Raising a child is an incredible journey filled with joy, challenges, and decisions. But it’s also complicated. We all want the best for our children, and as parents that means ensuring they stay on the right path by course correcting when necessary. The problem is knowing when it’s really necessary to step in and when we need to step back and allow them to find their own path.
This is particularly difficult when your children reach adulthood. Beginning in their later teens your children need to begin making larger and more impactful decisions for themselves – even if they’re not the decisions you’d like them to make.
Underlying this is a crucial aspect that most of us miss – understanding when and how to accept your adult children for who they are vs. who you wanted or expected them to be.
For instance,
Any of these deviations from what was expected or imagined as a child’s path can throw a parent for a loop. They can also cause well-meaning parents to feel tempted to “counsel” and “guide” their adult children, when perhaps what they need to do is simply accept them.
Knowing how to strike the right balance between giving direction and allowing your child to grow on their own terms is critical to helping them develop into healthy, confident, and successful adults.
Unfortunately, this process is full of shades of grey and very little black and white.
So, what’s a well-meaning parent to do?
Before we can truly talk about navigating all the shades of gray, it’s important to understand the difference between guidance and acceptance. Knowing what each looks like makes it easier to determine which one to apply.
Guidance is using your experience, knowledge, and wisdom to
In short, guidance is what parents do to give their children the tools to make good and healthy decisions.
Acceptance is more about recognizing and respecting your child’s autonomy.
When you accept your child, you recognize their
Acceptance is recognizing your adult children for who they are and not trying to change or influence them to be who you would like them to be.
It can be a source of internal conflict for parents, especially when your children are adults or approaching adulthood.
Knowing when to provide guidance and when to accept your adult children can be one of the most challenging aspects of parenting older children.
On the one hand, we want our children to be successful and do things that bring them joy. On the other hand, we don’t want them to make decisions that could lead to negative consequences.
And because we’re looking through lenses colored by our own experiences and acquired wisdom, we can feel compelled to simply tell them:
The refrain of well-meaning attempts at redirection can go on and on.
Guiding and advising them to make healthy choices without alienating and stifling them, or crushing their spirit is a very tricky balance to maintain.
Why is it so hard?
Short answer – because we love them and want them to be happy. But what we forget is that everyone’s version of happiness is different. Your kids aren’t you.
Still, even the most aware parent can find knowing when to offer guidance and when to accept their child and their choices difficult to discern.
Part of the reason this is so confusing is because children go through different stages of development that require different types of care.
For instance, babies and toddlers need more help learning and developing basic skills, while adolescents may require more freedom as they build autonomy.
Many parents get stuck in the purgatory of toddler to young child parenting behavior – even with their adult children. Helicopter parenting an adult leads to being over-protective, meddling, or nosey. It’s unhealthy and can cause:
Add to that the fact that every child is unique and has different needs, some require guidance longer than others. How do you know how much guidance to provide without inadvertently making them feel criticized or judged, or dependent?
It’s normal to feel overwhelmed or confused when it comes to knowing when to offer guidance and when to accept your child. Sometimes as guides, we need guidance ourselves.
Guiding your child is essential for them to learn important skills that will help them make wise decisions. The hallmark of successful parenting is creating an adult that doesn’t need you anymore and feels comfortable leading their life on their own.
Guiding your adult children should happen when they’re:
It’s important to remember that guidance should be positive and not done with recriminations, judgement, or insults. It also should be done with limits – you’re not supposed to be their therapist.
Accepting your child is just as important as guiding them. And in many situations, acceptance is the best course of action.
Accepting your child means recognizing and validating their thoughts, feelings, and experiences, even when yours are different. It shows them that you are listening to and respecting their viewpoint.
Acceptance should occur when they:
Many things in life come with instructions. Sadly, parenting isn’t one of them and no one parents without mistakes. No one.
Remember your goal – healthy, happy, self-sufficient adults and a strong parent-child relationship. Achieving this only comes with compromises and learning the balance between guiding and accepting, which also means a balance between staying close and letting go.
Are you navigating the ups and downs of being the parent to an adult child? Have you found ways to successfully guide and accept your child? Do you have challenges and questions you’d like some advice on? Share your story and join the conversation.
Tags Adult Children
This topic is enlightening and nicely explained!
Hi Teresita, Glad to hear it. -Dr. Kurt
What do you do with millennials who are being taught that their parents are likely emotionally immature and they put up boundaries to “protect” themselves?
Hi Ali, The same guidelines apply, which means you’re going to operate more on the acceptance side. Always respecting them is really important. I’ve found that doing that can open doors – now and later on. People change over time too, so be patient. -Dr. Kurt