I remember the exact conversation where I stopped telling my mother certain things.
I wasn’t angry. There wasn’t a big blowout.
She’d just responded to something I shared about my breakup in the way she always responded:
With worry that became about her, with advice I hadn’t asked for, with a reframing of my experience that was meant to help and instead made me feel like I’d said the wrong thing.
I didn’t decide, consciously, to stop opening up.
I just noticed, afterward, that I’d started editing before I spoke. Keeping the harder things back. Sharing the version of my life that would land smoothly and withholding the version that would require more from both of us than either of us knew how to manage.
It happened gradually. And by the time it was complete, the habit was so established that I’d stopped noticing I was doing it.
If you’re one of these parents, your adult children probably haven’t said any of this to you.
They love you.
They don’t want to hurt you.
But if you’ve noticed them pulling back—sharing less, keeping things surface, deflecting when you ask how they really are—it’s worth looking honestly at what might be happening in the space between what they share and how you respond.
Here are some patterns that tend to close that door.
1. You respond to their feelings with your own

They share something difficult, and before they’ve finished landing in it, the conversation has shifted to how it makes you feel.
Your worry.
Your guilt.
Your memories of something similar.
Your emotional response to their emotional experience.
It’s not intentional. But what they receive is that their feelings have triggered yours, and now there’s a second set of feelings in the room that also need tending. They came to share something. They end up managing you.
Over time, they learn to protect you from the things that will activate your feelings—which means protecting you from the real things, the hard things, the ones that actually matter.
I didn’t have language for this for years—only the vague sense that sharing something hard with my mother left me more depleted than before I’d said anything.
2. You offer advice before they feel heard
The impulse is genuine. You’ve lived longer. You’ve navigated hard things. You can see the solution from where you’re standing, and it feels loving to offer it.
But advice that arrives before someone feels understood doesn’t land as help. It lands as an interruption. As a signal that the point of the conversation is to fix the problem rather than to be with the person who has it.
They needed to be heard first.
The advice—even good advice, even advice they might eventually want—short-circuits that.
And they leave the conversation feeling like they went to the wrong place with something real.
3. You minimize what they’re going through
This, too, usually comes from a good place.
You want to reassure them.
You want them to see that things aren’t as bad as they feel right now, that they’ll get through it, that you’ve seen harder and survived.
But “it could be worse,” and “you’ll be fine,” and “I went through something similar and turned out okay” all communicate the same thing: what you’re feeling is bigger than it needs to be.
They hear this and learn to edit. To pre-minimize before they share, or not to share at all. Because bringing something real only to have it shrunk is its own particular loneliness.
4. You point out where they went wrong
Even gently. Even with love. Even when you’re technically right.
If their hard thing is repeatedly met with some version of well, here’s what you could have done differently, the message arrives clearly: coming to you with a problem means being assessed. Being evaluated. Having the spotlight turned on the choices that led here rather than the person who’s here now.
They stop bringing problems. Not because they don’t need support—because they’ve learned that your support comes with analysis, and right now, what they needed was just someone in their corner.
5. You share their private things with others
Maybe with the best intentions. Asking for advice, or sharing with a sibling because you thought they could help, or mentioning it to a relative who asked how they were doing.
But they told you. Not the family. Not the group chat. Not the relative they have a complicated relationship with.
When something shared in confidence becomes known by people they didn’t choose to tell, the trust doesn’t just crack—it recalibrates. They start doing the math before they open up: who will know this by next week? And the answer to that question determines how much of the truth they’re willing to put in the room.
I still do the math before I share certain things. It happens automatically, before I’ve even decided what I want to say.
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6. You don’t want to hear things that challenge your image of them
They can tell when something they share makes you uncomfortable in a particular way—the discomfort of it not fitting the version of them you carry.
The relationship that doesn’t seem right for them.
The choice that doesn’t align with what you hoped for.
The part of their inner life that’s messier or more complicated than the child you knew.
When they sense that the real version of their life is hard for you to hold, they protect you from it. They present the version that fits more smoothly. The gap between that version and the actual one widens slowly, and one day you realize you’re very close to someone you don’t entirely know.
7. You treat their openness as an invitation to bring up old concerns
They share something vulnerable, and it becomes the opening you’ve been waiting for to bring up the thing you’ve been worried about. The pattern you’ve noticed. The concern you’ve been holding.
Even if the concern is valid—even if it comes from love—the timing communicates something. That their vulnerability is an opportunity. That opening up leads to being redirected toward whatever you think needs addressing.
They learn to time their openness carefully, or not to open up at all, because the conversation rarely stays where they put it.
I recognize this one from the inside—the particular deflation of having opened up about something real and watched it become a doorway into a conversation I didn’t want to have.
8. You give the same advice every time
They know what you’re going to say before you say it.
Not because you’re wrong, necessarily. But because you’ve said it before. And before that.
And the consistency of the response signals something: that you’ve already formed your conclusions, that the listening is somewhat performative, that the conversation is heading toward the familiar destination regardless of what they actually share.
People stop bringing new things to containers that feel fixed. If the response is predictable, the opening up starts to feel pointless—and eventually, it stops.
9. You’ve never acknowledged when your response missed the mark
This one is quiet, but it accumulates.
They walked away from a conversation feeling unheard, or judged, or like something got turned around on them. And nothing was said about it.
No acknowledgment.
No return to the moment.
No, “I’ve been thinking about what you shared, and I don’t think I responded the way you needed.”
The repair never came.
Over time, the unrepaired moments stack up. Not into resentment, necessarily—into a kind of quiet resignation. A conclusion, never quite stated, that this is just how these conversations go. That the gap is real and probably permanent.
What they’re waiting for, often without knowing it, is for you to notice. To come back. To show them that the conversation is still open and that you’re willing to try again.
That’s usually where it can start to change.
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