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As baby boomer parents age, they're discovering the empty-nest syndrome is nothing compared to what happens when their kids graduate from college and start leading lives of their own. To a generation famous for being involved in every aspect of their children's lives, it can be upsetting to find that those children no longer need or welcome your advice. How does one parent children who no longer need parenting? Publishing veteran Isay, an editor and mother of two grown sons, interviews scores of parents and adult children of all ages to see how they are doing it. The stories are heartwarming, and Isay recounts them with intelligence and compassion. What does she find? Nothing Ann Landers hasn't already told us. Mainly: don't give advice; make friends with your children's significant others; and remember that love heals. The most compelling story is Isay's own. One wishes it were the centerpiece of the book rather than tacked on as an epilogue. Her experience is an example of her most interesting discovery: children are quick to forgive and often the ones who take the initiative in forging a new brand of closeness between themselves and their parents—a closeness that is best described as adult. (Mar. 27)
Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.1. Are you envious when you watch people you know with their grown kids, or with their parents? Sometimes people put on a good face, but most parents wish they could be more at ease with their kids, and most grown children wish their parents would change their behavior. What do you wish you could change about your child/parent? What annoys you most? What makes you happiest?
2. Are you closer to one parent than another? Are you closer to one child than to the other(s)? Walking on Eggshells shows that no person in the family has the same degree of ease or tension with the others. Tell some stories about these differences, both from your family and your grandparents.
3. Do you wish you could improve the relationships between the generations? Everybody has done or said things they regret, and this book tells stories of occasions when people apologized or changed their behavior. Has this ever happened to you? Is there something you want to apologize for? Isay has found that guilt for past behavior drives a wedge between the generations. Has this happened to you?
4. Do you feel judged too harshly by your parents? Do you feel let down by your children? At some point, parents have to adjust their expectations to the reality of their grown kids’ lives, and adult children need to begin to see their parents as just plain people, flaws and all. What has happened in your life to make you adjust to the reality of your parents/children? If you’ve had to adjust, did it improve your relationship?
5. If you’re a parent, how did you feel when your parents told you what to do? If you’re an adult child, what impact did your folks’ advice have? Walking on Eggshells advises that no advice is the best advice! Think and talk about the suggestions you made or received that you appreciated, and the ones that you resented. Think about how they might have been phrased better to make them more acceptable.
6. Do you belong to a family where the parents have been divorced and remarried? How do you deal with stepparents/stepchildren? Isay has found that it is not easy to form an old-fashioned family when the new relatives are all grown. Adult stepchildren especially resent the new parent, and new stepparents often take this personally. What is your experience with your stepfamily, and what do you think could be done to improve the situation? Or is it hopeless?
7. How do you get along with your in-laws? How does your spouse relate to your parents? Is there something you would dearly love to change in this relationship? Sometimes stereotypes are correct, and some mothers-in-law are awful, but Isay has found that there are plenty of families where the generations really get along. It just takes a lot of tact and self-control to lay down the foundation of these relationships. What would you change in your relationship with your in-laws?
8. Do you spend enough time with your grandchildren? Are your parents helpful with your kids and do they respect how you are raising them? It’s not easy for parents to see their grown children raising their own kids differently from the way in which they were raised. What do you think about this, and how would you explain what you really feel to your adult children or to your parents?
9. How do you deal with money? Some parents want to help their kids equally; others help the ones in need, if they can. There is often resentment on the subject, and people are confused about how to handle it. There are no easy answers. What do you think about this? How does your family deal with the issue?
10. If there were one thing you wanted to hear from your parent/child, what would it be? If there were one thing you wanted your child/parent to hear from you, what would it be?
Anonymous
Posted July 22, 2007
I was looking for a book to help with family problems, I believe this will help. I am buying this for my mother who likes to give unsolicated advice. Easy read and easy to understand.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 28, 2007
There is really not a lot out there on the topic of maintaining a strong relationship with your adult children, and this book goes a long way toward addressing that. The stories of the families are moving and inspiring, and the autor's own story, related in the epilogue, brought me to tears. Lots food for thought both for parents with grown up kids and for those with younger kids who want to avoid making mistakes that can have repercussions for years to come.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted April 30, 2007
Finding a book that deals with family relationships that shows insights from multiple perspectives is a real challenge. Jane Isay's WALKING ON EGGSHELLS does this effortlessly and elegantly, showing grown children the ways in which their parents might be struggling to understand them and showing parents the ways in which their children might need them to adjust their perspectives so that our relationships with each other can mature as we grow older and, one hopes, wiser. After reading this book I definitely felt I had better tools for understanding my parents and I felt sure that if my parents read it they would understand me better, too. Funny, insightful, and invaluable.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 31, 2007
excellent advice. written with warmth, humor and insight. highlly recommended.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 27, 2007
Now a book to tell me how to relate to my adult children? I have 3 great sons who are college educated, grown and very successful. I stay out of their business and have my own life. That is it in a nutshell..I think I will write a book about it!!!!!
1 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 29, 2007
Jane Isay's excellent book fills a much needed space in the contiinuing communication between parents and grown children.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 1, 2007
A flat-out wonderful book! Isay, long known as an editor skilled for shaping riveting narratives, has done it again, but this time as a writer -- with her own experience and the experiences of families across America. A must read for anyone who has ever wondered whether their relationship with their grown children would survive the many tests of time. And unlike typical family advice books, this one is elegantly written.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted November 20, 2011
This is a great book for those who are looking for solutions to difficult child/parent situations. It tells it like it is and is helpful to those who find themselves looking inward for answers on how to deal with these problems
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Posted May 7, 2007
I love this book
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 31, 2007
Please do not waste your money on this book! I had to force myself to keep reading in hopes that it would get better. All the book has to offer is other peoples stories about their kids! There is absolutley no insight to developing a relationship between adult children and parents. I am an adult child looking to mend the relationship with my absent mother, and this book offered no help at all. I am furious that I wasted $15 on this!!
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Posted December 14, 2009
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Posted January 17, 2010
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Posted January 28, 2010
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Posted August 1, 2010
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Posted February 5, 2011
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Posted July 20, 2009
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Overview
On giving advice:They Don’t Want It.
They Don’t Hear It.
They Resent It.
Don’t Give It.
We raise our children to be independent and lead fulfilling lives, but when they finally do, staying close becomes more complicated than ever. And for every bewildered mother who wonders why her children don’t call, there is a frustrated son or daughter who just wants to be treated like a grownup. Now, renowned editor Jane ...