Millennial Wonders Why Their Boomer Parents Have Suddenly Started Cutting People Off And Complaining About Everyone

Last updated on Apr 26, 2026

Boomer parent is complaining. Teona Swift | Pexels
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The social and emotional implications of generation gaps are a highly contested topic, a conversation that’s often discussed in sweeping generalizations. Yet one person wrote on an online forum about a fraught question about changes they’ve seen in their 70-year-old Baby Boomers' parents.

The millennial wondered why their Boomer parents’ attitude turned ‘nasty’ as they aged.

Their parents are in their mid-to-late 70s and have grown more isolated as the years have passed. “Ten years ago, they had friends,” the person explained. “They would throw dinner parties that four to six other couples would attend. They would be invited to similar parties thrown by their friends.”

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In keeping with common stereotypes about Boomers, the person described their parents as “pretty arrogant, but hey, what else would you expect from a Boomer couple with three master's degrees, two PhDs, and a JD between the two of them.”

Yet now, the millennial noted, their parents “have no friends, and I mean that literally.”

Millennial wonders why their Boomer parents have suddenly started cutting people off and complaining about everyone

millennial man sitting next to his boomer parent Getty Images / Unsplash+

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“One by one, each of the couples and individual friends that they had known and socialized with closely for years, even decades, will no longer associate with them,” they shared. They described how both their parents ended decades-long friendships after a “minor slight.”

“All either of them does is complain and talk crap about people they used to associate with,” they said. “This does not feel normal.” 

RELATED: 'I'm An Only Child Of Boomer Parents Who Never Saved For Retirement, And Now It All Falls On Me'

The millennial asked if other people of their generation have witnessed their Boomer parents' decline, too. 

“Is anyone else experiencing this? Were our grandparents like this, too, and we were just too young to notice it?” They asked.

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Other millennials in the comments section shared their own experiences of their parents’ aging process, with many people affirming that Baby Boomers, on the whole, seem to be running up against their own emotional limitations. One person described their Boomer parent as “entitled, lacking empathy, and super judgmental," while saying she’s not at all.

“Sometimes I wonder if our parents are changing or we all just grew up and can see that they were always this way,” they said.

Someone else affirmed that theory, saying, “We're seeing them as they always were, just through the lens of ourselves being adults.” Another person agreed, yet upheld the gracious, open-hearted perspective that Boomers are confronting larger emotional issues than they know how to navigate.

“I think people in that age bracket just suppressed their feelings and never dealt with them,” they said. “Now that their bodies are more fragile due to age, they can't handle it and become grouchy and bitter.”

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RELATED: Boomers Lived By These 11 Unspoken Rules That Worked Out Pretty Well (For The Most Part)

Boomers were raised by the silent generation, people who survived World Wars and the Great Depression.

boomer couple looking down at his phone together Keith Tanner / Unsplash

Most of them weren’t given the tools needed to confront the origins of their emotional turmoil. Some studies suggest that Boomers were affected by environmental forces beyond their control, like lead poisoning, which can cause long-lasting psychological damage, including “less adaptive personality profiles in adulthood, lower conscientiousness, lower agreeableness, and higher neuroticism.”

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Someone else touched on the belief that aging changes everyone in different ways, saying, “Life either softens you or hardens you, and you have a choice about how you want to respond to the difficulties you face in life.”

“I really want to choose softness, even though it's not always easy,” they shared.

At a certain point, no matter how old or young we are, we benefit from taking accountability for how we exist in the world. While it’s a challenge to heal generational trauma, it’s also the greatest gift we can give ourselves and our future descendants. 

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RELATED: If A Parent Had These 11 Troubling Traits, Their Adult Children Probably Resent Them Now

Alexandra Blogier is a writer on YourTango's news and entertainment team. She covers social issues, pop culture analysis, and all things to do with the entertainment industry.

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