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The No. 1 skill parents are forgetting to teach kids today


Parents today try to raise their children for good grades, perfect behavior and high achievement. We want them to do well and be able to handle challenges in life. But research shows that confidence and resilience stem from a child’s ability to feel safe being fully themselves.

In my work of studying over 200 kids, and as a mother, I’ve found that beneath the defiance and behavior problems, there is almost always a child who doesn’t feel comfortable expressing what they feel and need.

In other words, how safe your child feels with you today shapes who they become as adults. Here are six ways to shape that safety early on.

1. Stop rushing your child through their feelings

Most parents move quickly to calm or fix. When a child cries, we might say “you’re okay.” When they’re angry, we say “calm down.” When they’re overwhelmed, we look for the fastest way out of the moment.

As a result, children learn to disconnect from themselves faster and faster. What they actually need is a parent who can stay in the feeling with them longer than feels comfortable.

Resist the urge to fill the silence. Instead, try: “I see you’re really upset. I’m right here. Take all the time you need.” That simple act of staying teaches a child that their emotions are survivable and safe.

2. Let your child define their own inner world

Parents override their children constantly: “You can’t be hungry, you just ate.” “You slept early. How can you still be tired?” “She’s your friend. You don’t hate her.”

While well-intentioned, these phrases teach a child not to trust what they feel, and to let someone else define their inner experience instead.

Research on emotional validation shows that children whose feelings are consistently overridden grow into adults who struggle to trust their own judgment.

Instead, ask: “What do you feel?” or “What do you think?” Then stop talking and let them take ownership of their own experience.

3. Know the difference between a child who is thriving and one who is adapting

Some of the most well-behaved children are also the least emotionally safe.

They’ve learned, often very early, that keeping the peace protects the connection and that being easy to manage keeps the love intact. So they comply and try to give you what you need.

But the child who pushes back and expresses frustration openly is often the one who feels most emotionally safe.

4. Stop evaluating your child, and start noticing them

Phrases like “good job” or “that was disappointing” may seem harmless, but they can send the wrong message that kids are always being measured.

Instead of evaluating, describe what you see and get curious about what they feel. Instead of “good job,” try “I noticed how hard you worked on that.” Instead of “stop being mean,” try “what emotions are you feeling right now?”

Moving from judgment into genuine curiosity creates safety.

5. Not everything needs a response

The impulse to over-explain or over-correct often comes from a place of love. But when every emotion…



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The No. 1 skill parents are forgetting to teach kids today

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