Anonymous wrote:It's nobody's "responsibility". It's a new thing when everybody has to be accessible all the time. Just 2 generations ago people moved out and rarely kept in touch with parents, only on major holidays or when something important was happening. Nobody was "reaching out" all the time, everybody was busy with their own lives, which is normal. My grandma lived with us (was born 1905) an none of her 8 kids (uncles, aunts) reached out, not always even on birthdays, people came together for births, weddings, funerals, and milestone birthdays (which there were plenty). Nowadays, my mom's (boomer) demands to "reach out" ended up in a conflict as every interaction started to feel like an interrogation. She was involved in our lives at all and suddenly figured out that my kids are teens and have no relationship with her. You cannot demand a bond if you haven't developed one.
I talked to my parents regularly in my 20 (I’m 54 now). We called each other. I don’t think there is a hard and fast rule, even today. My oldest is busy in college and we call him once a week, with some occasional texting during in between. My daughter will likely want/need more interaction. We follow their cues.