Papa, Don’t Preach, Please Just Listen

Love, logic, and loud silences in today’s parent-child equation

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By Kalyani Srinath

Kalyani Srinath, a food curator at www.sizzlingtastebuds.com, is a curious learner and a keen observer of life.

March 21, 2026 at 4:23 AM IST

How is it that the choices we make for ourselves feel perfectly reasonable—bold, even wise—while the ones we gently (or not so gently) suggest to our kids are immediately suspect? Somewhere along the way, Im just saying this for your good” started sounding a lot like I dont trust you,” and thats when the temperature in the room drops a few degrees.

Papa, dont preach,” they say. Sometimes its said out loud. Sometimes its just there—in the eye roll, the half-listening nod, the quick change of topic. And just like that, what could have been a conversation turns into a careful dance. You pick your words. You soften your tone. You try not to sound like… well, like your own parents.

Because thats the other twist, isnt it? The very things we once resisted, we now find ourselves saying. Almost word for word.

Parenting has never been easy. But lately, it feels like the job description changed and nobody sent a memo. What used to be guiding” now feels like negotiating.” What used to be experience” is now just your opinion.” And what used to be a clear no” now needs a supporting presentation, three examples, and a disclaimer.

Part of the challenge is that todays kids grow up in a world that moves faster than ours ever did. Information is everywhere. Opinions are louder. Confidence comes early. Sometimes, a little too early. Theres a quiet belief that things should work out—quickly, smoothly, and preferably without too many detours. And when they dont, its not just frustrating; it feels unfair.

So when a parent steps in with a cautious maybe think this through” or this might be harder than it looks,” it doesnt always land as concern. It can sound like doubt. Or worse, like negativity.

Add to that a dash of I already know this,” and suddenly, your years of trial-and-error wisdom are competing with a 90-second video and a friends confident opinion.

To be fair, its not all on them.

Parents come with their own expectations. We assume our intentions are obvious. We expect our advice to be taken seriously. Somewhere, we hope for a little acknowledgment—if not agreement, then at least a pause before dismissal. And when that doesnt happen, irritation creeps in.

Thats when conversations start to go sideways.

You begin gently: Have you thought about…?
They respond quickly: Yes, I have.”
You push a little: But what about…?

They counter: Ill figure it out.”
And just like that, what started as concern becomes a mini debate no one really signed up for.

Over time, something interesting—and slightly worrying—happens. You start editing yourself. You skip certain topics. You tell yourself, Not worth the argument.” Calls get shorter. Conversations stay on safe ground: food, weather, traffic, maybe a show you both watched.

The bigger things—the ones you actually care about—get quietly parked.

And then comes that odd moment when you realise youre hesitating before calling your own child. Not because you dont want to talk, but because youre not sure how it will go. Thats a strange place to be.

How does that happen? How do people whove spent years providing, protecting, and worrying become… slightly stressful to talk to?

Its not one big thing. Its a series of small mismatches.

Parents are looking at the long game. Weve seen how choices play out over time. We know that some shortcuts arent really shortcuts. So when we speak, it comes from that place of hindsight.

Kids, on the other hand, are in the middle of it. For them, choices arent theoretical—theyre immediate, personal, and tied to identity. The idea of learning the hard way” doesnt sound scary. Sometimes, it sounds necessary.

So when we say, Be careful,” they hear, Dont try.”
When they say, I want to do this my way,” we hear, Your way doesnt matter.”
And just like that, wires get crossed.

Of course, life itself isnt getting any easier. As Atlas Shrugged famously reminds us, life is difficult. Not occasionally. Not selectively. Just… consistently. That hasnt changed across generations, even if everything else has.

No amount of positive thinking or motivational quotes can completely smooth things out. Life is still a series of decisions—some good, some questionable, some we avoid making until they make themselves. Every stage brings its own set of forks in the road.

Parents tend to see those forks with caution: Take the steadier path. It may not be exciting, but its safer.”

Kids often see them with curiosity: Whats the point of the steady path if I dont even know what the other one looks like?”
Neither is entirely wrong. Thats the tricky part.
The real issue isnt the difference in thinking—its how we handle that difference.

When every suggestion sounds like instruction, it creates resistance. When every piece of independence looks like rebellion, it creates tension. And when both sides dig in a little too firmly, even simple conversations start to feel heavy.

But heres the thing: beneath all the back-and-forth, the eye rolls, the I know,” and the just listen to me,” the intention on both sides is surprisingly similar.

Parents want their kids to be okay. Not perfect, not flawless—just okay. Secure. Capable. Able to handle what comes their way.

Kids want to be trusted. Not managed, not constantly corrected—just trusted. To try, to fail, to figure things out.

Somewhere between Im saying this because I care” and Let me do this my way,” theres a middle ground. Its not always easy to find, and it definitely doesnt show up on its own.

Maybe it looks like parents offering advice without insisting on immediate agreement.
Maybe it looks like kids listening—not necessarily to obey, but to consider.
Maybe its fewer lectures and fewer snap dismissals.
And maybe, just maybe, its okay if not every conversation ends in alignment.

Because at the end of the day, this isnt really about winning arguments or proving points. Its about keeping the connection intact.

Life will continue to be unpredictable. Plans will go off track. Decisions will work out—or they wont. Thats part of the deal.

But if, in the middle of all that, parents and children can still talk—honestly, occasionally awkwardly, sometimes even with a bit of humour—then things are probably not as off track as they seem.

And if all else fails, theres always the safest conversation starter of all time:

Have you eaten?”