Be like Ruth: How to honor our parents as they age
2 Articles
2 Articles
I remember the summer of 1998. I then lived in Washington, where summers are humid and hot, and the city, liberated from political activity, falls into a holiday lethargy.That summer began like everyone else, full of indulgences and rewards for having passed one more winter.
Be like Ruth: How to honor our parents as they age
If Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour has any lasting impact for non-Swifties, it’s the marking of different seasons of life as eras. For women with parents in the baby boomer generation, who make up nearly 20% of the population at 65 million people, we are rapidly approaching our second daughter era. Or you may call it the Ruth era. As our parents and older relatives age into older adulthood, we are now called to care for the elderly as they once cared f…
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