Helping Controlling Parents Ease Up on Their Children
How to deal with a controlling parent, one with an authoritarian parenting style, who is so strict and unforgiving, it destroys family peace.
A mother writes: My teens are wonderful and normal. Their misbehavior is neither extreme nor excessive. It's my husband who drives us all crazy. He expects the children to behave like little soldiers, and he can turn family life into boot camp with all his rules and regulations. How can I convince him that his controlling parenting is the problem, not us?
What Causes Controlling Parents?
Just like the children they love and guide, fathers come in different varieties and assume various roles in the family. Sometimes their chosen role, though well-intentioned, leads to great difficulty for all other family members. At any given moment, overbearing and critical parenting attitudes, mired in a militaristic delivery of expectations and punishments, descend upon the home. In addition to alienating children, promoting marital strife, and sabotaging the quality of family life, controlling parents squander opportunities for bonding and understanding in their quest to turn children into "conformity cadets."
Help for Controlling Parents
Examine the Origins of the Controlling Parent's Authoritarian Style of Parenting
Excessive accountability, exacting standards, and onerous interactions are some of the ingredients that create a boot camp atmosphere when the controlling parent is around. If this unwelcome recipe is cooking up conflict at home, consider the following parenting tips:
Identify and examine the roots. Fathers with this strict and narrow parenting style often follow a parenting compass from childhood. Prior experience with their own fathers has carved reactions and rationales forming the basis of their parenting mentality. Allegiance to their own father is at odds with today's changing conditions. Children with different personalities, families with new stressors, and mothers with different values are just some of the changes that don't mix well with rigid parenting. Despite positive perceptions of their own childhood upbringing, fathers are urged to consider whether their parenting roots are enriching or eroding the soil for family growth.
Work toward a mutually satisfactory parenting attitude. Typically, as fathers boil, mothers recoil. One key difference for fathers to thoughtfully consider is the parenting preferences of their wives. Is she on board with this boot camp idea? While some mothers may be subservient, this often belies their strong objections and deep concerns about the emotional scars left on the children.
Wives of controlling parents typically report that they "walk on eggshells" when their children and husband occupy the same room, hoping that an emotional tripwire is not activated by a mistake or rule infraction on the part of a child. Fathers might ask themselves, "Is this the kind of legacy I want to leave behind in the minds of those I love?"
Develop a mutually agreeable list of parent priorities, without the controlling style of parenting. Substitute the rigid wielding of authority over children for a shared parenting plan based on mutually held values. Such values might include that
- children's feelings of physical and emotional safety should not be threatened by punishment,
- standard parenting expectations and imposed consequences must be agreed to by both parents,
- children should have an opportunity to respectfully voice their feelings and thoughts about parents, and that
- parents will calmly air their disagreements behind closed doors.
Once this new plan is agreed upon, periodic follow up will ensure its continued application.
Mothers, or the un-authoritarian parent, are urged to monitor and mediate so success is realized. The lynchpin in discarding the old police state and installing an acceptable co-parenting mission is the mother. Children will continue to test the father, fathers will continue to test the children, and mothers will continue to have their patience tested over and over again. Signals that wives that send to their husbands when they sense the drill sergeant is about to appear can be agreed upon.
Doing these things will prevent the damage a controlling parent can do to the children and the family.
APA Reference
Richfield, S.
(2019, August 2). Helping Controlling Parents Ease Up on Their Children, HealthyPlace. Retrieved
on 2024, December 23 from https://www.healthyplace.com/parenting/the-parent-coach/parenting-help-controlling-the-controlling-parent