The Moment I Realized I Was Parenting for Approval, Not Growth
Introduction
There wasn’t a meltdown.
There wasn’t a mistake.
There wasn’t even a bad day.
It was an ordinary moment—quiet, almost forgettable—that changed the way I saw my parenting.
My child had finished something they were working on and looked at me, waiting. Not for help. Not for comfort.
For approval.
And in that pause, I realized something uncomfortable:
I had become the measuring stick for their worth.
Not intentionally.
Not harshly.
But consistently.
That moment didn’t make me feel like a bad parent. It made me feel like a well-meaning one who had absorbed a system without questioning it.
This blog isn’t about one tool—rewards, praise, discipline, or motivation.
It’s about the pattern underneath all of them.
The Pattern We Rarely Notice
Throughout this series inspired by Punished by Rewards, we’ve examined many familiar parenting strategies:
Stickers and incentives
Praise meant to boost confidence
Rules enforced for compliance
Motivation driven by outcomes
Each one, on its own, seems harmless. Helpful, even.
But taken together, they create a quiet message children absorb early:
“Your value lives outside of you.”
That message doesn’t arrive loudly.
It arrives politely.
Wrapped in encouragement.
Delivered with love.
And that’s why it’s so easy to miss.
As we reflected in ParentingThroughPages – Blog #14:
“What feels supportive in the moment can still shape dependency in the long run.”
How This Shows Up in Real Life
In modern parenting—especially in fast-paced, high-pressure environments like New York—external validation is everywhere.
We praise quickly because time is short.
We reward because resistance feels exhausting.
We correct behavior because chaos feels unsafe.
None of this makes us controlling parents.
It makes us tired parents navigating inherited systems.
But over time, children learn to ask:
“Is this good?”
“Did I do it right?”
“Will I get something for this?”
Not because they lack confidence—but because we’ve unintentionally trained them to outsource it.
Personal Story: The Day It Clicked
One evening, after a long day of school schedules, city noise, and the usual New York rush, my child was drawing quietly at the table.
I did what I always did. I praised. I encouraged. I commented.
Eventually, they stopped drawing.
I asked why.
The answer was simple:
“You stopped watching.”
That sentence stayed with me.
It echoed something we later articulated on ParentingThroughPages – Blog #11:
“When children depend on our reactions, they stop trusting their own.”
That night, I realized my presence had slowly turned into performance review.
Not because I wanted control—but because I didn’t yet understand the cost of constant evaluation.
What This Series Has Really Been About
If you zoom out, every blog so far has been circling the same truth:
Rewards replace meaning
Praise replaces self-reflection
Punishment replaces learning
Competition replaces cooperation
Different tools.
Same foundation.
Control instead of connection.
And here’s the hard part:
Most of us were raised this way. So were our teachers. So were our parents.
This isn’t about blame.
It’s about awareness.
As we shared in Blog #12:
“We parent the way we were managed—until we pause long enough to choose differently.”
The Shift: From Managing Behavior to Raising Humans
The alternative isn’t permissiveness.
It isn’t chaos.
And it definitely isn’t “doing nothing.”
It’s a shift in orientation.
From:
“How do I get this behavior?”
To:“What does my child need to grow?”
From:
“Is this working right now?”
To:“What am I teaching long-term?”
When we stop parenting for immediate outcomes, we start parenting for character, resilience, and inner stability.
What This Looks Like Practically (No Ideal Parenting Required)
This shift doesn’t require a full reset. It starts small:
Sitting with silence instead of filling it with praise
Asking reflective questions instead of offering judgment
Letting children feel proud before we tell them they should
Allowing mistakes without rushing to fix meaning
These moments feel subtle—but they are powerful.
Because children don’t need constant feedback.
They need space to hear themselves.
Why This Matters More Than Ever
Today’s children grow up with:
Constant comparison
Performance metrics
Social validation loops
External judgment everywhere
Home should be the one place where worth isn’t earned.
As we wrote earlier on ParentingThroughPages:
“Home should be where children rest from evaluation—not rehearse it.”
Conclusion: The Pause Before What Comes Next
This blog is not an ending—it’s a pause.
A moment to step back and see the full picture:
Not just what we do as parents, but why we do it.
In the next blog, we’ll bring everything together—rewards, praise, discipline, motivation—and look at the system they create when combined.
Because once you see the pattern, you can’t unsee it.
And that’s where real change begins.
