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“This is my first turn at being a daughter … and being a mother,” Julie-Anne says. “So, this is my first rodeo at trying to balance those things together.”

Julie-Anne with her parents Keith and Pattie, both of whom have dementia. Source: Supplied
A responsibility to fulfil?
“What if they [had done] the same to us when we were kids?”

Sid (left) and Irina (right) live with their daughters and Sid’s parents in Melbourne. Source: Supplied
GenX faces a unique situation
This leaves people typically in their 40s and 50s, like Julie-Anne — some even in their 30s — squeezed in the middle.
Managing expectations
“You’re setting your family up for success if you’ve got really clear, loving boundaries.”
“It doesn’t mean that I … love her any less, but I need to be very strong and present, not only for my sons and my mother, but for myself.”

Phyllis says setting boundaries and expectations with her mum has been incredibly helpful. Source: Supplied
The future of the ‘sandwich generation’
“If we can look after our kids,” Sid says, “why can’t we look after our parents”?