the company failed to install four key bolts in a new Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 during production. Sunday's evacuation also comes amid concerns over aviation safety in the United States after a string of recent accidents and near misses. On Friday a Southwest Airlines flight plunged mid-air to avoid colliding with another aircraft while en route to Las Vegas, injuring two flight attendants. In January, a mid-air collision between a commercial aircraft approaching Ronald Reagan Airport near downtown Washington and a military helicopter killed 67 people. In May, US President Donald Trump's administration announced plans to overhaul its 'antiquated' air traffic control system, which suffers from a shortage of controllers in FAA-managed towers. The government has laid off hundreds of FAA employees as part of its plan to slash the federal workforce. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more. Solve the daily Crossword


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
American Airlines jet at Denver International Airport evacuated due to landing gear incident
Passengers on board an American Airlines flight at Denver International Airport Saturday afternoon were evacuated due to an incident with the plane's landing gear during takeoff, officials confirmed. The Denver Fire Department said the problem occurred on board American Airlines Flight 3023 from Denver to Miami International Airport while the plane was still on the runway. The airline reported that all 173 passengers and six crew members on board were safely evacuated from the aircraft. One person was taken to a hospital with minor injuries, the airline said. The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that the crew of the Boeing 737 MAX 8 "reported a possible landing gear incident during departure" at around 2:45 p.m. local time. Video posted to Instagram by passenger Mark Tsurkis showed passengers evacuating the aircraft using a slide as smoke and flames billowed from below the rear of the plane. The passengers were transported to the terminal by bus. The FAA said it is actively investigating the incident. Tsurkis, a resident of Miami and Colorado Springs, told CBS News Miami the terrifying incident happened right before the plane went airborne. "During the speed-up, when the plane almost took off, we heard a loud boom, and I said, 'That's not good,'" Tsurkis said. He went on: "It was definitely an unpleasant moment, but we were lucky that we didn't get up in the air yet, so we weren't airborne just yet, but I would imagine that it happened five to 10 seconds before we were airborne." Tsurkis said the pilots immediately began to slow the plane down and then brought it to a halt. About a minute later, other passengers began to notice smoke coming up from the aircraft, and evacuations began shortly after, he added. Five people were evaluated at the scene but were not transported for further treatment, the airport confirmed. However, one person was transported to a hospital for medical attention both the airport and airline confirmed. American Airlines said in its statement that the aircraft "experienced a maintenance issue prior to takeoff" involving one of its tires and has been taken out of service for inspection. Later Saturday evening, the fire department said that it had extinguished a fire after responding to the aircraft. The displaced passengers would depart for Miami on a replacement aircraft later Saturday, the airline said. FlightAware showed at least 306 flights at Denver International Airport had been delayed as of Saturday night. The airport said a ground stop was in place from 2 p.m. until shortly after 3 p.m. for all incoming flights that had not left their departure airports yet. Operations at the airport have since returned to normal. A separate incident involving an American Airlines aircraft happened at the airport in March when a plane suffered an "engine-related issue" and was diverted to Denver International Geisel contributed to this report.