If You Want Your Children’s Respect For You To Deepen With Age, These 12 Habits Need To Go

If You Want Your Children’s Respect For You To Deepen With Age, These 12 Habits Need To Go

There was a moment a few years ago that unsettled me more than I expected.

I was mid-sentence—offering advice no one had asked for—when I saw it. That look. Not anger. Not defiance. Just polite distance.

The kind adults use when they’ve already decided not to argue.

I kept talking. Of course I did. I framed it as guidance. Experience. Love.

But later, lying in bed, I realized something uncomfortable: respect doesn’t automatically deepen just because you age. Authority doesn’t mature on its own. And love—no matter how steady—doesn’t guarantee closeness.

Children grow. They develop their own minds, their own filters, their own quiet assessments of who you are outside of “Mom” or “Dad.”

And whether we notice it or not, they’re watching how we handle disagreement. Mistakes. Change. Power.

The dynamic shifts slowly. One day, you’re tying their shoes. Next, they’re forming opinions about how you handle conflict.

That shift can be beautiful, but it requires letting go of certain habits that once felt natural, even necessary.

If you want your children’s respect for you to deepen with age, these habits are the ones you need to let go.

1. Stop Dismissing Their Feelings As “Overreactions”

An angry father scolding his teenage daughter.
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It’s easy to minimize what looks small from the outside.

A teenage friendship drama. A job rejection. A breakup that seems temporary to you.

From your vantage point, it feels survivable. Manageable. Even trivial.

But when you dismiss their emotions, you’re not shrinking the problem—you’re shrinking their experience.

Respect grows when people feel heard, not corrected.

If you routinely respond with “It’s not that big of a deal” or “You’ll get over it,” you may unintentionally teach them that vulnerability with you is risky.

That doesn’t mean you agree with every emotional reaction. It means you treat it as real.

I didn’t fully grasp this until I caught myself brushing off something that would have devastated me at their age. The look on their face told me everything.

Validation isn’t indulgence. It’s an acknowledgment, which builds trust.

2. Let Go Of The Need To Be The Final Authority On Everything

There’s a subtle habit many parents carry long after their children become adults.

The instinct to conclude. To finalize. To deliver the last word.

You’ve lived longer. You’ve seen more. That matters.

But respect doesn’t deepen when conversations become verdicts.

It deepens when dialogue replaces decree.

When your child feels free to disagree with you without fearing dismissal, something shifts. They stop managing your reaction. They start engaging honestly.

Authority based on control eventually breeds distance.

Authority grounded in wisdom invites closeness.

You don’t lose influence by allowing discussion. You strengthen it.

3. Stop Making Every Conversation About Your Sacrifice

There’s truth in the sacrifices you’ve made.

The sleepless nights. The financial stress. The constant prioritizing of their needs over your own.

Those things are real.

But when sacrifice becomes a recurring reference point, it can quietly create emotional debt.

Children—especially adult children—don’t deepen respect through guilt.

They deepen it through freedom.

When reminders of what you’ve done surface during disagreements, it shifts the dynamic from partnership to obligation.

Obligation rarely produces warmth.

It’s human to want acknowledgment. But when sacrifice becomes leverage, it erodes admiration.

Respect grows most naturally when generosity stands on its own—without invoices attached.

4. Stop Criticizing Their Choices In The Name Of “Just Being Honest”

There’s a difference between honesty and commentary.

If every decision—career, relationship, lifestyle—comes under review, your child may begin to brace before sharing anything.

Research on parental criticism and adult relationships has found that consistent evaluative commentary often reduces openness over time. When people expect critique, they share less.

That doesn’t mean you suppress your perspective.

It means you examine your motive.

Are you offering guidance? Or asserting preference?

There’s a subtle but powerful shift when you say, “Tell me more about how you see this,” instead of “I wouldn’t do it that way.”

Curiosity preserves dignity.

Constant critique, even gentle, often chips at it.

Respect deepens when your child feels supported in their autonomy—even when their choices wouldn’t be yours.

5. Stop Turning Every Disagreement Into A Character Assessment

Disagreements are inevitable.

But when conflict becomes commentary on who they are—“You’re always so dramatic” or “You’ve never been responsible”—it lingers longer than the issue itself.

Specific behavior can be discussed. Identity-based judgments cut deeper.

When you separate the action from the person, conversations stay repairable.

When you merge them, they often calcify.

I’ve caught myself doing this before—labeling instead of addressing. It felt efficient in the moment. It felt clarifying.

It wasn’t.

It closed the door faster than I intended.

Respect grows when disagreements feel safe to navigate—not like trials about character.

6. Stop Avoiding Apologies Because You’re The Parent

There’s a quiet myth that authority protects you from admitting fault.

It doesn’t.

In fact, research on family dynamics consistently shows that parents who model accountability tend to foster stronger long-term relational trust.

Apologizing doesn’t weaken your role.

It strengthens your credibility.

When you say, “I handled that poorly,” you demonstrate emotional maturity.

You show that growth isn’t age-dependent, and something remarkable happens when children see you own your missteps. They don’t lose respect. They gain it.

Humility signals strength, not fragility, and strength that includes accountability feels safe.

7. Let Go Of Comparisons—Even The Subtle Ones

Comparison is rarely neutral.

Even casual remarks—“Your sister handled that differently” or “At your age, I was…”—carry weight.

They suggest a measuring stick.

And being measured doesn’t foster closeness.

It fosters performance.

Each child, even in adulthood, wants to feel seen as singular.

Not ranked. Not benchmarked.

When comparison exits the room, individuality expands.

Respect grows when your child senses that your pride isn’t conditional on mirroring your path—or outperforming someone else’s.

Individual recognition builds dignity, which strengthens connection.

8. Stop Treating Emotional Independence As Disloyalty

As children age, they differentiate.

They develop opinions that diverge from yours. They establish boundaries. They cultivate independence.

Research on adult development suggests that healthy individuation strengthens—not weakens—family bonds over time.

But if independence is interpreted as rejection, tension follows.

If emotional space is framed as distance, they may feel pressured to minimize their growth.

Letting them evolve without interpreting it as abandonment changes everything.

You can remain close without remaining central.

When you honor their independence without guilt or withdrawal, your presence feels chosen—not obligatory.

Chosen closeness deepens respect in ways control never could.

9. Stop Oversharing Adult Conflicts That Burden Them

Transparency can be healthy.

But there’s a line between sharing and unloading.

If your child becomes your primary emotional outlet for marital frustrations, financial anxieties, or unresolved grievances, the dynamic shifts.

They may feel responsible in ways they shouldn’t.

Children—at any age—aren’t meant to stabilize their parents emotionally.

When boundaries are clear, respect stays intact.

When roles blur, it complicates the relationship.

Thoughtful discretion communicates steadiness, which inspires confidence.

10. Let Go Of The Need To Be Needed

This one is quieter.

When your children become self-sufficient, it can stir unexpected grief.

If you subtly reinsert yourself—offering help where it isn’t required, solving problems before being asked—you may preserve involvement but undermine their autonomy.

It took me time to recognize how easily helpfulness can mask discomfort with letting go.

When you allow them to stand fully on their own, you’re not becoming irrelevant.

You’re honoring their capability.

Respect deepens when support feels available—not imposed.

11. Stop Reacting Defensively When They Offer Feedback

At some point, your child may gently point out something difficult.

A pattern. A habit. A tone.

Research on intergenerational communication shows that families who tolerate upward feedback—children speaking honestly to parents—tend to maintain stronger adult bonds.

Defensiveness shuts that down instantly.

Curiosity keeps it open.

If your first response is to justify or counterattack, they may decide it’s not worth trying again.

But if you pause, consider, and respond thoughtfully, you signal that mutual respect flows both ways.

Reciprocity transforms hierarchy into partnership. Partnership deepens respect naturally.

12. Release The Assumption That Respect Is Owed

This may be the most difficult shift of all.

Respect isn’t guaranteed by age.

It isn’t secured by title.

It evolves.

When respect is demanded, it tightens the air.

When it’s modeled—through patience, humility, steadiness—it expands.

Your children don’t stop evaluating you once they reach adulthood.

They refine their view.

When they see growth, accountability, emotional steadiness, and genuine curiosity about who they’re becoming, something beautiful happens.

Respect doesn’t just remain.

It deepens.

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.