Standing on Their Shoulders: Are We Better Than Our Parents, or Merely Different?

Every generation quietly asks the same unsettling question: Are we doing better than our parents did at our age? And somewhere, in another room or another decade, parents wonder whether their children are truly prepared for the world that lies ahead.
It is a comparison as old as civilisation itself.
When I look back at my own parents’ generation, I see resilience carved out of scarcity. They lived in times when comfort was a luxury, not an entitlement.
Opportunities were limited, yet their determination was limitless. They walked miles for education, saved every coin, and built homes brick by brick — not merely of cement, but of discipline and sacrifice. Their word was their bond; their integrity, their inheritance to us.
We, on the other hand, inhabit a world flooded with information, technology, and choice. We travel faster, communicate instantly, and dream globally. At our age, many of us have earned degrees our parents could not access, explored careers they never imagined, and voiced opinions they might have suppressed. By material standards, we may appear “ahead”.
But progress is not a straight line; it is a layered tapestry.
The Measure of “Better”
If “better” means greater financial security, access to healthcare, global exposure, and technological competence, many of us may indeed be better off. A young professional today can access online courses from Oxford or IIT, connect with mentors across continents, and launch enterprises from a laptop.
The world has shrunk; possibilities have expanded.
Yet, if “better” means emotional endurance, patience, community bonding, and contentment with little, then our parents may still outshine us. They knew how to wait. They knew how to repair instead of replace. They valued relationships over reactions.
In an era without social media applause, they quietly did their duty.
Perhaps we have gained speed but lost stillness.
We have gained voice but sometimes lost depth.
We have gained choice but often lost certainty.
Context Shapes Capability
One must never forget that each generation fights different battles. Our parents contended with economic instability, limited infrastructure, rigid hierarchies, and fewer rights. We contend with hyper-competition, digital overload, mental health crises, environmental anxieties, and an ever-moving benchmark of success.
It would be unjust to compare two generations without accounting for their contexts. A farmer who tilled land under the scorching sun and sent his child to school performed an act of greatness. That child, who later navigates global corporate corridors or educational leadership, builds upon that greatness.
The fruit does not compete with the root.
As Isaac Newton humbly remarked, “If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” Our parents are those giants.
Evolution, Not Rivalry
The real question is not whether we are better than our parents, but whether we are worthy of their sacrifices. Have we honoured their struggles by becoming responsible, ethical, compassionate human beings? Have we preserved values while embracing change?
In many Indian homes, the intergenerational dialogue often oscillates between nostalgia and impatience:
– “In our time, we never spoke back.”
– “In your time, things were simpler.”
Both statements are true — and incomplete.
Times were simpler, yes, but opportunities were fewer. Today’s youth enjoy liberty, but carry invisible burdens of comparison and performance. Our parents built stability; we are called to build sustainability — emotional, social, environmental.
The Silent Inheritance
There are certain inheritances with no bank records:
1. The habit of rising early.
2. The discipline of finishing what one starts.
3. The reverence for education.
4. The belief in God or in goodness.
5. The courage to endure quietly.
These are not outdated virtues. They are timeless anchors.
As someone who has seen decades of change in education and society, I often feel that each generation must refine, not reject, the previous one. We polish the diamond they mined.
So, Can We Do Better?
Yes — but only if “better” means wiser, kinder, and more balanced.
We may earn more, travel more, and know more. But unless we also love more, respect more, and endure more, progress remains hollow.
– Let us not compete with our parents; let us complete them.
– Let us not measure success only by height, but by roots.
– Let us remember that a tree grows taller not by denying its soil, but by drawing strength from it.
They walked so we could run,
They were saved so we could spend,
They prayed so we could dream,
They endured so we could ascend.
If we must outgrow them,
Let it be in gratitude, not pride;
For every step we take ahead
They walk beside us — inside.
In the end, generations are not rivals in a race. They are chapters in the same book — each incomplete without the other.





