Turning Into My Parents

At What Age Do We Become Our Parents (and Can It Be Stopped)?

There are a few cold certainties in life: the sun will rise, the bins will somehow still smell even when empty, and at some point—usually when you least expect it—you will become your parent.

One minute you’re young, vibrant, casually judging the older generation for wearing bootcut jeans and tutting at supermarket queues. The next, you’re standing in your garden, hands on hips, saying “Can’t believe how early it’s getting dark now,” as if you’re auditioning to play your dad in a local am-dram piece titled Weather-Based Observations and How to Make Them Sound Profound.

The transformation is both gradual and shocking. You don’t notice it happening. You don’t get a warning email or a polite notification. You just wake up one day and realise that you now refer to “going out” as “popping out” and get oddly excited about a new bin collection calendar.

When Does It Begin?

The precise age varies, but it generally strikes somewhere between 32 and 46. That’s the sweet spot. It can be triggered by a number of things: your first proper argument about house paint, using the phrase “They don’t make ‘em like they used to,” or developing passionate views on the correct way to load a dishwasher.

It’s not a conscious choice. You’re not sitting down and thinking, “Today I shall become my father and develop an intense opinion about the hedge.” It just… happens. Like puberty, but with more grunting when standing up.

For Men: The Sudden Fatherfication

Fatherhood is not a requirement for this transformation. You could be completely childless, and still find yourself shouting at the thermostat.

Common symptoms include getting visibly angry when lights are left on in unoccupied rooms, saying “Not paying those prices” in response to literally anything, developing a mysterious but all-consuming hat habit, and the strange compulsion to announce every minor task: “I’m just going to put the bins out,” as if narrating a documentary about yourself.

You also begin to say “That’s a decent set of shelves” in DIY stores. Unironically.

It’s not just the words—it’s the stance. One day, you catch yourself looking at a barbecue with quiet satisfaction, your stomach sticking out slightly, and your entire posture reads “I built this with fire.”

For Women: The Mumification Sneaks In

On the flip side, women aren’t immune. Oh no. The signs of becoming your mother are just as insidious, and often sneak in under the guise of practicality.

Symptoms include a Tupperware obsession that borders on legal ownership disputes, developing the ability to communicate full narratives through a single disapproving look, and the transition from “I don’t really like tea” to “Have you tried the Yorkshire Gold? It’s stronger.” Then there’s the uncanny ability to detect draughts in buildings constructed with concrete, and a surprising emotional attachment to a particular supermarket.

You also begin to make noises when sitting down—not out of pain, but as a declaration of personhood.

And at some point, without realising it, you become the sort of person who says “I don’t need to write it down, I’ll remember,” even though you absolutely won’t.

Can It Be Stopped?

In a word: no.

You can fight it for a while. You can stay up late, listen to new music, wear trainers that don’t support your arches. But eventually, biology and social conditioning will win.

You’ll wake up one day, walk into your kitchen, and hear yourself say, “I see we’re down to one Weetabix,” and just like that—it’s over. You’ve crossed the parental Rubicon.

You’ll do things your parents did and, worse, you’ll understand why. You’ll see someone in their twenties and think, “Put a coat on, it’s 4°C,” and you’ll mean it. Sincerely. Without irony.

But Is It All Bad?

Maybe… not.

Becoming your parent means you’ve lived long enough to develop preferences, boundaries, and a deeply irrational hatred for how cushions are arranged in department store display windows.

It means you know what makes you comfortable. You’ve stopped pretending to like loud restaurants. You’ve started keeping a drawer for birthday cards, and you now know where the good biscuits are hidden.

You start saying, “I can’t drink like I used to,” not because you’re ashamed—but because you finally understand that hangovers now last three working days.

Acceptance is Key

The sooner you accept it, the easier it becomes. Lean into it. Buy that multi-pack of thermal socks. Enjoy a Sunday roast and a moan about parking. Embrace your inner parent with the pride of a warrior slipping into his final form.

Just know that somewhere out there, your own children (or the generation beneath you) are watching, waiting, judging. And one day, they too will find themselves in a garden, frowning at the sky and declaring, “Oof, you can feel that change in the air, can’t you?”

And thus, the cycle continues.

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

Discover more from untypicable

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Back To Top
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x