Yesterday we explored different parenting styles: authoritarian, permissive, and conscious.
Today we go one step deeper.
Because beyond discipline or rules, there is something that truly shapes a child’s experience growing up:
the relationship.
The parent–child bond is the emotional foundation of the family. It is what helps a child feel safe, understood, and supported as they grow.
And that bond isn’t built in big moments.
It is built—or weakened—in the small interactions that happen every day.
Love alone doesn’t automatically create connection
Most parents love their children deeply.
But love alone doesn’t always guarantee a strong relationship.
Connection is also shaped by:
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How we respond when our child makes mistakes
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How we handle their emotions
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How we set limits
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How we navigate conflict
Children don’t only listen to what we say.
They feel how it feels to be with us.
When parenting becomes too authoritarian
In a highly authoritarian environment, children often learn the following:
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Rules are not open for discussion
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Mistakes may lead to punishment
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Expressing emotions can feel unsafe
This approach may create obedience in the short term, but it can sometimes weaken emotional closeness.
Over time, some children begin to:
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Hide what they feel
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Avoid sharing problems
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Behave out of fear rather than understanding
The relationship may become more distant.
When parenting becomes too permissive
On the other extreme, when boundaries are unclear or inconsistent, children experience a different challenge.
There may be emotional closeness, but also
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Confusion about expectations
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Uncertainty about right and wrong
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Difficulty developing self-regulation
Children need love, but they also need structure to feel secure.
Without guidance, the relationship can become unstable.
Connection grows through balance
A healthy parent–child bond usually grows when children experience two things at the same time:
emotional connection and clear boundaries.
This means:
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Listening without dismissing feelings
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Correcting without shaming
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Supporting without overprotecting
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Setting limits without losing calm
When a child feels that their emotions are valid, but that their parents still provide guidance, they learn something essential:
my parents are on my side, even when they correct me.
Difficult moments also strengthen the bond
It’s easy to assume that connection is built only during happy moments.
But in many cases, it grows strongest during difficult ones.
When a parent:
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Stays calm during a meltdown
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Listens before reacting
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Repairs the relationship after a mistake
the child learns that the relationship remains safe even in conflict.
And that builds trust.
Questions for reflection
Sometimes small shifts can create meaningful change.
You might ask yourself:
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Does my child feel safe telling me what’s going on in their life?
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Do I listen first, or correct first?
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Are my limits clear, or do they change depending on the day?
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Am I parenting from fear or from connection?
These questions aren’t meant to create guilt.
They are meant to create awareness.
🌿 Free Resource: Parenting Style Reflection Guide
To help you go deeper, we’ve created a practical guide that will help you:
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Analyze your current parenting style
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Understand how it influences your relationship with your child
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Identify small adjustments that strengthen connection
📥 Download the Parenting Style Reflection Guide
(To parent with greater awareness and connection.)Closing reflection
The bond between parent and child is not built in one single moment.
It grows every day.
In every boundary.
In every conversation.
In every moment of listening.
When the relationship is strong, children don’t simply obey.
They trust.
Tomorrow we’ll explore something many parents don’t immediately recognize:
the invisible effects of authoritarian parenting 🌿
Y. Vargas. 💬💖
