It comes unnoticed. In the evening, when the child is already asleep, and you are sitting at the kitchen table with a cup of cold tea. You replay the day in your mind: not enough time, not enough attention, too sharp a tone, too few toys. Somewhere inside, this sticky, tenacious feeling boils up, which you call guilt. You think: \"I'm a bad mother,\" \"I'm not a good enough father,\" \"My child deserves more.\" This feeling is familiar to almost every parent, but few realize that a large part of it is false. It has nothing to do with real failures; it is born from ideals that no one can achieve and expectations that no one has formulated. To break free from this prison, you need to understand: what we really owe our child, and what is just an illusion of duty imposed from outside.
False guilt is not the result of a real mistake, but the result of a discrepancy between reality and some ideal image of \"a good parent.\" This image is constructed from many sources: social networks, where mothers post perfect breakfasts and smiling faces of children; advice from friends and relatives, who \"always know what's right\"; personal childhood traumas and the belief that \"I should have it better than my parents.\" As a result, we start to demand the impossible from ourselves: to be an ideal educator, friend, financial provider, and therapist at the same time. And when we fail, we feel guilty. But think: does a real child need an ideal mother or father? Or does he need a living, real person who is sometimes tired, makes mistakes, and also learns to be a parent?
Let's start with what is a real, inalienable parental obligation. This is not endless gadgets, not circles from the age of three, and not ideal order at home. These are basic things without which a child cannot grow up healthy, happy, and independent.
First and foremost, this is safety. Physical safety: the child must know that he will not be hit, left in danger, or neglected in terms of his health. Emotional safety: he must have the right to his feelings, not be afraid to express anger, sadness, fear, knowing that his parents will not turn away or punish him for it. The child must know that he is loved unconditionally, not for grades, not for obedience, but just because he exists. This does not mean that parents should not teach him rules and boundaries — this means that punishment should not mean a loss of love.
Second, this is attention and presence. Not the number of hours, but the quality. The child does not need a parent who sits next to him, buried in his phone, and mechanically responds \"uh-huh.\" He needs to be heard, his questions not to be ignored, his joys to be shared. This does not mean that you need to be available 24/7, but this means that the time allocated is truly his.
Third, this is the opportunity to learn from mistakes. The child needs not perfect solutions, but the opportunity to try, make mistakes, and see that a mistake is not a catastrophe. Parents should give him this space, not saving him from every failure, but supporting him in moments of falling.
This is where false guilt begins. It is here that we often confuse the desired with the mandatory.
You are not obligated to give your child everything he wants. Branded things, the latest phone, an annual vacation at the sea — all this is pleasant, but it is not a basic need. A child raised in modest conditions, but with loving parents, will be much happier than one who got everything but warmth.
You are not obligated to be perfect and never make mistakes. You have a right to bad moods, to fatigue, to irritation. It is important not to hide this, but to honestly say: \"I'm tired, I need some time for myself.\" The child learns to understand emotions through you, and if you hide your feelings, he will not learn to cope with his own.
You are not obligated to sacrifice your life, career, relationships for your child. Healthy parents are not those who have given up everything, but those who have preserved themselves. A child needs happy parents, not martyrs. If you feel that work brings you joy — this is not a reason for guilt, but a reason for an example.
You are not obligated to be a therapist for your child. You can be his support, friend, mentor, but you should not take on all his pain. Sometimes the best way to help is to admit that you do not know the answer and seek professional help.
It is important to understand that false guilt often arises not only from internal demands but also from manipulation. A child, especially an older one, may intuitively use this weak string to get what they want. \"You never spend time with me\" — may be true, but it may also be a way to get another purchase or permission. And here the parent's task is to learn to distinguish between real needs and caprices. This does not mean that you need to ignore your child's words, but this does not mean that you need to take them as an unchallengeable truth. Ask yourself the question: \"What lies behind these words? What does my child really need?\". Often it is attention, not a thing, and attention can be given without a sense of guilt, with an awareness of your choice.
Overcoming false guilt is a process that requires time and awareness. The first step is to acknowledge that this feeling exists, but not to give it power. When you catch yourself thinking \"I'm a bad parent,\" try to stop and ask: \"What is the basis for this thought? Are there any real evidence? Or is it just my anxiety?\". Often it turns out that there is no evidence, only a fear of not living up to the ideal.
The second step is to distinguish between real mistakes and false assumptions. If you really scolded your child, apologize and explain that you were wrong. If you just didn't buy an expensive toy — this is not a mistake, it is your parental choice. You do not need to apologize for what you cannot or do not want to do.
The third step is to learn to say to yourself \"I am enough good.\" This is not about self-satisfaction, but about a realistic assessment. You should not be perfect, you should be good enough. Psychologist Donald Winnicott introduced the concept of \"enough good mother\" — one who is not perfect, but who satisfies the basic needs of the child and allows him to develop, facing reality. This is the healthiest approach to parenting.
The fourth step is to seek support. Talk to other parents, share your doubts. Often it turns out that your \"horrible\" mistakes are what everyone experiences. This normalizes the situation and removes the burden of isolation.
This may sound harsh, but it is the truth. The child should not be the only meaning of your existence. If you are completely immersed in your child, you deprive him of an important example — the example of an adult person who lives a full life, has interests, friends, work. The child should see that life does not end with his birth, and that the happiness of the parents is not egoism, but the basis for his own happiness. When you feel guilty for leaving your child with your grandmother or going to the gym, remember: you are not throwing him away, you are teaching him that each person has the right to their own space. And this is a lesson that he will carry through his entire life.
False guilt is fed by uncertainty. When we doubt our decisions, we become vulnerable to internal criticism. But if we learn to trust ourselves, if we understand that our path is our choice, not a mistake, we can let go of this feeling. Trusting yourself does not mean that we will not make mistakes. It means that we will learn from our mistakes, not punish ourselves for them. Parenting is not an exam that you can pass or fail. It is a process in which every day we learn to be a little better than yesterday. And that is enough.
False guilt towards children is a shadow that we project onto our own life. It does not make us better, it makes us anxious and exhausted. Overcoming it means stopping demanding the impossible of ourselves, regaining the right to error and fatigue, recognizing that we are not gods, but humans. We are not obligated to be perfect. We are obligated to be loving and honest. And if we can give our child this — love and honesty — everything else will be just details. And details, as we know, do not justify the pain we cause ourselves with a sense of guilt. Allow yourself to be just a parent. Good enough. And then your child will get the main thing — not an ideal mother or father, but a living person who loves him and learns to love with him.
New publications: |
Popular with readers: |
News from other countries: |
![]() |
Editorial Contacts |
About · News · For Advertisers |
U.S. Digital Library ® All rights reserved.
2014-2026, LIBMONSTER.COM is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map) Keeping the heritage of the United States of America |
US-Great Britain
Sweden
Serbia
Russia
Belarus
Ukraine
Kazakhstan
Moldova
Tajikistan
Estonia
Russia-2
Belarus-2