FAMILY COUNSELING CENTER ASSOCIATION
  • RSS
3617 W. Pioneer Parkway
Arlington, Texas 76013
817-275-3617
  • Home
  • Books
  • Staff
    • Dr. Roger Doss, Ph.D.
    • Dr. Carol Doss, Ph.D.
  • Counseling Services
    • Individual Counseling
    • Marital/Couple Counseling
    • Family Counseling
    • Play Therapy
    • Adolescent Transitions
    • Group Counseling
    • Grief Recovery
    • Career Counseling
    • Spiritual Counseling
  • Counseling FAQ
  • Unsolicited Advice Column
    • Relationships
    • Personal Issues
    • Parenting
    • Random Topics
  • Contact Us

Life can be challenging and, even with our best efforts, we can have difficulty sorting through our own challenges. Let us help. Sometimes, having an impartial listener can help. Whether you're anxious, depressed or trying to sort through relationship difficulties, our therapists are trained to give you our full attention and help you find the solutions that work for you.

We offer the options of in-person therapy, virtual counseling or telephone sessions to current and new clients. (Our virtual services are offered through HIPPA compliant and encrypted services. This option involves new clients filling out intake forms--links on first page of this site--and either faxing them to 817-275-3720 or emailing them to our office at centerstaff@hotmail.com. Arrangement of payment method needs to be made with our office and we are glad to file insurance claims when appropriate.)

Credit cards are also accepted. All our therapists are licensed in the state of Texas.

CLIENT FORMS

Complete Here: 2026 CLIENT INTAKE FORM
  • Home»
  • Unsolicited Advice Column»
  • Parenting»
  • Good Parent / Bad Parent?

Good Parent / Bad Parent?

Posted on April 20, 2009 by Carol in Parenting

Don’t think you can judge whether or not you’ve been a good parent by the choices your children make. It may seem like your parenting success should have a clear outcome, but that’s not the case. The children of really terrific parents sometimes make really bad choices.

The goal is simple: happy, healthy, well-behaved children who grow up with high self-esteem and lots of friends, go to college and then embark on successful careers. But you can put a lot of energy and effort into this and still not get the outcome for which you were hoping. Parenting is one of the hardest jobs on earth. You’re probably really trying to do it right.

You may often feel like a total failure.

While some people don’t seem to care about making good parenting decisions(you know the ones), most parents worry a lot about how they’re doing in this area. Parenting books populate store shelves and television news program frequently feature stories about how-to and how-not-to raise your children. Parenting is such a huge job and so many people struggle with it that a popular television reality television show features frustrated parents and their out-of-control brats both being chastised by a super-nanny.

There are few demanding jobs at which it seems so easy to fail as parenting. The question you need to ask yourself is: Are you measuring your success with the right yardstick?

You may feel judged as a bad parent when your child throws a tantrum in a grocery store or kicks the back of another patron’s seat at the movies or gets bad grades in school. You might think you look like a parenting failure. It might, in fact, feel like other people always have opinions about what you should be doing with your kids (of course, you’re never doing whatever this is).

But even when you’re trying your hardest, your kids may struggle. So, how does this work?

It is a little recognized fact that children, to a certain degree, get to choose their own paths. Parenting has a major impact, but it’s not like steering a car–you turn the wheel to the left and the kid goes left. You can be a loving parent and give your children your attention and love and your kids still may make bad choices.

They get to do this. They get to fail miserably. They get to create their struggles by heading in really lousy directions.

Sometimes, this has nothing to do with you. The only way to measure how successful you are as a parent is to look at your own behavior. Good parenting doesn’t automatically lead to good outcomes. Kids have minds of their own and, while you want them to think for themselves, it also can make you crazy.

So, ask yourself if you’ve put your children’s needs at a high priority. Have you let them deal with their own lessons rather than stepping in to save them from the consequences of their actions? When they’re young, you keep them from running out in front of cars. When they’re in high school and cheat on a test, however, you don’t rescue them. Allowing them to experience consequences when they make bad choices is hard, but still important to children’s learning process.

Remember, you can’t take credit for their successes, only your own. And you certainly can’t blame yourself for their failures.

Individuals make choices. Therein, lies our power.

Comments are closed.

Share This Page

Blog Categories

  • Parenting (138)
  • Personal Issues (158)
  • Random Topics (23)
  • Relationships (208)
  • Uncategorized (14)
  • Unsolicited Advice Column (61)

Recent Posts

  • Saying “I Told You So”
  • Don’t Distract Your Kid
  • Roommate Marriage
  • Why I Don’t Call No-Show Clients
  • You’re Not Nuts
  • Not Done Yet…
  • ADDICTED TO ACHIEVEMENT
  • Doing Your Part
  • Staying For The Kids
  • Relationship Issues & Alcohol
  • Stupid Emotional Choices
  • Biology Doesn’t Trump Behavior
  • Prepare Your Kids
  • Relationships & Winning
  • Beating Anxiety
  • WHY DO EVIL?
  • How We Affect Each Other (or The Relationship Dance)
  • Getting The Therapist You Deserve
  • PRESSURING OUR YOUNG
  • CHANGING KIDS
Content/Graphics © 2002-2026 Family Counseling Center Association. All rights reserved.