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​What kids really need from their parents (Hint: It’s not perfection)​

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jun 24, 2025, 07:46 IST
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1/8

The truth is, kids don’t need you to be perfect. They need you to be present


Let’s just get this out of the way—no child ever looked up at their parents mid-tantrum or in the middle of a burnt-toast breakfast and thought, “Wow, I wish you were more perfect.” Nope. That’s not how kids work. They’re not looking for flawless role models with sparkling countertops and superhuman patience. They’re looking for something else entirely: realness, warmth, and connection.
And if you're a parent who's spent even five minutes scrolling through Instagram parenting “tips” or Pinterest-perfect bento lunchboxes, it’s easy to think you're falling short. But what does your kid really need? It’s far more doable—and a lot less curated.

2/8

Kids need to see you mess up—and handle it

Believe it or not, making mistakes in front of your kids is a gift. When you spill coffee on your laptop or forget school picture day (again), and then recover with a laugh or a calm, “Oops, I’ll fix it,” you’re showing your child how to navigate life’s bumps.
When you apologize for snapping or admit you didn’t handle something well, you're teaching them it's okay to mess up—and more importantly, it's okay to own it.
Perfection doesn’t teach resilience. Your imperfect reactions, followed by effort to make things right, do.

3/8

They crave your time more than your techniques

You don’t need to memorize every parenting book ever written. You don’t need to build elaborate crafts or plan themed weekends. You just need to show up, consistently.
A simple walk to the store, lying on the bed chatting before lights-out, baking cookies that turn out more “abstract” than edible—these are the real connection points. Kids remember how they felt around you, not how organized your sock drawer was.


So yes, say yes to that 10-minute Lego building session, even if dinner is late. It means more than you know.

4/8

They want a safe emotional landing pad



Kids experience big emotions in tiny bodies—rage, sadness, embarrassment, disappointment. They’re not always rational. They’ll cry over the broken cookie or the green cup instead of the blue one. It’s not your job to “fix” the feelings. It’s your job to sit with them, to say, “I see you’re upset. I’m here.”

This emotional anchoring—being calm when they’re stormy—gives them the tools to self-regulate later. They’re not looking for you to be calm 100% of the time, but they need to know you're trying to be their calm when things feel out of control.

5/8

They need your belief in them, even when they’re flailing



Confidence doesn’t come from lectures or gold stars. It comes from knowing someone sees your potential even when you're struggling. Your kid wants to feel like you’re in their corner, especially when they're failing math, or flunking a friendship.

Telling them “you’ve got this” and meaning it—even when you’re unsure too—builds a belief system far stronger than any praise-for-performance pattern. They don’t want a perfect coach; they want a messy, cheering, always-on-their-team parent.

6/8

They learn self-worth by watching how you treat yourself



Your kids are watching how you talk to yourself. They notice if you say things like “I’m such an idiot” when you drop the groceries. They see if you push through exhaustion or if you allow yourself to rest. They hear how you respond to your own failures.

Want your kids to grow up with healthy self-esteem? Let them see you practice self-kindness. Show them what it looks like to forgive yourself, ask for help, or just call it a day.

7/8

They need space to grow—and know you'll love them anyway



We’re often tempted to mold kids into miniature versions of ourselves. But sometimes they’re going to choose a different path. Different hobbies, opinions, passions. And that’s okay. Actually, it’s beautiful.
What they really need is your unconditional love, not contingent approval. They need to know: Even if I mess up, even if I’m different, even if I don’t meet your expectations—you love me anyway.
That’s the soil confidence grows in.

8/8

So here’s the big secret

Your kid doesn’t need the perfect parent. They need you—the real, flawed, laugh-at-yourself, try-again-tomorrow you. The one who hugs tightly, listens fully, and keeps showing up, even when it’s hard.
No one remembers if their mom packed five vegetables a day or folded the laundry like a retail display. But they always remember how safe, seen, and loved they felt.
Perfection is overrated. Real parenting? That’s what makes confident kids.


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