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5 common parenting mistakes that create emotional distance

etimes.in | Last updated on - May 5, 2026, 13:00 IST
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5 common parenting mistakes that create emotional distance

A child does not usually stop opening up in one dramatic moment. Emotional distance between parents and children is more often built quietly, through repeated interactions that make a child feel unheard, judged or emotionally unsafe. A harsh reply here, a dismissal there, a habit of controlling instead of listening , over time, these small moments can change the entire shape of a relationship.

Most parents do not set out to hurt their children. In fact, many of these mistakes come from love, worry or the belief that authority is the same as guidance. But children remember how they felt long after they forget the exact words. And when a home begins to feel like a place of correction rather than connection, communication starts to thin out. Here are five common parenting mistakes that can slowly create emotional distance.

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1. Dismissing their feelings

One of the quickest ways to make a child stop sharing is to treat their emotions as unimportant. Comments like “You are overreacting,” “That is nothing,” or “Do not be silly” may sound harmless to an adult, but to a child they can land like rejection.

When feelings are repeatedly dismissed, children learn that speaking honestly does not help. They may begin to hide sadness, anger, fear or disappointment because those emotions are not welcomed. Over time, this creates a quiet gap between parent and child, not because the child has nothing to say, but because they no longer expect to be taken seriously. A child does not need every emotion to be agreed with. They need it to be acknowledged.

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2. Reacting with anger instead of listening

Many children stop talking not because they are doing something wrong, but because they are afraid of how it will be received. If every mistake leads to shouting, sarcasm or harsh punishment, children quickly learn to edit the truth.

Anger may bring short-term obedience, but it rarely builds trust. A child who expects a storm instead of a conversation will think twice before sharing problems, admitting failures or asking for help. That is how emotional distance grows: not from one explosive moment, but from a pattern of fear.

Listening does not mean approving everything. It simply means creating enough calm for the child to speak before the correction begins.

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3. Being too controlling

Some parents believe that constant monitoring is the same as care. They choose the clothes, the friends, the subjects, the hobbies, sometimes even the emotions a child is allowed to express. The intention may be protection, but the effect is often suffocating.

Children raised in highly controlling homes may become quiet, secretive or overly dependent. They may stop sharing because they already know the answer will be no. They may begin to live two lives: one visible to parents and one kept completely hidden.

Healthy parenting leaves room for age-appropriate choice. When a child is trusted with small decisions, they are more likely to trust their parents with bigger ones. Control may produce compliance, but connection grows through respect.

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4. Comparing them with others

Few things weaken a child faster than constant comparison. “Why cannot you be like your cousin?” “Look at your friend, she never behaves this way.” “Your brother is better at this.” These sentences may be meant as motivation, but they usually create shame.

Comparison tells a child that love is conditional on performance. It shifts the focus from growth to competition, from learning to proving worth. Children who are compared too often may become anxious, resentful or emotionally withdrawn. Some stop trying altogether; others become perfectionists who never feel good enough.

Children need to feel seen for who they are, not for how they measure up to someone else. When they are valued as individuals, they are more likely to stay emotionally close.

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5. Not making space for real conversations

Many families speak every day without truly communicating. Logistics get discussed, routines get managed, but the emotional life of the child remains untouched. Parents may ask, “Did you eat?” or “Did you finish homework?” while never asking, “How was your day really?” or “What has been bothering you lately?”

When conversations stay superficial, children begin to assume that deeper topics do not belong at home. They may stop bringing up loneliness, confusion, friendship issues or self-doubt because there is no clear invitation to do so.

Connection grows in the small, ordinary moments: a ride home, a shared meal, a quiet evening, a question asked without distraction. What matters is not forcing deep talks, but making it clear that honest ones are always welcome.

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Copyright © Jun 10, 2026, 08.47AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service