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6 reasons why parents should never compare themselves with others

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jun 13, 2025, 05:32 IST
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1/7

Why should parents never compare with other parents?


Parenting today feels like walking on a tightrope, with people watching from every direction. Social media is full of “perfect” families, milestone updates, home-cooked meals, and kids winning medals at every turn. While it may seem harmless, this constant stream of curated lives often plants a dangerous seed—comparison. And that seed can quietly grow into guilt, self-doubt, and burnout.
It’s easy to believe that other parents are doing everything better. But the truth is, behind every smiling photo or glowing report card, there’s a story no one sees. Every parent fights their own hidden battles, faces their own struggles, and walks a path that can never be the same as someone else’s.
Here are 6 honest and heartfelt reasons why comparing parenting journeys does more harm than good.

2/7

What’s shown isn’t always what’s real

Everyone else seems to be handling things effortlessly—be it their child’s education, behaviour, or even family meals.

Most only share the highlights. The skipped homework, toddler meltdowns, or sleepless nights rarely make it to the camera roll. Everyone edits their life before it’s shared.

When those raw, unfiltered moments are hidden, it creates a false belief that others are doing better. But reality is more complex, and no one truly has it all figured out. Just because something isn’t seen doesn’t mean it’s not happening.

3/7

Every child is born with a different manual

If one child is reading fluently at age four, every child should.

No two children grow the same way, at the same pace, or with the same interests. Comparing progress only puts unnecessary pressure on both the child and the parent.

Some kids talk early, others walk early. Some struggle with maths, while others thrive in music. Parenting isn’t about ticking boxes—it’s about understanding the unique rhythm of a child’s development.

4/7

Comparison breeds guilt, not growth

A little comparison can motivate better parenting.

It rarely does. Instead, it brings in silent guilt, making parents question every decision, every reaction, and every moment of rest.

Guilt can overshadow joyful moments and cloud the bigger picture. It shifts the focus from bonding to benchmarking. Growth comes from learning, adjusting, and loving, not from competing.

5/7

Personal strengths are ignored in the shadow of others’ highlights

If someone else is great at organising birthday parties or teaching phonics, they must be doing parenting better.

Every parent has their own strengths—some create laughter-filled homes, others nurture deep emotional intelligence. Comparing skills reduces parenting to a scoreboard.

Acknowledging personal strengths, even the quiet ones, is vital. The ability to listen patiently, to soothe tears, or simply to be present—these often go unnoticed but shape a child’s world more than anything else.

6/7

Emotional health takes a backseat

One must keep up, or fall behind.

This invisible race often leads to burnout, anxiety, and a loss of confidence. And when that happens, the emotional connection with the child can quietly begin to fade.

A mentally and emotionally healthy parent is far more valuable than a constantly “perfect” one. Rest, self-kindness, and acceptance matter more than matching anyone else’s pace.

7/7

Parenting isn’t a formula: It’s a relationship

Following what works for others will guarantee better outcomes.

Parenting isn’t about strategies, it’s about connection. What works in one home may not work in another. Culture, temperament, and family dynamics all play a role.

Blindly following someone else’s method often backfires. True parenting wisdom comes from observing, understanding, and evolving within one’s own unique context.


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Copyright © May 26, 2026, 04.56PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service