
How Adult Children Affect Their Mother’s Happiness
Plenty of moms feel something less than unmitigated joy around their grown-up kids. Make sure yours feels that she’s getting as much out of her relationship with you as she gives.
Plenty of moms feel something less than unmitigated joy around their grown-up kids. Make sure yours feels that she’s getting as much out of her relationship with you as she gives.
When the richest of the rich split up, the usual dilemmas are mixed in with the fate of enormous charitable efforts and billion-dollar stock holdings.
Parent-child relationships are constantly evolving, and as children grow, “Dear Therapist” writes, parents have to recalibrate what their role is.
The competing demands of work and motherhood have some white-collar women choosing part-time work—and loving it.
Each generation has its own norms for parenting. Arguing over the differences can be an emotional minefield.
“I have a big-girl job and a big-girl friend, and we’re talking about big, important things like breakups. What a life I live.”
Your time on Earth is precious and limited. Here’s how to waste it.
It’s not a new developmental stage; it’s the economy.
When the social floodgates open, not everyone will want to use their newfound freedom in the same way.
Some people will want to go out as often as they can. Others won’t be able to forget how nice it is to sit at home on the couch.
If you want to improve your well-being, you need to make a plan and act on it.
Inequality has seemingly caused many American parents to jettison friendships and activities in order to invest more resources in their kids.
“Kristi’s been a constant in my life. I couldn’t even imagine not having her involved in the girls’ lives.”
The assumption that we are the sole authors of our texts and emails is a collective fiction—but a useful one.
The joys of money are nothing without other people.
If your social life is leaving you unfulfilled, you might have too many deal friends, and not enough real friends.
The school-funding program recently switched from offering rebates for physical labels to an app, frustrating many users and highlighting some of the program’s long-standing contradictions and inequalities.
In some cases, “Dear Therapist” columns help us understand a situation from another person’s point of view; in others, they give us the language we need to name a situation.
“When I see people from Peretz school, it’s as if nothing has changed. The comfort, the ease, the knowing of each other is the same.”
Switching to Zoom forever might be convenient, but it’s a recipe for loneliness.