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Posted: 2024-09-19T09:45:03Z | Updated: 2024-09-19T09:45:03Z Your Parents May Have A Case Of 'Gramnesia.' Here's What The Viral Term Means. | HuffPost Life

Your Parents May Have A Case Of 'Gramnesia.' Here's What The Viral Term Means.

"I cant stop thinking about how accurate it is," one millennial therapist and mom said.

Folks on the internet are constantly making up new terms some pointless, others more useful. But this one is ringing true for many parents of young children. 

Gramnesia is a portmanteau combining the words grandparent and amnesia. Its unclear who first coined the term, but it has been appearing on online forums for years. 

Maryland therapist and mom Allie McQuaid , who goes by @millennialmomtherapist on Instagram, posted a video in June on this topic with overlaid text that reads: I just heard this term called gramnesia when grandparents forget what its really like having young kids and I cant stop thinking about how accurate it is. 

It has since racked up more than 4.4 million views, 20,000+ likes and hundreds of comments.

In the caption, McQuaid says that shes heard a ton of stories from her clients many of whom are millennials  about the ridiculous and unhelpful comments theyve gotten from their own parents after theyve spent time with the grandkids.  

Common examples of gramnesia might include: 

  • Oh, you slept through the night as soon as we brought you home from the hospital!
  • You were potty trained at 1 and it only took a weekend!
  • You never had tantrums like this!
  • We gave you rice cereal and you slept like a champ. Have you tried that?
  • You were never this picky. You always ate whatever we put on your plate. 

McQuaid has several theories about what might be causing this wave of gramnesia. For one, its natural to have a foggier memory of how things truly were as we get older, especially if the experience we had was particularly difficult or even traumatic, she said. Theres even a psychological phenomenon known as euphoric recall, which says we have a tendency to remember past experiences, especially negative ones, more positively than they actually were at the time.  

Plus, the recommendations for raising kids have evolved over time as new research and best practices have emerged. So advice a pediatrician may have given to a parent in the 1980s or 90s may not be advisable today.

Another factor may be that in older generations, parents and moms in particular werent given the same space to talk about the struggles of adjusting to life as a parent and raising kids, McQuaid said.   

Today theres less stigma for mothers to speak out about the realities of motherhood, she said. 

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Its natural for a grandparent to have a foggier memory" about how difficult child-rearing had been for them, says Allie McQuaid, a therapist and mother.

Parents report feeling frustrated and invalidated by these kinds of offhand gramnesia remarks, McQuaid said. But if they voice their frustrations, they worry it will feed into negative stereotypes many folks have of millennial parents, McQuaid said, that theyre entitled, spoiled or complainers.

It makes these parents feel like they cant share their struggles or emotions with their parents the grandparents or have difficulty setting boundaries with them, she added. 

In a follow-up Instagram Reel , McQuaid explained that the main reason these comments are unhelpful is that they dont change the things parents of young kids are struggling with and they minimize the very real stress theyre facing. 

Our boomer parents telling us that we didnt cry ever (whether thats true or not is up for debate apparently..) doesnt change the fact that OUR baby now is crying and needs our care, McQuaid wrote. 

Maybe all you can do is smile and nod after hearing for the 100th time how you were never like this.

- Allie McQuaid, therapist

When dealing with these kinds of comments, its up to you whether to address them or simply ignore them. 

Check your capacity if you have the space or energy to even consider bringing up your frustration with your parents, McQuaid said. You are likely in the throes of parenting right now, and maybe all you can do is smile and nod after hearing for the 100th time how you were never like this. 

If you do want to speak up and say you were hurt or irked by a gramnesia remark, revisit in a way that makes sense to you and your relationship with your parents, McQuaid said. That might mean a text or a phone call or bringing it up the next time youre together.

She suggested saying something along these lines: When you said that Harper always acts up at restaurants and I never did when I was her age, it makes me question how well Im doing as a parent. 

And if you dont want to bring this up with your parents directly, thats fine, too. You can also discuss it with your partner, a friend, your therapist or a fellow parent in the trenches on the internet instead, McQuaid said. 

If youre the grandparent in this situation, one of the most helpful things you can say to your adult child is: We must have forgotten what it was like to be a new parent, McQuaid said. You are doing a great job, and it gets so much better that you might forget how hard it was at that time. 

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