By Lauren Mitchell Your child doesn’t come home from school and say, “When you compared me to my cousin at dinner last night, I spent the rest of the evening wondering if something is wrong with me.” They don’t have the vocabulary for that at seven. At twelve, they have the vocabulary but not the trust. By sixteen, they’ve stopped trying to explain it entirely. The damage is quiet. It happens in the normal flow of a Tuesday evening, in the way you respond to a bad grade, in the tone you use when they’re struggling, in the praise you give and the praise you withhold without realizing it. None of it feels like a mistake while it’s happening. It feels like parenting. But children are always reading the room. They notice what makes your voice warm and what makes it flat. They notice when your attention sharpens and when it drifts. They build their entire sense of self from these small, daily signals, and five of the most common ones are quietly teaching them that who they are is not enough. Here’s what to look for, and what to do instead. 1. Measuring Them Against Someone Else’s Yardstick “Your sister never had trouble with this.” “Your friend Jake finished the whole project already.” “When I was your age, I was already doing my own laundry.” These comparisons feel motivational to the parent delivering them. To the child receiving them, they land as a verdict: you are falling behind, and someone else is doing it better. Children who grow up being compared learn to evaluate themselves through the lens of other people’s performance. They stop asking “am I getting better?” and start asking “am I better than them?” That second question is a trap with no exit, because there will always be someone ahead, and the goalposts will never stop moving. What to do instead: When you catch a comparison forming in your mind, redirect it into a question aimed at your child’s own experience. Instead of “your friend already turned hers in,” try “what part of this is giving you the most trouble?” This moves the conversation from ranking to problem-solving. It teaches your child to look inward for answers instead of sideways for approval. 2. Shutting Down the Feeling Before You Understand It A child cries because their sandwich was cut into squares instead of triangles. A teenager slams a door because you asked a simple question. Your instinct, understandably, is to correct the reaction. “Stop crying, it’s just a sandwich.” “Don’t slam doors in this house.” The behavior gets addressed. The feeling underneath gets buried. When a child’s emotions are consistently dismissed, minimized, or punished, they learn one of two things. Either my feelings are wrong (which leads to suppression, people-pleasing, and difficulty identifying emotions as an adult), or my feelings don’t matter unless they’re loud enough to force a response (which leads to escalation, outbursts, and conflict-driven communication). Neither path builds a confident human. What to do instead: Acknowledge the feeling before you address the behavior. “You’re really upset about the sandwich. I can see that.” Pause. Let the acknowledgment land. Then deal with whatever needs to be dealt with. This two-step approach takes about ten extra seconds, and it teaches your child that their emotional experience is real and valid, even when their behavior needs to change. That distinction is the foundation of emotional intelligence. 3. Making Your Love Loudest When They Achieve Think about when you light up around your child. When do they get the biggest smile, the warmest hug, the proudest voice? For many parents, the honest answer is: when the child performs. When they score the goal, bring home the A, win the award, behave perfectly at the restaurant. Children are ruthless pattern-matchers. They figure out the formula fast. The love gets loud when I perform, so performing must be what earns it. Once that formula is installed, it runs for decades. Adults who were raised this way often look successful on the outside and feel hollow on the inside, because they’ve spent their entire lives chasing a feeling of unconditional acceptance through conditional achievements. The treadmill never stops. What to do instead: Deliberately show warmth in the unremarkable moments. When they walk into the kitchen on a Saturday morning, let your face light up before they’ve done anything. When they’re sitting on the couch reading, sit next to them and be present without it being about anything. When they show you a drawing that’s honestly not very good, respond to the sharing, not the quality. The message you’re sending is: you don’t have to earn my warmth. It’s here because you’re here. 4. Rescuing Them From Every Struggle Your son is trying to tie his shoes and you’re running late. Your daughter is stuck on a math problem and getting frustrated. The faster, easier, kinder-seeming move is to step in and do it for them. You tell yourself you’re helping. What you’re actually doing, when multiplied across hundreds of small moments, is building a child who believes they cannot handle hard things on their own. Confidence is not built by being told you’re capable. It’s built by experiencing yourself being capable, especially when it’s uncomfortable. Every time you take over, you rob your child of the evidence they need to trust themselves. The short-term relief of solving the problem for them comes at the long-term cost of a kid who freezes whenever help isn’t available. What to do instead: When your child hits a wall, resist the urge to take over. Instead, ask: “What have you tried so far?” or “What do you think the next step might be?” Give the smallest possible hint, not the answer. Let the process take longer than it needs to. The goal is for your child to walk away saying “I did it” instead of “my parent did it.” Those two experiences wire completely different brains. Build extra time into your
