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The No. 1 parenting trend that worries me

I spent seven years studying high-achieving students, interviewing hundreds of students and their families.

Many young people I met described monitoring their grades, rankings, and resumes as if they were constantly assessing their worth. Achievement assumes such a large role in some families, leading some children to wonder whether their parents’ love is linked to their own performance.

Success culture promises to open doors by arguing that better grades and better college degrees guarantee better futures. But a growing mass research It shows that this relentless pursuit can fuel perfectionism, a trait linked to higher rates of anxiety and depression.

So what can a parent do to guard against this narrow view of success and self-worth?

We can help young people direct their self-focused attention outwards. Children “How am I?” “Where can I be useful?” They develop a stronger identity based on contribution rather than performance. Small, everyday ways of feeling needed—helping a neighbor, being trusted at home, joining a team—can buffer against this harmful internal scoring and build a more solid sense of self-worth.

When children attribute their efforts to something beyond themselves, daily stressors become more manageable. They stop believing that they are just a grade or score and start feeling like an important person in the world. Here’s how:

1. Help children recognize real needs in their environment

A woman told me recently that she was walking to the park with her two young children when she saw her elderly neighbor combing her lawn. The neighbor did not accept the woman’s offer of help, but still the woman took her children out of the car and they took rakes and piled leaves into bags.

The kids talked about it all afternoon; how happy their neighbors are, how much fun they have, and how good it feels to be useful. They were experiencing what psychologists call “helper high” and a growing sense of agency.

To help children look beyond themselves, ask “What do you think they might need today?” Try directions like: or “Who can help right now?” Regular actions such as checking on neighbors, delivering meals, and volunteering strengthen children’s sense of belonging in the community.

2. Contribute to daily routines

3. Make invisible maintenance work visible

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