Below is part of an article I read and I think it says a lot as to what has happened to cause such a change in younger people. It's the trial and error of learning a new skill when the old ways just are no longer applicable. Like the article says, parents need a map to show where and how to navigate the present.
It sounds to me like the hard part now is how to convey to your adult children that as parents you did the best you could in the circumstances of the unfamiliar life that left you with no point of reference. My heart goes out to you all and I hope that your children will somehow realize how hard it was to be a parent in a world that was changed so quickly.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lisa-belk ... 65620.html
"Nearly everything about childhood today is completely unlike the one in which we were raised. Our children can communicate instantly and constantly. They live with the knowledge that terror no longer requires a government, and has actually reached our shores. Jobs are no longer lifetime guarantees. Families are no longer mom, dad, 2.5 children and a dog. Kids who are different are more likely to be met where they are, rather than pressed to be something they are not. Life is faster and more cacophonous, with more possibilities but also more land mines. Things that used to be hard are easy, and things that used to be easy are hard. Our children are over scheduled and over-coddled. They are simultaneously asked to grow up too quickly --sexualized early, exposed to violence in the media and infantilized with hovering parents and dependence that extends into their thirties).
Today's children do everything sooner, faster and more intensely than we did, and no amount of longing for yesterday is going to change the reasons that is true. Parents are not so much the reasons for change -- peers, technology, social trends, world events are far more powerful forces -- as we are the ones children rely on to guide them through it.
To do that, we don't need a map back to the past, but rather one that will show us where we've strayed a bit from the best path going forward, and help recalibrate. One that will help us navigate the future. Or better yet, the present."