That kind of headline is designed to hook attention, not to give balanced advice. There’s no universal list of “secrets” people aged 55–75 should keep from their children—what to share or keep private depends on your values, relationships, and practical needs.
A more grounded way to think about it is what’s helpful to share vs. what’s reasonable to keep personal:
Things usually worth sharing
- Health information (serious conditions, medications, emergency contacts)
→ helps in emergencies or caregiving situations - Financial basics (where key documents are, wills, insurance)
→ prevents confusion or legal problems later - End-of-life wishes (care preferences, decision-makers)
→ avoids conflict and uncertainty
Things that can reasonably stay private
- Personal regrets or past conflicts you’re not ready to revisit
- Financial details beyond what’s necessary (e.g., exact balances)
- Relationship matters that don’t affect others directly
Where these headlines go wrong
They often:
- Create unnecessary mistrust between parents and children
- Suggest there’s a “correct” secret list for everyone
- Ignore cultural and family differences
- Oversimplify complex emotional decisions
In reality, strong families tend to balance privacy with transparency—not secrecy for its own sake.
If you’re thinking about this for a real situation, the better question is:
“Will sharing this help or harm my relationship or future planning?”
If you want, tell me what kind of “secrets” you’re concerned about, and I can help you think through them more concretely.