Ever notice how your parents can’t seem to help themselves from offering advice about everything from your career choices to how you load the dishwasher?
I used to be that parent. When my younger son started his first job after college, I had opinions about everything—his commute route, his lunch choices, even how he organized his desk. One evening, he finally looked at me with exhaustion in his eyes and said, “Dad, when you constantly tell me what to do, it feels like you think I’m incompetent.”
That hit me like a ton of bricks.
What I thought was caring guidance felt to him like constant criticism. And here’s the thing—I wasn’t trying to control him. I genuinely thought I was showing love the only way I knew how.
Why boomers can’t stop giving advice
When I was growing up, parents showed love by solving problems. My father fixed my bike when it broke, told me exactly how to handle bullies, and had strong opinions about which classes I should take. That was parenting. That was love.
We boomers were raised in an era where being useful meant being valuable. Your worth came from what you could do, what you could fix, what wisdom you could impart. Nobody asked if you needed emotional support or validation—they asked if you needed help with your homework or advice about your job interview.
Think about it: when was the last time you heard someone from my generation say “I just need you to listen” instead of “What should I do?” We weren’t taught that listening without solving was valuable. We were taught that if you care about someone, you help them avoid mistakes.
Sharon Martin, DSW, LCSW, a licensed psychotherapist, puts it perfectly: “Unsolicited advice can sometimes feel like criticism or a lack of trust in their abilities.”
But for many of us boomers, offering advice is like breathing—we do it without thinking because it’s how we learned to express care.
The generational communication gap nobody talks about
Here’s what fascinates me: what feels like support to one generation can feel like suffocation to another.
Avery White, an author who writes about family dynamics, nails this disconnect: “Parents may express closeness through guidance and concern, while daughters experience those same messages as intrusion or mistrust.”
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I’ve seen this play out countless times at family gatherings. A parent suggests a “better” way to handle finances, and suddenly their adult child’s shoulders tense up. The parent thinks they’re being helpful; the child hears “You’re not capable of managing your own life.”
The first few months of my retirement really drove this home for me. My entire identity had been wrapped up in being useful, in solving problems, in having answers. Suddenly, nobody needed me for anything. That feeling of falling off a cliff? That’s what happens when your primary love language becomes obsolete.
When helping becomes hurting
You know what’s ironic? The more we try to help through advice-giving, the more we push our kids away.
Margaret Foley, a psychologist, observes that “Overthinking leaves parents feeling disconnected from their adult children.”
And she’s right. I used to lie awake planning conversations, preparing advice for problems my kids hadn’t even asked me to solve. Meanwhile, they were pulling away, calling less, sharing less of their lives.
Recent research analyzing parent-child interactions found that even well-intentioned parental behaviors, such as unlabelled praise, can significantly increase specific conflict types, highlighting the complexity of parent-child dynamics.
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- I moved to a small village in Tuscany after my retirement and spent the first three months thinking I was on vacation, until I realized I was actually grieving a life I never had the courage to live - Global English Editing
What we intend as support gets lost in translation.
The uncomfortable truth about control
Now, let me be clear about something that took me years to understand: just because we don’t intend to be controlling doesn’t mean our behavior isn’t experienced that way.
When I gave my son advice about his job, I genuinely thought I was helping. But impact matters more than intention. If your adult child feels controlled, telling them “I’m just trying to help” doesn’t change their experience.
There’s also an uncomfortable truth about boundaries that my generation struggles with. As Peg Streep, an author who writes about family dynamics, points out: “It is also not ok for you to excoriate your parents for deciding that they do not want to bankroll your choices and to decide to wage war.”
The street goes both ways. We need to respect our children’s autonomy, but they also need to understand that our way of showing love might be different from what they prefer.
Learning a new language of love
So how do we bridge this gap?
For me, it started with learning to ask questions instead of offering opinions. When my son tells me about a work challenge now, I ask, “Are you looking for advice, or do you just need to vent?” Nine times out of ten, he just needs someone to listen.
This shift wasn’t easy. The urge to jump in with solutions is still strong. Sometimes I literally bite my tongue. But the payoff has been incredible—my sons actually talk to me more now that I’ve learned to dial back the advice.
I’ve had to accept that my way of showing love—fixing things, solving problems—wasn’t what my kids actually needed most of the time. They needed presence, not prescriptions. Understanding, not instructions.
Getting feedback from my sons as adults about things I’d gotten wrong as a father was painful but valuable. They helped me see that my constant advice-giving made them feel like I didn’t trust them to figure things out on their own.
Closing thoughts
If you’re a boomer parent struggling with this, cut yourself some slack. We’re trying to unlearn a lifetime of programming. We were taught that love means protecting, guiding, and preventing mistakes. Nobody told us that sometimes love means stepping back and letting people find their own way.
And if you’re an adult child frustrated by your parents’ constant advice? Try to remember that for many of us, this really is our love language. We’re not trying to control you—we’re trying to connect with you using the only tools we were given.
The beautiful thing about languages? We can learn new ones. My sons taught me phrases I never knew: “I trust your judgment.” “You’ve got this.” “Tell me more about how you’re feeling.”
These days, when I feel that familiar urge to offer unsolicited advice, I remind myself of something: My kids already know what I think. What they really need to know is that I believe in them.
Isn’t that what we all need to know, really?
