Toronto Star

How can we make our adult children care?

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Dear readers: For Christmas Eve — with its underlying message of hope that can be applied to all people concerned about the future for themselves and their families — I’ve chosen a reader’s question that spans three generation­s and deals with the most universal of relationsh­ip concerns: how we humans treat each other. Q: At what point should a parent expect adult children to become less self-absorbed and show more interest in others around them (e.g. parents and grandparen­ts)?

Our two adult children are smart, successful, lovely people. We’ve always shown them that we’d be there for them — help them, support them, listen when they have difficulti­es.

We’ve discussed with them in recent years that perhaps it’s time for them to take some initiative in contacting their loving/caring grandparen­ts, also calling us to see how we’re doing and reaching out to each other as siblings. But only when we make contact or have everyone over do we hear from them (unless they need something). We’re hurt by this behaviour and tired of reminding, “Your grandmothe­r is sick, maybe you should call her?” We always made the effort with our own parents and grandparen­ts, to show them love, keep in touch and be supportive of them.

Now we’re at a loss. Do we pull back from our adult children so they see that they need to make an effort if they want family in their life? Thinking of Withdrawin­g

A: It’s not just the time of year that should help you think this through. It’s also the time of life and the period in which you and your adult children are living that can help with your response.

Your adult children are busy, even busier than you were at their age. You may have struggled more to get ahead, perhaps with less support and other disadvanta­ges. But there’s no doubting that younger people are living with a faster-moving, ever-changing culture, where work/life now has 24-hour demands through the internet, email, texting, social media and other technologi­es.

Raising youngsters is also different — more time-consuming, more driving, more pressure for more activities (fitness, culture, sports, the arts) and arranging play time with other children since unsupervis­ed street play is largely a thing of the past.

Meanwhile, parents of adult children (like yourself ) are thankfully living longer and healthier, and/or with medical needs that largely can be handled through medication­s and successful interventi­ons. Today’s adult children take this care of their parents for granted, since it’s in their awareness years that they’ve seen all these advances.

Do these comparativ­e lifestyle realities excuse younger adults from any responsibi­lity to maintainin­g family ties? Of course not. Rather, they should help the generation­s understand that change requires new adaptation­s and expectatio­ns.

For me, withdrawin­g from your grown-up children isn’t a reaction that makes sense. Miss the fun of seeing their present/future children grow from helpless infants to children amazed about small things we grownups take for granted — snowflakes, candles, a spinning top? No way. Punish your adult children for not calling more often? There’s no win there!

Join their communicat­ion mode and text to ask how they’re doing, then text about what’s happening with you. Tell them how their grandparen­ts are, and still arrange those get-togethers for the extended family.

But ask them to bring part of the meal and, when it gets too much for you, ask them to host it. They’ll recognize the need (albeit reluctantl­y) when it becomes necessary with the next set of changes. Meanwhile, keep loving them; you need each other. Ellie’s Tip of the Day

Don’t knock generation­al difference­s, adapt instead.

Read Ellie Monday to Saturday. Email ellie@thestar.ca or visit her website, ellieadvic­e.com. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

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Ellie ADVICE

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