I’ve studied over 200 kids—parents who have the closest relationships with their adult kids never do 6 things
Every parent hopes their adult child will still want to call, still want to come home, and still choose to let them in. Child psychologist Reem Raouda, who has studied over 200 kids, shares what not to do if...
One of the most rewarding things about being a parent is watching your kid grow from a child into an independent adult.
But it can also be one of the hardest transitions. Every parent hopes their adult child will still want to call, still want to come home, and still choose to let them in.
As a conscious parenting coach, I've studied over 200 kids, and the pattern I see in parents who maintain deep, lasting bonds with their adult children is about the norms they refused to follow.
1. They never tried to control their child
Obedience and connection are two very different things. From what I've seen, connection gets more cooperation than control ever will, and it builds a relationship worth coming back to.
A parent who is good at building connection doesn't need to have the last word or immediate compliance. They are often more interested in keeping the door open than proving a point.
That looks like resisting the urge to correct right away and instead saying, "Let's figure this out together."
2. They never dismissed their child's emotions
Telling a child "you're fine" or "stop crying" doesn't change how they feel. It just teaches them not to say it out loud.
The parents who stay close did something deceptively simple: they made feelings feel safe. That looks like saying "that was really hard, huh?" instead of rushing to the solution.
The next time your child experiences uncomfortable emotions, sit with them in the feeling instead of trying to talk them out of it. Let them be upset without making their upset a problem you need to solve.
3. They never tried to change who their child was
One of the biggest mistakes I see parents making is trying to turn their child into someone who is easier or more acceptable. It's okay to let your child be who they are, even if it challenges you.
That might look like supporting a child who is more sensitive than they expected, or not shutting down a personality that feels "too much." The key is to avoid making them feel like a problem that needs to be solved.
Children who grow up feeling fully accepted don't go looking for that acceptance somewhere else. They stay close to the person who gave it to them first.
4. They never tied their child's worth to achievement
Our job as parents is to let our kids know that their worth is not on the line every time they succeed or fail.
Instead of focusing only on outcomes like grades, wins or results, stay connected to who your child is, not just what they do. It's asking "how did that feel?" after the game instead of "how many points did you score?"
Be as present after the failure as you are after the win.
5. They never judged their child in the moments that mattered
Instead of helping a child improve, judgment often leads them to hide their mistakes. The parents who stay close made the hard moments feel like exactly the right time to come to them.
Replace "What were you thinking?" with "Talk to me about what happened." Stay curious instead of going straight to correction.
6. They never avoided accountability
Apologizing is powerful. When parents own their mistakes — like overreacting or misunderstanding — it shows kids that repair is part of a healthy relationship.
It can sound like: "I shouldn't have spoken to you like that. I was wrong, and I'm sorry." Don't make excuses or try to pin the blame back on your child.
Moments like that build the kind of trust kids don't want to lose.
Reem Raouda is a leading voice in conscious parenting and the creator of the BOUND and FOUNDATIONS journals, now offered together as her Emotional Safety Bundle. She is widely recognized for her expertise in children's emotional well-being and for redefining what it means to raise emotionally healthy kids. Find her on Instagram.
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