By Penny Travers
Most parents would do anything for their kids — after all, they just want what’s best for them.
But what if continually being at your child’s beck and call actually meant they failed to become independent and launch into adulthood?
With more young adults dependent on their families and childhood anxiety rates higher than ever before, parenting expert and author Michael Grose said parents need to take a step back and give their kids room to find their own feet.
“As parents we need to remember that our job is to make ourselves redundant from the earliest possible age and make our kids independent,” Mr Grose told ABC Radio Canberra.
“All parents want their kids to be happy and successful and confident, and the best way we’ve done that in the past is independence building — but we seem to be retreating from that independent approach over the past few decades.
“Now we do a bit too much for them, don’t expect enough from them at home and are probably a bit too protective of them as well.”
Mr Grose said “spoonfeeding” children had given rise to a generation of risk-averse kids who remained financially and emotionally reliant on their parents well into their 20s.
He said that while parents meant well by protecting their kids, it was better in the long run to stand back and give them more freedom.
“Young people will inevitably risk experiencing failure, discomfort and hurt in the process,” he said.
“But accessing and facing risk has always been a part of childhood.
“It’s only over the past few decades that much of the unpredictability and uncertainty has been removed from kids’ lives, which keeps them dependent on adults for longer.”
Busy lives, smaller families behind dependency parenting.
Mr Grose said one of the reason for the high level of dependency parenting was the fact many modern families were “rushed” living busy lives.