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    Home » When Your Parents Did Their Best — And It Still Hurt More Than You Admit
    Health

    When Your Parents Did Their Best — And It Still Hurt More Than You Admit

    By Jack WardFebruary 26, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    The phrase “Your parents did the best they could” is followed by a specific type of silence. Usually, it comes right after someone has just talked about a painful childhood memory. A recital that was missed. A door slammed. A mom too tired to pay attention. A father preoccupied with his job or with something more significant and anonymous. The purpose of the phrase is to ease the sharp edges of resentment. But it frequently has the opposite effect. Just as the conversation was starting to become honest, it ends.

    Both of these things could be true: they tried their hardest, but it still hurt. The psychologist Jonice Webb has written a great deal about childhood emotional neglect, characterizing it as the lack of an adequate emotional reaction rather than abuse. The definition seems straightforward. The emotional needs of a child are not sufficiently met by a parent. Don’t yell. Not a single bruise. It’s just a subtle mismatch that keeps happening for years. The number of adults from otherwise “stable” homes who identify with that description is startling.

    Bio Data / Important InformationDetails
    TopicEmotional impact when parents’ genuine effort still failed to meet a child’s needs
    Psychological ConceptChildhood Emotional Neglect (CEN)
    Key Voice in the FieldJonice Webb
    Notable WorkRunning on Empty: Overcome Your Childhood Emotional Neglect
    Core DistinctionSeparating parental intent from emotional impact
    Healing ApproachAccountability without blame, boundaries without cruelty
    Authentic Referencehttps://drjonicewebb.com

    Imagine a father who worked double shifts, sank into a recliner in front of the TV, and came home with grease still under his fingernails. The bills were paid by him. He attended the majority of the games. He never went out or drank. However, he responded, “You’re too sensitive,” when his daughter attempted to explain why middle school was so painful. He most likely thought he was giving the gift of resilience. He may or may not have understood what she was genuinely requesting. Impact and intent are not the same thing.

    Adult children frequently vacillate between guilt and anger in therapy sessions. After saying, “They loved me,” they will mutter, “But I felt alone.” There is a feeling that admitting one’s pain is betraying one. After all, a lot of parents were dealing with their own problems, such as untreated depression, generational trauma, and unstable finances. Some grew up in homes that viewed emotions as dangerous or indulgent. They made things better than what they had to endure. There was progress. However, attunement is not always synonymous with improvement.

    It’s difficult to ignore how rapidly society jumps to the defense of parents. We honor selflessness. We romanticize being worn out. For example, “There’s no manual.” That’s all accurate. Under pressure, parenting is improvisation. However, admitting its difficulty shouldn’t negate responsibility. The incision is still the responsibility of a stressed-out surgeon. A stressed-out parent continues to shape a child’s nervous system in real time.

    This is made even more difficult by the myth of “good enough.” According to developmental psychology, children only require consistent care, not perfection. However, “good enough” has been interpreted as “immune from critique” at some point. We assume that the emotional ledger balances out if a parent wasn’t explicitly abusive. However, competence frequently conceals emotional neglect.

    Consider the mother who was unable to bear tears but never missed a doctor’s appointment. She used snacks or jokes to divert her son’s attention whenever he cried. She thought she was shielding him from pain. He eventually learned to suppress his emotions before they could get to his throat. He performs exceptionally well at work as an adult, giving presentations without faltering. But he freezes when vulnerability is needed for intimacy. One gets the impression from seeing this pattern that the wound was procedural rather than loud.

    It becomes crucial to distinguish impact from intent. It’s possible that a parent intended safety. Invisibility could have been the effect. Discipline may be intended by a parent. Shame could have been the effect. It is not necessary to demonize anyone in order to acknowledge this distinction. It actually requires maturity. It makes room for complexity, which is frequently more unsettling than assigning blame.

    The issue of boundaries is another. Setting limits is difficult for many adult children because they don’t want to come across as ungrateful. Who are they to ask for distance if their parents “did their best”? However, even from well-meaning individuals, healing occasionally necessitates taking a step back. It is possible to respect effort without sacrificing one’s mental well-being. This delicate balance is frequently misinterpreted by both parties.

    The context of generational differences is important. Parents from cultures that valued stoicism might find it difficult to adjust to a culture that speaks therapy language. Talking about emotional validation may make a mother who was told to “toughen up” tense. Instead of feeling invited, she might feel accused. These conflicts seem to be more about mismatched vocabularies than they are about malicious intent.

    The body, however, maintains its own records. A persistent emptiness, trouble naming emotions, and a propensity to overachieve or overfunction are common traits of adults who were emotionally invisible as children. They might feel in charge of controlling the emotions of everyone else. These trends are adaptations rather than criticisms. However, childhood adaptations may become limitations as an adult.

    Therefore, healing is not about changing the past. It has to do with broadening one’s viewpoint. It entails recognizing that parents were imperfect human beings molded by their personal traumas, but also admitting that those shortcomings had repercussions. It necessitates giving up the hope that they will fully comprehend and fix everything one day. People may remain stuck for decades because of that hope.

    Gratitude and grief in the same hand is perhaps the most radical step. I appreciate what you provided. The things you couldn’t do still hurt me. Those sentences can be used together. They are not mutually exclusive. Allowing both, in fact, may be the most obvious indication that the next generation is doing something a little different—that is, increasing rather than contracting emotional capacity.

    The work isn’t meant to downplay either reality—your parents did their best, but it still hurt. It involves living truthfully in the midst of stress and accepting accountability for your own recovery without harboring remorse for requiring more than they could provide.

    When Your Parents Did Their Best — And It Still Hurt
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    Jack Ward
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    Jack Ward contributes to Private Therapy Clinics as a writer. He creates content that enables readers to take significant actions toward emotional wellbeing because he is passionate about making psychological concepts relevant, practical, and easy to understand.

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