I’ll admit I used to be a snob about being friends with someone a decade older than me. When I started grad school, I gravitated toward the other 20-year-olds in my cohort, thinking I’d have more in common with them than with the Gen Xers who wore out-of-style jeans and talked about starting their own families. At 22, I felt like I was oceans apart from someone nearing their 40s.
The tables turned when I found myself in an office full of Gen Z employees and I was the older one, clinging to delusions of youth. Really, I had just turned 30, but to a 20-year-old, I assume I was practically ancient. My only comfort was a gray-haired Gen Xer, 20 years my senior, who took me under her wing. She would confide in me about raising two teenagers, and I would complain about not knowing what I wanted to do with my life.
Soon, we seemed less like castmates on “The Golden Girls” and more like coworkers Barbara (Sheryl Lee Ralph) and Janine (Quinta Brunson) from “Abbott Elementary.” (If you haven’t seen the show, rookie teacher Janine often seeks advice from the older and wiser kindergarten teacher Barbara, whom Janine considers a mother figure, even calling her “mom” in the first episode.)
Eventually, however, the friendship fizzled out when I kept rehashing problems and ignoring my colleague’s advice. As much as I valued this friendship, I realized she wasn’t looking for a “work daughter.” But not every age-gap friendship is doomed.
Popsugar spoke with two relationship experts for advice on navigating age-gap friendships and how to get your friendship on track if, like me, you start treating your colleague like a “work mom.”
Experts Featured in This Article
Brianna Paruolo, LCMHC, is the clinical director and founder of On Par Therapy.
Alexandra Stratyner, PhD, is a licensed psychologist and a cofounder of Stratyner & Associates.
Why Do We Treat Older Friends Like Parental Figures?
Nandini Maharaj, PhD, is a trained therapist with a master’s degree in counseling and a doctorate in public health. Her writing on health, wellness, relationships, and dogs has been featured by PS, Self, Well+Good, Business Insider, Apartment Therapy, American Kennel Club, and more.





