Anonymous wrote: OP, I don't know if it's them being Boomers, maybe it's just that there are so many Boomers that we notice it more?
I'm Gen X and my parents are (among the oldest) Boomers (Dad is deceased now). They were excellent grandparents to my adult kids, and also to my late in life 10 yo.
My ex-dh's parents are also Boomers. They were disinterested grandparents to our adult kids, and equally disinterested in my youngest who is also their last grandchild. I have to assume that it's just because they are a**holes like their ds.
No grandchilden for me yet, but I can't wait!!! I want to be like my parents, involved and helpful. My kids are devoted to my mom (and dad when living).
Anonymous wrote:Wow. My mom didn't have any help, her parents and in-laws were in a whole different country. I don't expect her to help me either. You sound like a brat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is strange that you would paint a brush on an entire generation based on your experience with your parents. My boomer parents could not be more interested in my kids. They're very helpful and I've always been around and available.
Everybody's different. Your parents are who they are and my parents are who they are. It's not a generational thing. It's more than likely how they were raised and then they pay it forward.
But in a lot of these cases, today’s grandparents are very different from how their own parents were as grandparents. That’s why OP is asking what’s going on. It doesn’t seem to have anything to do with how they were raised.
Anonymous wrote:If grandparents are local, it would be nice if they’d help in an emergency. But the notion that it’s expected for grandparents to provide ANY childcare (non-emergency) is strange to me. My kids have involved grandparents who will help out if they can (but non-local). It’s great, but they offer. We don’t assume.
My grandparents loved us, but virtually never watched us and mainly seemed more interested in talking to my parents. And it was fine! I had a good relationship with them. But the term “grand parenting” was not a thing. The grandkids were not their focus. I see it all the time on DCUM that people expect grandparents to help them parent. Why? If the grandparents want to do it, they’ll offer. But it shouldn’t be an expectation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok sociologists, Explain Boomer Grandparenting to me. What happened in Boomer history that made this a thing?
I am elder millennial former latch key kid. My Boomer parents preached raising an independent kid as their #1 value for parenting.
Fast forward: They have close to zero interest in grand parenting. Ask them to help out in an emergency, Boomer mom pulls out a calendar and say “well, we have Canasta at 3. How about three weeks from now?”
This creator who does Boomer Mom
Videos sums it up perfect. It’s a continuous guilt trip, not wanting to grandparent, and always being too busy. Also lots of double speak that makes you toss up your hands and say “why did I even bother.”
So, what in Boomer history influenced this parenting style?
https://www.tiktok.com/@callmekristenmarie/video/7476110074436472095
What happened? These three things:
1. They waited longer to have kids, you waited longer to have kids. My grandma was 56 when I was born, my mom was 52 when my oldest was born. But now people are becoming first time grandparents well into their 70s
2. They worked full time until 65+, they raised their kids while working full time and are now exhausted.
3. Because of all that work, older women feel entitled to be full humans now instead of free servants for other people. Be honest, when you say “boomer parents” you actually mean “boomer moms”, right? You don’t expect your dad to cook and clean, and babysit for you.
My dad is silent generation, and not only did he cook, clean, and babysit when I was a kid, he does it now for the grandkids. Boomer generation is such a waste of space.