With each new generation, mindsets and beliefs change, and therefore, the parenting styles too. Those who grew up in times of economic struggle, usually teach their children to be hardworking, whereas those who grow up in times of opportunity teach otherwise. Boomers, who grew up watching the first Moon landing, hooting in a Beatles concert, and collecting stamps, are usually criticized by psychologists for being too detached or too intrusive in their children’s lives. However, a teacher, Teresa Kaye Newman (@teresakayenewman), posted a TikTok video in February 2023, debunking this myth. She revealed 11 things that boomer parents did just as perfect as it could be.

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Tima Miroshni Chenko
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Tima Miroshni Chenko

“11 things I agree with boomer parents on raising children, as a #teacher and soon to be mom,” Teresa wrote in the video caption. She added that only those who have experienced parenting first-hand can know what it feels like to be a parent. Unless one is not a parent, one shouldn’t accuse others of doing things right or wrong. As someone who has over 13 years of experience in dealing with “hundreds and hundreds of other people’s kids,” and seeing the effects of these points not being implemented, she made up her mind to share these 11 things. Here’s the list:


via GIPHY


1. Not giving the child iPads, ever

“All I’m going to say is my kid has a whole world to explore and none of that has to do with being stuck in front of a tablet,” said Teresa.

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Helena Lopes
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Helena Lopes

2. Not giving the child smartphones until high school

Using smartphones too early can steal many things from a child, such as imagination, and spontaneity, and they may even lose touch with nature. Noticing this scenario, Teresa said, “Kids that are younger than that age do not know internet safety to a point where I feel comfortable letting them have free reign of the internet.”

Representative Cover Image Source: Pexels I Askar Abayev
Representative Image Source: Pexels I Askar Abayev

3. Teaching them the value of their education

Baby boomers, who are known as loyal workers, were well aware of the true importance of education. And this is what they instilled in their children, at least most of them. Agreeing with this parenting habit, Teresa said, “There are far too many parents that are teaching their kids that education is only linked to financial stability. What I’m going to teach them is this has nothing to do with how much money you’re going to make or how successful you’ll be professionally. But you will still value it, nonetheless.”


via GIPHY


4. Respect their teachers and treat them well

“Everyone who has gone through a professional degree program and has put in the time and is there, giving you the quality education, deserves some type of attention and deserves to be treated well,” said Teresa, who herself is a teacher.


via GIPHY


5. Be kind to elderly folks

Courtesy and etiquette are those things that most boomers hardwired into the brains of their kids, so they would grow up to be respectful. “If they’re on public transportation and they’re sitting down and an old lady is standing next to them and there are no other seats available, my child will know to stand up and give that lady his seat,” reflected Teresa.

Representative Cover Image Source: Pexels | Andrea Piacquadio
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Andrea Piacquadio

6. Using “Yes Ma’am/Yes Sir”

“It does not matter your age or status in society, as long as they are respecting their pronouns, that’s how we’re gonna be talking to other people,” asserted Teresa.


via GIPHY


7. Terms of greeting and gratitude

Vintage people revered the idea of respecting other people irrespective of their age, social status, and profession. Sadly, Teresa said, this is not the case with present generations. “Simple greetings and simple terms of gratitude such as ‘please’, ‘thank you’ and ‘you’re welcome’ are just not being taught like they used to. I think it’s really sad.”

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Gratisography
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Gratisography

8. Consequences for poor behaviour

Millennials and Gen Xers might call out boomer parents for being too strict with them in their childhoods, but Teresa points out that this was actually good for the children. “If they’re neglecting their schoolwork and not doing what they’re supposed to do, they get their technology taken away. Simple things like this are pretty common sense and I’m not sure why they’re not being done anymore.”


via GIPHY


9. Respect adult conversations and adult spaces

Boomers liked to draw a boundary line between what is supposed to be an adult interaction and what is not. They did the best thing by teaching their kids to do the same. “They don’t get to interrupt two adults speaking to each other. If they don’t learn how to do that as a child they’re going to be the most obnoxious adult ever.”

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Jack Sparrow
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Jack Sparrow

10. Cleaning your own mess and participating in chores

And, boomers taught the most important skill – responsibility. “My child is going to put as much work in the house as we are, regardless of whether he’s paying rent out of his own pocket or not. That’s because when my son becomes an adult, I want him to be a partner or a spouse or a roommate that someone is proud to have around.”

Representative Image Source: Pexels | Gabby K
Representative Image Source: Pexels | Gabby K

11. Having fixed bedtime habits

Coming home late, going to raunchy party nights, and spending late nights outdoors; things like these were not in fashion when there were boomers onboard the parenting train. “As long as he is living under my roof as a minor; he’s gonna have some sort of bedtime,” said Teresa agreeing with what boomers believed.


@teresakayenewman

11 Things I agree with boomer parents on raising children, as a #teacher and soon to be mom. ♬ original sound – Newman Music Academy


You can follow Teresa Kaye Newman (@teresakayenewman) on TikTok for more parenting videos.

  • A bride collapsed during her own rehearsal dinner toast. The detective who burst in explained everything.
    Bride gives a speech at her rehearsal dinnerPhoto credit: Canva
    ,

    A bride collapsed during her own rehearsal dinner toast. The detective who burst in explained everything.

    She planned a prank for the rehearsal dinner and cast herself as the victim. The groom had no idea.

    Alexandra Lahde had been a couple of things on the night of her rehearsal dinner: a bride, a hostess, and, briefly, a corpse.

    The 28-year-old barista from Canada had spent months planning the evening at Fairmont Banff Springs, one of the most storied hotels in the country. The decor was themed around old Hollywood glamour and detective fiction, with a vintage typewriter welcome sign, magnifying glass name tags, and moody florals and candles throughout the room. If any of her 30 guests noticed the clues, they kept quiet about it. When Alexandra clinked her wine glass to give a toast, nobody suspected a thing.

    “I just wanted to take a second and thank you all so much for coming here,” she began. Then she started to cough. She tried to continue. She coughed again, clutched the counter beside her, and said, “Oh my God” before dropping to the floor. Two guests who had been in on it from the start called out, “She’s dead. She’s DEAD!” Her husband Ian rushed toward her. Before anyone else could react, a man in a detective costume burst through the doors, flashing a badge. “Nobody move! My name is Bert Hammel. I’m from a bad police department. I’ve been told there’s a murder,” he announced, before looking down at Alexandra’s motionless body. “I can’t feel a pulse. The bride has been poisoned.”

    A dining table at a wedding reception with champagne bottles and flowers.
    Table arrangement at a rehearsal dinner. Photo credit: Canva

    The evening was underway. The actor, Eric from the improv company THEY Improv, had been hired by Alexandra with help from her wedding planner Melissa Alison Events. The murder plot was tied to the Fairmont Banff itself, which has its own legendary ghost bride story. Selected guests had been pulled into a separate room before dinner, briefed on the plot, and given character roles to play. After the faux detective questioned them in front of the group, guests split into teams to solve the mystery.

    Alexandra told People magazine that she had only learned the full script about 15 minutes before her guests arrived, which suited her perfectly. “I find I work best when I have little to no plan, so I went into it pretty blind,” she said, “only having practiced my expression and fall in the bathroom a few times before!”

    The video, captured by videographer Alesia Hardy (@alesiafilms) of Alesia Films, has since gone massively viral. Viewers were particularly impressed by one logistical detail: the detective appeared within seconds of Alexandra hitting the floor, giving the groom and guests no time to spiral into genuine panic. “The fact that the detective was virtually immediate to signal that she was okay and it was a game is the PERFECT way to pull this off,” one commenter wrote.

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.

  • Woman at airport quietly pays for dad who couldn’t afford toddler’s $700 ticket
    A woman pays at the counterPhoto credit: Canva
    ,

    Woman at airport quietly pays for dad who couldn’t afford toddler’s $700 ticket

    Debbie Bolton didn’t introduce herself or ask for thanks, she just handed over her card.

    He had done the math when he booked the flight. His daughter was under two, which meant she could sit on his lap for free. By the time they got to the check-in counter at Omaha’s Eppley Airfield, she was two, which meant she couldn’t.

    The ticket agent broke it to him simply: his daughter needed her own seat, and that seat would cost $749. The man stepped away from the counter, hugged his daughter, and started making calls. He’d told the agent he couldn’t afford to rebook his own ticket, let alone buy a second one. A fellow traveler who witnessed the scene, Kevin Leslie, later described what happened next on Facebook: “He was hit with emotion. He mentioned he couldn’t afford to rebook this flight or get her the ticket with such short notice. He stepped aside and tried to make a few calls. Hugging his daughter and grabbing his head, you could tell he was heartbroken.”

    That’s when the woman standing behind him in line spoke up.

    airport, line, airplane tickets, luggage
    Travelers wait in line at the airport. Photo credit: Canva

    “I wanna buy her ticket,” she told the agent, pointing to the little girl. The agent, caught off guard, double-checked: “You know how much this ticket costs, right?” The woman said yes. She pulled out her credit card and told the agent to charge it.

    The man asked for her name so he could pay her back. She told him not to worry about it and walked away.

    Leslie posted about what he’d seen, and the photo he’d taken began circulating on Facebook, eventually racking up tens of thousands of shares. People wanted to know who the woman was. Within hours, she was identified: Debbie Bolton, co-founder and Global Chief Sales Officer of Norwex, a sustainable cleaning products company.

    The story resurfaced in a big way in November 2025, when TikTok creator Bo Grant (@marriedtoalunatic) shared a video about it that went viral all over again, introducing the moment to millions of people who’d never heard it.

    @marriedtoalunatic

    Woman Identified as Debbie Bolton after interaction with a stranger and his 2 year old child is caught on camera #karma #kindnessmatters #norwex #heartwarming #debbiebolton

    ♬ original sound – Bo Grant

    Bolton, who spoke with Newsweek about the incident, said she noticed the father growing increasingly distressed at the counter and felt she had to do something. “He seemed like he couldn’t afford it and was traveling to visit family,” she said. She described the decision as straightforward. “I always ask myself every day, ‘Whose miracle can I be today?’” she said. “That day I was given the opportunity to be a miracle for someone else and I took action.”

    She said she hadn’t expected the story to travel as far as it did. “I honestly didn’t expect the story to resonate with so many people,” she told Newsweek. “My only intention was to help someone in need.” When Norwex confirmed her identity to CBS News at the time, the company’s chief marketing officer Amy Cadora said they were “very proud” of her. “She’s kind, caring and generous,” Cadora said. “That’s why none of us was a bit surprised.”

    @norwex

    “In a world full of Karens, be a Debbie!” Today, our Co-Founder Debbie Bolton is sharing a special message straight from the heart. 💚 We want to thank you for the incredible outpouring of kindness, messages, and support after her airport story touched so many this past weekend. As we head into the busiest time of year, we challenge you to look for simple opportunities to show kindness. It’s woven into everything we do at Norwex, from our home office to our Consultant community that Debbie has helped nurture since 1994. One person alone can’t change the world…but together? Together we can create something extraordinary. 💚 #norwex #sustainability #cleanhome #cleanliving #thankyou

    ♬ original sound – Norwex

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.

  • A couple sat in an Olympian’s seat and asked her to swap. She has a name for exactly what they were doing.
    An airplane cabin filled with passengersPhoto credit: Canva

    Cynthia Appiah just got back from competing at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan. She finished 13th in the monobob and 14th in the two-woman event at the Cortina Sliding Centre, racing alongside brakewoman Dawn Richardson Wilson. A few years before that, she was on a flight from Toronto to Calgary when a couple decided her seat looked better than their own.

    Appiah is a national team athlete whose training means she flies between the two cities constantly. Over the years she’s accumulated enough airline points to occasionally upgrade, and on this particular flight she’d used some to book a premium economy aisle seat. She chose the aisle specifically so she could move around freely during the four-hour flight without climbing over anyone. She paid for the upgrade at the time of booking, as she always does, because she doesn’t want to be an inconvenience to other passengers.

    She boarded, found her row, and discovered a woman already sitting in her seat. The woman’s boyfriend was next to her in the adjacent window seat. Appiah triple-checked her ticket. The seat was hers.

    airplane, plane

    When she pointed this out, the woman acknowledged it without much embarrassment. She knew she was in the wrong seat, she said. She was just wondering if Appiah might not mind switching with her own seat, just one row back, so she could sit next to her boyfriend for the flight. Her seat was also premium economy, but it was a window seat.

    Appiah’s answer was no.

    “I told her, nope, I paid for this seat. I would rather stick with my seat,” she said in the TikTok video, as reported by Narcity Canada. “I was just like, I bought the aisle and I’m not moving.”

    The woman was upset, but as Appiah noted, she knew there wasn’t much of a fight to be had. She moved. The flight proceeded.

    Appiah posted the story to TikTok under the caption “Seat selection is your friend. I promise you,” and it spread rapidly, resonating with the sizable portion of the traveling public who have been in exactly her position. What made her framing stand out was a phrase she used for what the couple had attempted: “Nice bullying.” The strategy of occupying someone’s seat and then sweetly asking them to accommodate you, banking on social pressure to make refusal feel rude. As Appiah put it, people should not “kindly ask, but really bully, people into giving up their seats.”

    Her point wasn’t that couples shouldn’t want to sit together. It’s that the time to sort that out is before the flight, not after someone has already paid for the seat you’re sitting in. “If you don’t want to pay for seat selection, then that’s up to you and you deal with the consequences,” she said.

    The response in the comments was largely in agreement. A Delta flight attendant with 28 years of experience said that seat swaps are only really reasonable when they involve seats of equivalent value. A window seat for a window seat. An aisle for an aisle. Asking someone to trade a paid aisle upgrade for an unrequested window seat is a different thing entirely.

    Appiah grew up in Toronto public housing, the daughter of Ghanaian immigrants, and was introduced to sport through a Blue Jays community outreach initiative in her neighborhood. She made Canada’s national bobsleigh team through years of work, competed at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, and has now completed her second Olympic Games in Milan.

    She also recently competed on Jeopardy, incorrectly answered a question about Tim Hortons, and says she may never fully recover. She is, by all available evidence, exactly the kind of person who is going to politely but firmly keep the seat she paid for.

    You can follow Cynthia Appiah (@cyndiesel) on TikTok to learn more about her daily life as a bobsleigh athlete. 

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.

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