Guiding, Not Owning

“I’m not the boss of my child’s identity—I’m their guide while they build it.” That hits something deep in me. Because for a long time, I think I believed—without even knowing it—that parenting meant shaping my child into something. Like I was sculpting clay, and my job was to mold them into a good, kind, successful human. But the truth is, they already are a human. Whole, with their own spark and temperament and truth.

They’re not mine to design. They’re mine to support.

Being their guide means I walk beside them—not ahead of them pulling, and not behind them pushing. I help them make sense of the world, give language to their feelings, and offer safety as they try things on, fall apart, rebuild, and evolve. It means I’m there to reflect their worth, even when they’re confused or angry or different from what I expected.

And honestly, that takes humility. It takes stepping back when I want to step in. It takes trusting their inner compass, even when I don’t fully understand it yet. Especially when their path diverges from mine. That’s not failure—it’s growth. It’s what’s supposed to happen.

When we try to be the boss of our kids’ identities—controlling who they love, what they believe, how they express themselves—we might get compliance, but we don’t get connection. We don’t get the privilege of really knowing them. And they don’t get the chance to truly know themselves.

I want my child to feel free in their own skin. I want them to know I’m here, not with a map of who they should be, but with curiosity, courage, and open arms while they figure it out. Because their identity isn’t mine to build—it’s mine to honor.

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