Old People Using Wrong Emojis Is the Family Group Chat Crisis Nobody Warned Us About

Apr 30, 2026 01:00 AM EDT
Elderly woman confused by phone with text message using laughing crying emoji for funeral condolences.
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A grandmother announced the death of her cat with a yellow background and six bright pink heart-eye emojis. The post is heartfelt. The post is also visually celebrating something. These two facts are at war and the war is happening in everyone’s feed. These old people using wrong emojis are operating a digital language they did not grow up with, and the results are equal parts confusing and deeply, deeply funny. The laugh-cry emoji is doing terrible work in this gallery. Brace.

Social media post announcing a sad cat death, contrasting with joyful heart-eyes emojis on the background.

Tell me you didn't check the background before you posted without telling me you didn't check the background.

A messaging thread where one person uses a playful smirk emoji to acknowledge a cat's death.

This is how a villain marks a "successful operation" to their henchman.

Messaging thread with an accidental middle finger emoji reaction in a dark mode interface.

If "thanks, I hate it" was a messaging reaction.

Sign misinterpreting an arousing "oh face" emoji for a coughing person.
Text conversation where a heartbreaking story about a pet with cancer ends with a laughing emoji.
Comment thread about a serious medical misdiagnosis and death, punctuated by a laughing-crying emoji.
A short text convo where "Dad" uses a creepy-looking disguised emoji to represent a "nice old man."
Social media condolences post about a sister's death featuring a background of laughing emojis.

This post is the definition of "emotional whiplash."

Facebook post where a thoughtful memory of a daughter is followed by an inappropriate laughing-crying emoji reaction.

A single emoji can derail an entire family memory.

Facebook post about a pet's ashes returning home, juxtaposed with a string of laughing-crying emojis in the text.

Old people using wrong emojis

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The laugh-crying emoji is the central villain of this entire genre and it is, in a way, not even its fault. To anybody who came up online, that emoji clearly conveys “I am crying from laughing so hard.” To a generation that learned emojis the way you’d learn a new language at 65, it just looks like a face with tears, and tears are sad, and therefore this emoji is sad. The funny grandparent texts in this gallery are basically a translation error happening in real time, and there is no Rosetta Stone available.

The pet bereavement category in particular is where this lands the hardest. Somebody’s family pet has died, the post is genuinely meant to be a tribute, and the background of the post is a riot of love-struck emojis because that’s the template they picked from the menu without checking what was on it. The hilarious texting fails are not malicious. They’re the opposite of malicious. The intention is sweet and the execution is, accidentally, a meme.

The “I know” smirk emoji response to news of a death is its own special category. The intent there was almost certainly “yes, I have heard, this is so sad,” but the smirk reads as smug, and the cousins are now wondering whether mom actually celebrated when her sister-in-law’s cat passed. These embarrassing tech moments and senior emoji confusion situations keep producing accidental villain energy out of people who, in real life, would never harm a fly.

And the disguised “nice old man” emoji from Dad. The dad meant well. The dad picked an emoji that, to him, conveyed warmth and trustworthiness. The emoji in question looks like a Bond villain who has just turned to face the camera. The internet age fails are at their richest when the gap between intent and reception is this wide.

What this whole gallery quietly documents is the digital generation gap, which is real and which is also a much more affectionate phenomenon than we usually frame it as. Nobody in this collection is being a bad person. Everybody is doing their best with tools that didn’t exist for most of their lives. The emojis were not designed by them, the conventions were not built by them, and they are walking into a coded social language that the rest of us absorbed by osmosis between the ages of 12 and 25.

The thing is, the kids are still going to be the ones laughing. That’s how it works. Every generation is going to have some technology gap that the next one finds hilarious, and ours just happens to be that our parents and grandparents are publishing genuine emotional content with backgrounds that look like a birthday party and reactions that look like contempt. The screenshots will get taken. The screenshots will get posted. The aunts will not know.

What softens the whole thing, when you sit back from it, is how much love is actually in these posts. Somebody made the effort to share a memory. Somebody made the effort to acknowledge a death. Somebody picked an emoji because they wanted to add something, even if the something they added was, technically, a middle finger. The intent was always tenderness. The internet just keeps catching the spelling mistakes.

If the second-hand cringe was your kind of fun, broader family group chat content is right next door, screenshot fail collections cover this territory beautifully, and general internet generation gap humor is where these moments keep getting compiled. Stay kind. It might be your turn one day.

Katie Rodriguez is a seasoned writer with eight years dedicated to meme commentary, viral internet events, and digital storytelling. Formerly a senior meme analyst at Bored Panda and an occasional guest contributor at Vice's Motherboard, Kat specializes in meme culture’s intersection with social media phenomena—covering trends like Milk Crate Challenge, Area 51 Raid, and Baby Yoda. She’s known for her witty writing style and deep understanding of why certain memes resonate across generations, making her a valuable voice on Thunder Dungeon.
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