Bridging Generations: The Invisible Load of Dual Caregiving

February 05, 2026

If you’re in a position where you are caring for both your children and parents, you’ve likely felt the push and pull from both directions: young children needing your energy and attention, and aging parents needing your help, advocacy, and often, your emotional labor. Both are deeply needing your care. As a licensed marriage and family therapist (LMFT), I witness how deeply rewarding this caregiving labor is—and yet how exhausting it can become to find balance. 

People in the “sandwich generation” report higher levels of role overload, emotional strain, and financial stress compared to non-caregivers (Lei, Leggett, & Maust, 2023). You might feel like you’re constantly triaging — should I feed the kids, manage the doctor’s appointment, return a work email, or help my parent with mobility today? You’re not alone, and the burden matters.

To maintain your well-being while sustaining care for others, self-care is crucial. Here are a few practices that can support your well-being and help fill your cup to balance all you pour into others.

Schedule micro self-care breaks. Even ten minutes of stepping outside, deep breathing, or listening to a favorite song can reset your stress levels. 

  • Seek support where it’s available—big or small. You don’t have to handle every chore, errand, or moment of care on your own. Seek out sources of support; sharing tasks with siblings, neighbors, or trusted friends, or look for community resources (listed below). Even small steps, like automating bill payments or setting app reminders, can ease the load and create a little more breathing room.
  • Use transition rituals. Give yourself a clear “shut-off” ritual (e.g. journaling, sipping tea, going for a walk) when caregiving “ends” for the day. This helps your nervous system transition and prevents constant alert-mode.
  • Stay connected with peers. Whether via a caregiver support group, a trusted friend, or an online forum—even fifteen minutes of venting or sharing strategies with someone who “gets it” can be therapeutic. 
  • Practice emotional check-ins. Use a scaling system (“On a scale of 0 to 10, how stressed/sad/angry am I?”) daily. If you notice creeping despair or exhaustion, that’s a signal to slow down, and perhaps reach out for help sooner rather than later.

Here are local and Texas-based resources to help you (and your parent) plug into support for seniors and caregivers.

Here are local and Texas-based resources to help support parents of young children.

  • Partners in Parenting (PIP). Offers inclusive, facilitator-led support groups for new parents focused on emotional well-being, connection, community, and navigating early parenthood.
  • Any Baby Can. A nonprofit offering parenting education, early childhood development support, home visiting, early intervention services, and family counseling at low or no cost.

You carry a lot on your shoulders. Give yourself the same compassion, planning, and care you so generously extend to others. You don’t have to “do it all,” and sometimes the strongest move is asking for support, taking a breath, and scheduling yourself into the care plan you deserve. 

References

Lei, L., Leggett, A. N., & Maust, D. T. (2023). A national profile of sandwich generation 

caregivers providing care to both older adults and children. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society71(3), 799–809. https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.18138

 

 

janet mize counseling therapist

Written By: Janet Mize, LMFT

 

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