9 Reasons Your Adult Children Have Stopped Telling You The Truth About Their Lives

9 Reasons Your Adult Children Have Stopped Telling You The Truth About Their Lives

My mom asked me last year why I never tell her anything anymore. And I didn’t know how to answer.

Because the truth was that I didn’t just stop last year, I stopped sharing my life with her years ago. Just gradually. Piece by piece. Until our conversations became surface-level updates about work and weather and nothing real.

And she had no idea.

She thought we were close. She thought I told her things. But what I actually told her was a carefully edited version of my life. The parts I knew wouldn’t trigger a lecture, a judgment, or a three-hour phone call about all the ways I was doing it wrong.

I wasn’t lying. I just wasn’t being honest. And, yes, there’s a difference.

I have friends who do the same thing. They love their parents but can’t tell them the truth because they learned that honesty costs more than it’s worth.

If your adult children have stopped sharing their real lives with you, here’s probably why.

1. You Turn Every Conversation Into A Lecture

Adult daughter explaining to her mother that she doesn't want to tell her everything about her life.
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They mention something—a problem at work, a decision they’re making, something they’re struggling with. And before they’ve even finished talking, you’re in solution mode.

Telling them what they should do. What you would do. What they’re doing wrong. How to fix it.

But guess what? They didn’t ask for advice. They just wanted to share, be heard, and process out loud with someone who cares.

You can’t just listen, though. You have to fix. And after enough times of that happening, they stop bringing you problems. Because they know it won’t be a conversation. It’ll be a lecture.

2. You Judge Their Choices Instead Of Trying To Understand Them

They tell you about their life—their business, their partner, their plans. And your first response is criticism.

“Why would you do that?” “That doesn’t make sense.” “I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

Studies on parent-adult child relationships found something consistent: adult children who perceive parental judgment around life choices significantly reduce disclosure over time. They don’t stop making their own choices—they just stop telling their parents about them.

And it’s not that they can’t handle disagreement. It’s that they’re tired of having to defend every decision. They don’t want to feel like nothing they do is good enough or that sharing their life brings judgment instead of support.

That’s why they stop sharing. Because it’s easier than constantly justifying their choices to someone who’s already decided they’re wrong.

3. Everything They Tell You Gets Shared With Everyone Else

They tell you something personal. Something private. And the next time they talk to their aunt or their sibling or your friend, that person already knows.

Because you told them. Because you didn’t think it was a secret. Because you wanted to talk to someone about what your child was going through.

But they didn’t give you permission to share. And now they know they can’t trust you with information they want kept private.

They’ve learned that anything they say to you eventually becomes public knowledge. And some things they just want to keep between them and you. But you’ve proven that’s not possible.

4. You Compare Them To Their Siblings Or Their Friends

Unhappy father and son having a serious conversation at home.
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They share something they’re proud of, and you immediately bring up someone else.

“Your sister just got promoted.” “Your friend from high school just bought a house.” “When I was your age, I already had two kids.”

Research tracking family communication patterns shows that adult children who experience frequent comparison by parents report feeling undervalued and are significantly more likely to limit personal disclosure. The comparisons alienate them.

Every time you do that, you’re telling them: what you’re doing isn’t enough. Someone else is doing it better. You’re falling behind.

Then, they don’t talk about their wins. Because they know that their accomplishments will just be measured against someone else’s. And that feels worse than not telling you at all.

5. You Use Their Honesty As Ammunition

They told you they were struggling with something. Stressed about money, unsure about their relationship, and overwhelmed at work.

And later, when you’re upset with them about something else, you bring it up. “Well, you’re always stressed about money.” “I knew that relationship was a problem.” “You said yourself you were overwhelmed.”

Studies on trust and disclosure found that people who experience their vulnerabilities being used against them in future conflicts drastically reduce personal sharing. It’s a self-protective response—if honesty becomes ammunition, people stop being honest.

You’re using what they trusted you with as a weapon. And once they realize that’s happening, they stop trusting you with anything real, because they know it might be used against them later.

6. You Make Their Problems About You

They tell you something hard they’re going through. And instead of supporting them, you make it about how it affects you.

“I can’t believe you didn’t tell me sooner.”

“This is so stressful for me.”

“What am I supposed to tell people?”

“I’m so worried I can’t sleep.”

And suddenly they’re comforting you. Managing your emotions about their life. Taking care of you instead of getting support from you.

Hard things are yet another topic they don’t bring to you. Because they’ve learned that sharing their struggles just means taking on the additional burden of managing your reaction, and they don’t have the energy for that.

7. You Can’t Admit When You’re Wrong

Mother and son having a serious discussion.
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They try to tell you that something you said hurt them. That a comment you made was hurtful. That they need you to approach something differently.

And instead of listening, you get defensive. “I didn’t mean it that way.” “You’re being too sensitive.” “I’m your mother, I can say what I want.”

You can’t apologize. Can’t admit that you made a mistake or said something hurtful. Can’t adjust your behavior even when they’re telling you it’s damaging the relationship.

Be honest: If you were them, would you want to talk to someone who only defended themselves? Who never heard you? Didn’t think so.

8. You Catastrophize Everything They Tell You

They mention they have a headache, and you’re convinced it’s a brain tumor.

They say work has been stressful, and you’re panicking about them having a breakdown.

They’re going through a rough patch with their partner, and you’re already planning for the divorce.

You take every small problem and turn it into a bigger problem. You can’t hear about a struggle without immediately jumping to the worst possible outcome.

And it’s exhausting.

They can’t just share normal life stuff with you. They can’t mention minor problems or temporary struggles without you spiraling. They’ve learned to only tell you things when everything is perfect. Because anything less than perfect sends you into panic mode.

And they don’t have the time or bandwidth to manage your anxiety on top of their own problems. It’s easier to handle their struggles alone than to deal with your catastrophizing on top of it.

9. You’ve Never Asked Why They Stopped Sharing

You’ve noticed they don’t tell you things anymore. That your conversations are surface-level. That you’re learning about major life events from social media or from other people.

But you’ve never asked why. You’ve never said: “I’ve noticed you don’t share as much with me anymore. Did I do something to make you feel like you can’t?”

You’ve just accepted it. Or blamed them for being distant. Or complained to other people that your kids never call.

But you’ve never actually tried to understand what changed. What you might have done to create distance. What you could do differently to rebuild trust.

And until you ask—really ask, and really listen to the answer without getting defensive—nothing will change. They’ll keep giving you the edited version of their lives. And you’ll keep wondering why you don’t know your own children anymore. Not realizing that somewhere along the way, you taught them that the truth wasn’t safe. And they believed you.

Halle Kaye has been writing for Bolde since 2014. She writes primarily about dating, marriage, divorce, parenting, friendship and family dynamics.

As someone who is unapologetically hyper-independent, Halle writes extensively about people who are high-functioning, high-achieving and tend to rely exclusively on themselves. She writes about the origins of this psychological profile as well as the loneliness that often comes with it. She regularly shares her personal experiences navigating parenting, family and friendship with these tendencies and speaks candidly about those moments she wishes she had someone she could rely on.

Halle is also the author of the popular 2012 dating book Maybe He's Just an Ahole: Ditch Denial, Embrace Your Worth, and Find True Love! which was based on her dating experiences in college. Halle splits her time between Westport, CT and New York.