Trigger warning: This article contains themes of emotional abuse and parental neglect that some readers may find distressing.

Oprah Winfrey, an entrepreneur and the host of her iconic eponymous talk show, was born to unmarried teen parents, according to her profile on the Academy of Achievement. Experiencing severe emotional neglect and absenteeism from her parents, she ended up getting molested repeatedly by male relatives throughout her childhood. She eventually overcame her trauma and adversity, but not everyone can achieve this peace. The result is a fragmented life. While a person of any generation can suffer from emotional neglect, Generation X is most susceptible to topping the list. A Texas-based counselor, Janet Martinez (@cursingcounselor), took to TikTok to describe how most Gen Xers had neglected childhoods and how it impacted their relations with their boomer parents.

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Mikhail Nilov
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Mikhail Nilov

According to ScienceDirect, “emotional neglect” involves inattentiveness to a child’s emotional needs. When children are emotionally invalidated or neglected during their childhood, they usually end up growing up with a chip on their shoulder, and this emotional residue haunts their lives like a “monster.” The long-term consequences of this can be highly painful and can seep into every aspect of their lives, including romantic relationships, finances, self-esteem, and likewise. Emotions like fear of abandonment and insecurity change their adulthood and seriously affect their overall mental health. Sadly, these consequences prevail in most Gen Xers.


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“I am Generation X,” Janet said in the video, “In my generation, we were basically feral. We were allowed to, we sort of raised ourselves.” Generation X includes people born between the years of 1965 and 1980. Gen Xers are usually sandwiched between the Baby Boomers ahead and the Millennials behind. Janet continued explaining her point by saying how the parents of Gen X had busy schedules and most of the time they were on their own. “Our parents were very busy doing their own things, lots of working parents, so we were latchkey kids, and we were on our own a lot. And while that in and of itself was problematic, sometimes unavoidable, it was more of the emotional neglect.”


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She went on to list some of the things that Gen Xers were left to do on their own without any adult supervision. “We came home from school, made our own lunches, we made our own dinners a lot of times, nobody really checked out homework or helped us with school or anything like that, because again, they were really busy. It was the emotional stuff like that. We didn’t have a lot of people to talk to. Our emotions were not seen as important.”

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Pixabay
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Pixabay

Janet further shared that now that Gen Xers have grown up and their responsibilities towards their parents have flipped, lots of buried emotions rise to the surface. “So, now this is what’s coming up in counseling. Now our parents are older, and they need us. And many of us are struggling because we were not taken care of, but now we are expected to take care of, and that’s creating a lot of issues.”

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Olly
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Olly

Janet’s TikTok video has nearly 800,000 views and over 14,000 responses. The comment section was flooded with people who expressed the overwhelming emotions they felt towards their emotionally neglectful parents, including rage, guilt, insecurity, fear of abandonment, resentment, and more.

Image Source: TikTok | @saramilligan78
Image Source: TikTok | @saramilligan78

@hwmc13, a Gen X therapist, commented, “I am seeing this too! In my own experience and with clients. Parents still want us to make up the emotional difference.” @tpoly723 said with a certain bitterness, “It seems like we should take care of them the way they did for us. Basic food and shelter.” @annafromontana, who thankfully had attention from caring parents, said, “Most of my friends are feeling this issue, I can’t imagine the pain.”

Image Source: TikTok | @tiffanyrolling99
Image Source: TikTok | @tiffanyrolling99

@amyj4250 shared an insight, “I feel this so much. But we have to remember that we weren’t the only generation not taken care of emotionally.” Trauma specialist Elizabeth Marston offers many ways to deal with childhood emotional neglect. One powerful way, she says, is “to write a letter to your childhood self. In this letter, you can offer yourself the love, validation, and support you may have missed out on as a child. Acknowledge the pain and hurt you feel. This letter can be a cathartic and healing experience, allowing you to process your emotions and release lingering shame or self-blame.”


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You can follow Janet Martinez on TikTok and Instagram for more videos on parent-child relationships.

  • Homeowners swear by this simple ice cold hack that thoroughly makes your toilets cleaner
    Photo credit: CanvaMany believe cleaning the toilet properly starts by filling it with ice cubes.

    Most people welcome a new cleaning hack, especially if it involves the bathroom. Cleaning the toilet isn’t a fun task and getting it thoroughly spotless can get stinky real quick. However, there’s one hack that many homeowners say gets their toilets cleaner with less elbow grease. It involves emptying your ice tray.

    There are experts who recommend putting ice cubes down the toilet whenever it is time to clean.

    Toilet cleaning starts with your freezer

    This understandably sounds weird. Many people might remember flushing ice cubes down the toilet as a superstitious ritual during the winter months to “summon” a snow day from school. But to clean the toilet? That sounds like just as much as a myth. 

    But there is a logic to it and many homemakers suggest it. First, let’s get this out of the way and say that ice cubes aren’t being flushed to replace regular toilet cleaner. It’s actually being used to help the cleaner be more effective.

    So…how could ice help clean my toilet?

    Ice in the toilet bowl acts as a support for the toilet cleaner. Often, toilet cleaner drips down the side of the toilet bowl into the water and down the pipe. The ice allows the cleaner to cling to the bowl and its sides for longer, penetrating filth and disinfecting it more effectively.

    Here’s the gist on how it works: first, take a bowl of ice cubes and pour them into the toilet. Make sure you’re not filling it to the brim. Next, take your preferred toilet cleaning solution and pour/spray it onto the ice. Let the mixture sit for about 15 minutes to allow the cleaning solution to cling and disinfect the bowl. After that, use a toilet brush to stir and agitate the ice, ensuring that it is scraping all sides of the bowl. By this time, the ice should have melted enough to flush. 

    @homiluxe

    Wait… ice cubes in the toilet?! 🧊😳 This cleaning trick blew my mind — and it actually works! Watch ‘til the end to see the magic happen! 👇✨ #lifehack #fyp #DIY #hometips #cleantok #cleanwithme #tiktokhacks #viral #tiktokdiy #tolet #ice #homecaretips

    ♬ I Think I Like When It Rains – WILLIS

    There are additional bonuses to using ice with toilet cleaner. The ice can also act as an abrasive pumice stone in addition to your toilet brush, scraping off mildew, mineral build-up, or other yucky things that could be stubbornly clinging to the bowl. The flushed ice could help clean the pipe similarly, dislodging filth and grime in conjunction with the toilet cleaner on its way down.

    Another benefit is reducing odor. Ice is known to absorb smells and could make cleaning a little less smelly. It’s one of the reasons why many restaurants, clubs, and bars put ice in men’s urinals.

    Many people who frequently travel and live in an RV also recommend flushing ice down their toilets. This is not just to clean the bowl, but to have the ice jostle and scrape the nasty stuff out of the black tank. While this method’s effectiveness in cleaning a black tank is put into question, critics still say that ice can help reduce smells and keep water in the black tank during hot days.

    Final tips (specifically “don’ts”)

    If you plan on giving this hack a try, be sure not to overflow your toilet with ice. Along with that, while most forms of ice work (cubes, crushed, or chips), putting larger blocks of ice in the toilet won’t do any good and could clog things up if they’re too big.

    It’s also important to use one cleaning solution and not mix a bunch together. Mixing cleaning products together could create fumes that are dangerous to inhale. It’s best to use your preferred cleaner and choose a different one next time if you’re getting the results you want.

  • Facebook group helps families without a ‘village’ find surrogate grandparents
    Photo credit: CanvaSurrogate grandparents laughing with small child.

    Raising kids today doesn’t match the historical “it takes a village” experience many grew up with. Not because people don’t care, but because life doesn’t seem to line up that way anymore. Families are spread out across the country and sometimes the world. Few grandparents live just up the street. There’s no built-in help for childcare and no extra sets of hands when things get overwhelming.

    In response to that missing piece in raising kids, some people have looked for other ways to create something similar. One path is Surrogate Grandparents – USA, a Facebook-based community that connects older adults with families.

    surrogate grandparents, chosen family, connecting seniors, programs
    An older man helps a boy water the plants.
    Photo credit Canva

    Missing out on grandparents nearby, some find new ones online

    Founded in 2015, Surrogate Grandparents – USA offers a platform that works like a community bulletin board. The goal is to bring together families bereft of nearby grandparents with older adults looking to share that kind of family role.

    Over 14,000 members hope to make a surrogate family connection and the possibility of building real love. They describe the opportunity on their Facebook page as follows:

    “A surrogate grandparent is a volunteer or mentor who forms a supportive, grandparent-like relationship with a child or family who may not have local grandparents. These relationships can begin online or in person, often through platforms designed to connect families and older adults.”

    The typical online pattern might look like a family posting on the page that their children don’t have nearby grandparents and would love a consistent older presence in their lives. Someone responds. They all start talking. Then, they meet in person.

    Those introductions can turn into something steady with regular check-ins. Children receive the face-to-face guidance and experience that an older generation can offer. The surrogate grandparents gain a sense of purpose they hadn’t anticipated at this stage of their lives.

    support system, children bonding, mentorship, extended family
    A family picnic.
    Photo credit Canva

    Surrogate grandparent success stories

    One success story was shared in Newsweek. In 2019, Deborah Whatley, then aged 64, joined the Facebook group with her husband. Hoping to fill a need within their own lives, they connected with the Nelsons, and a beautiful relationship quickly blossomed.

    The families share photos, meet in person about every month, and text regularly. “We’ve met up more times than I can count,” explained Whatley. “I just wanted to feel included. I have the time, the energy, and the desire. Discovering the surrogate grandparents group instantly brought light back into a part of my life that had turned dark,” she added.

    CBS News reported that Anteres Anderson Turner and Louis Turner wished to extend their own family while raising twin boys. Janet Firestein Daw welcomed the idea of grandchildren in her life, saying, “I was getting older and I wanted to get down on the floor and play Legos and trains and read books.”

    After meeting through the Facebook group, the relationship between the two families really worked. Daw continued, “It’s indescribable for me, because I haven’t had that experience before to be that grandparent, and I love it.”

    Facebook closes the page

    Earlier this year, the Facebook group became inaccessible. There haven’t been any publicly reported reasons from Facebook itself. However, an administrator for the page shared, “Surrogate Grandparents-USA group was unfortunately erroneously removed by Meta. We are actively working to have it reinstated.”

    Thankfully, the page was reopened in time. In an Instagram post dated April 11, 2026, they said, “This morning, my Surrogate Grandparents-USA group was officially reinstated.” The post continues, “What a journey this has been—stressful, emotional, and at times incredibly disheartening. But I never stopped believing in the purpose of this community…and the power of speaking up when something isn’t right.”

    community, kindness, parenting support, family structures
    An extended family at the park.
    Photo credit Canva

    A shift in how family works

    The structures that used to hold families together aren’t as automatic as they once were. For a long time, grandparents lived nearby. Neighbors remained for decades. Communities were tighter, and lives were more interwoven. Support existed from a simple proximity.

    But families move. Relationships change. Career and circumstance have stretched people farther apart. Places like Surrogate Grandparents – USA fill roles that certain families are missing. It may not work for everyone, but for many, it’s a chance to build community in a whole new way.

  • Husband steals the spotlight picking up PR packages for wife who became an influencer at 80
    Photo credit: CanvaA wife takes a piggyback ride on her husband.
    ,

    Husband steals the spotlight picking up PR packages for wife who became an influencer at 80

    “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a better video in my life”

    After a successful career as an artist, 80-year-old Alice Williams decided to transition into the role of social media influencer. What attracted a massive following wasn’t simply this second creative life shared on Instagram, but rather what happened when she posted that her PR packages had arrived.

    In a now-viral video highlighted by People, the job of carrying these packages inside belongs to her husband. The sweet spectacle of an elderly man lumbering arms full toward home has resonated with people in a way that’s hard to ignore.

    “POV my wife became an influencer at 80 years old and now I have to get the PR packages”

    As the music from No Doubt’s “Just a Girl” carries the scene, the title on the video reads, “POV my wife became an influencer at 80 years old and now I have to get the PR packages.”

    The husband, Don Williams, with his arms stacked with boxes and moving carefully but confidently, walks up the driveway like it’s just another regular day. No performance. No spectacle. Just a smile on a warm face during a beautiful afternoon.

    His ho-hum attitude and the video’s casualness seem to have tapped into something instantly relatable. He’s just a husband being of service to his wife.

    A small gesture resonates

    People online didn’t react to the packages. They reacted to him. Viewers were excited and hoped to have that kind of partnership, too. They also seemed impressed by how fit and natural he appeared. He was just helping out. No complaints. Here are some of those comments:

    “So many things I love about this post; the love, the companionship, the nature, the house, the peace, and the supreme shirts”

    “Seriously this proves ANY AGE. YOU ARE NEVER LATE”

    “KING”

    “Oh my heavens, what a sweet man you have! Does he happen to have an older brother, I’m 93 1/2”

    “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a better video in my life”

    “I think exercising keeps him happy & alive. We need his legs strong!”

    “Where am I supposed to find a man like this???”

    “Obsessed with this!!!”

    “so cuteeee”

    “This is the life! Pops is getting those steps in and getting a little strength training in.”

    There’s more to the story than just a viral moment

    This story doesn’t end after one viral moment. In a follow-up post, the couple opened the PR packages together. The at-home unboxing became less about the products and more about the playful rhythm between two people enjoying each other’s company.

    The appeal of these videos really isn’t about influencer culture. These moments aren’t resonating simply because an older man carries boxes or because we see a kind gesture. Most people aren’t looking for perfect love. Having something that holds up as life changes, that’s valuable.

    As Alice Williams opens a new chapter in her life, the relationship doesn’t pause for reinvention. It simply adjusts to it.

    Happy wife, happy life

    Interestingly, many healthy relationships feature the woman taking a leadership role or at least having the final say. In a GOOD story about happy marriages, versions of the same four-word advice kept coming up: “Listen to your wife,” “Whatever she says goes,” “She is the boss,” and “Do what she says.” When asked how these men became so wise, one replied, “Over time.”

    The sweet Instagram post resonated with many, even though it wasn’t that unusual. Similar videos of couples reuniting, partners sharing small gestures of care, or long-married sweethearts showing affection often reach millions of views.

    In each case, it’s probably less about what’s happening on screen. Sure, we all love a feel-good snapshot. However, it’s more about the belief that love can be slow and steady, and that fun adventure can happen without reinventing the wheel. The Williamses offer us all a glimpse of the casually possible. Things are simply good.

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