My natural reaction sets in. I want to jump in and get results. I want to take charge. I want to give a few directions and solve the problem, large or small. If need be, I want to throw good old hard work and some elbow grease at the problem to make it go away.
But times have changed. It’s not my problem.
It’s my kid’s problem.
The challenge with parenting is that “the little shits” — pardon my French and my loose mouth — grow up. They start out as these little cherubs who need you and come to you for their every need. They look at you with their big expressive eyes and you’re ready to run through a brick wall to eliminate whatever problem they’re having.
As a dad, you love this stuff. It’s what we train for. It’s what we live for. I’m not talking about helicopter parenting. I’m talking about basic meat and potatoes parenting. Your kid is having a problem in school. Let’s talk to the teacher to see if we can get some tutoring help. Your kid likes baseball. Let’s go outside and play catch. If they really like it, you sign them up to play with their friends in a rec league. It’s using the “Big Brain” God gave us to help smoothen the journey.

When parents become gross
And then the kids get older. Instead of coming to you, they run from you. They want to be left alone. Parents become the last person a kid wants to see. Kids start treating their parents like they need to be quarantined. They put in their headphones, pull up their hoodie, and give you the cold silent treatment. They run to their room and come out only when they want food or money. You demand respect and they give it begrudging, but there’s still a chill in the air.
You hate this stage. You wonder when Spring will take over for Winter and warmer temperatures will ease the freeze. In the end though, it is what it is.
The cool thing is that at some point, they start to come back to you. I’m talking years here. They out of the house now. They’re on the cusp of big things. I’m talking growth and maturity here. It starts slow. It’s baby steps. It’s kind of like the little engine that could. It’s slow at first, but over time the train starts to build up steam.
“I think I can, I think I can, I think I can.”
You look up and for the first time you see a grown adult staring back at you. They have big people challenges. They’re sheepish at first. They don’t come out say “hey dad what do you think?” Heck no, that would be too easy, that would be too simple. Instead, we have to take the long way around the problem.
They come to you with small snippets of problems. You laugh to yourself. They look like adults. If you didn’t know them and saw them on the street, you’d think they were fully functioning adults. But the question shows their rawness and how challenging life really can be.
- “Hey dad, in your first job after college, did you have to fight to be heard?”
- “I gotta look for a new mattress. Do you have any suggestions on what to look for Dad? What brands would you suggest?”
- “How much do you pay for electricity? Why is my bill so high?”
- “So I’ve been reading up on home mortgages. If I would take out a loan on a house, how long would I have to pay the PMI – the private mortgage insurance? Do you know anything about that Dad? Why is that even a thing?”

Good things come to those who wait
I see the ball coming toward me. I want to try to hit a home run. I want to swing for the fence, but instead I try for a single. I try not to takeover the conversation. I tell myself to be patient, to let the conversation build slowly over time. I’ve learned that it’s best to take it step by step and be patient.
And sure enough when I’ve let things happen, when I’ve been patient and unassuming, I’ve been rewarded. The conversations meander and go in a million different directions. And sure enough, they come back a few weeks later, or even a month later. And then later they come back again and again for advice, counsel . . . and the Holy Grail, to just talk.
From those small steps, from that blooper hit up the middle, it becomes a talk between friends.
And then the sky is the limit. But it takes a lifetime to get to this point. Oh yes, the joys of parenting — it’s not for the faint of heart.
What has your experience been with grown children? What has worked for you?
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We have one child and I have thought about whether we helped, or gave, too much. Is that possible? For five years when we lived in California our closest family (my husband’s) was 4 hours away and they were not big communicators or people you felt you could have a deep conversation with. So it was “us three”. We had friends of a similar ago with children of a similar age, but they had their parents. So we parented as we felt best.
I helped him through situations and never left him out to dry, as the old expression goes. Always talked him through anything minor, major, but maybe injected my opinion more than necessary for his growth?
He majored in business management but really always wanted to work in our remodeling business. The four years of college was actually a requirement of mine if he was going to “be a carpenter”. He came to work the Monday after graduation coming up on 14 years ago.
He lived at home for the 5 years between college and buying a house with his now wife. I think maybe we got lucky there that he was dating her during that time period and she was also living at home! He paid “rent” that we used to hire a cleaning person.
He owns the business now and he’s learning some stuff the hard way. Do I wish I had been paying more attention to how he was pricing jobs? YES! But maybe that is what he has to learn in his own.
He, like any young person, has trouble communicating but he knows how much we love him and will listen to whatever he has to say.
I sometimes wonder though if I made him to dependent on what we think for him. He’s turning 37 this year.
Ha! Wow – this awakened a lot of thoughts!
Parenting right?
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From the “Grown Child’s” point of view: My parents had to struggle to put me through high school so Mom (who was an excellent seamstress) made all my clothes. I hated that and complained a lot.
I graduated, got my first job and quickly moved out on my own.
Within months, I was buying material and begging Mom to make clothing items for me.I realized how much higher the quality was of the things she made.
It was one of her favorite little “funnies” to tease me about for the rest of her life.
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Oh man, Brian. I see the ball coming and usually swing too early. But you said it beautifully: “…when I’ve let things happen, when I’ve been patient and unassuming, I’ve been rewarded.” Thanks for this timely post!
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I try to not give advice without being asked. I have also cut down the eye rolls when she says something stupid
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Yes! All of this! I have an 8 years old son and a 20 year old daughter who is moving into her own place in just 2 short weeks! I have a mixture… the begging and ending (well sort of) of the journey! 🙂 It’s exhaustingand exciting all at once!
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