“So, when can your mother expect another grandchild?’ Mrs Dankworth utters, just as the tea is being poured. I stare at Mrs Dankworth, well aware that my mother’s eyes are on me. I consider a comeback, but respond with a lame, ‘I guess time will tell, Mrs Dankworth. It will depend on what happens in life and what Bailey and I want to do.’ It isn’t the answer I want to give. I want to tell Mrs Dankworth to take a short walk off a long pier, to swim with a pod of sharks, to have a stroke, to be eaten by her five cats. But I’m conditioned to be polite to a generation of people that can demand any information from me they want without consequence.” MillennialsBoomersMillennialMillennial AuthorsBoomerMillennials Quotes Book:A Year in Boomertown: A Memoir Source: A Year in Boomertown: A Memoir
“After decades of shaping of the world, the Boomers are finally facing their end. It’s something we all must deal with one day. But when you’ve experienced power your whole life, the end of one’s life is the ultimate moment of being powerless in the face of something you can’t change. And they hate the very thought of it.” DeathPowerDeath And DyingMillennialsBoomersMillennialMillennial AuthorsBoomerMillennials Quotes Author:I.M. Millennial
“I’m her grandmother!’ my mother repeats, now shouting. ‘I have rights. I get a say in how she lives her life!’ That’s what it comes down to, doesn’t it? Rights. Who has the right to dictate to family, friends and the world about how people should live, how things should work and what life means? Boomers have expressed these rights for decades. And they’ve refused to cede authority and autonomy to the generations that follow. Even the Trailers live in the Boomers’ shadow.” PowerBoomersMillennialMillennial AuthorsBoomerMillennials QuotesZoomersBoomer Grandparents Book:A Year in Boomertown: A Memoir Source: A Year in Boomertown: A Memoir