Menu

Dear Parent of an Estranged Adult: What Might Repair Your Relationship

Want more posts like this in your life? Join the Tiny Buddha list for daily or weekly insights.

Dear estranged parent,

I know it’s not easy to feel cut off from your child when you still feel love and maybe even remorse. I know you might feel confused about why your adult child is so upset, and you might even feel angry and wrongly accused.
Perhaps there’s some truth to that. I don’t know why your child cut ties with you, but I can share a little of my own experience and then offer some tips that might help, regardless of your unique situation.

So why did your son or daughter cut you out of their life?

I can’t speak to the specifics of your situation, but I can offer you some insights from my own experience and I can talk about common themes expressed by my community of estranged adults.

Before I go any further, I need to remind you that everyone remembers and experiences the same events differently. For example, you might remember the fun family trip to Disneyland where everyone was together and had a good time, but your son or daughter might remember getting yelled at or you and your spouse fighting.

I’m not trying to invalidate your feelings but simply to remind you to be open to the possibility that your child may remember or may have experienced events differently.

I tried to have a relationship with my parents for many years before I made the hard decision to cut them out of my life. I would seek validation for my academic accomplishments, but all they would notice were the mistakes I’d made, and they would repeatedly highlight them.

I’m not saying I was perfect, but a little love and affirmation would have gone a long way. Each rejection left me feeling hurt. I questioned my self-worth and became depressed. Still, I tried to maintain a relationship with them, despite the fact that it took a toll on my health.

I showed an interest in my mother’s life, and every time I came back to visit, I did my best to be helpful around the house and attend to their needs in any way I could.

My parents would criticize me repeatedly, even in front of friends and family members, and I was left feeling smeared and demeaned. All of my actions were met with judgmental negativity.

If I tried something new, my father would list all the reasons why he thought I was going to fail, while my mother would take sadistic joy in my failures. My parents never wanted anyone to see the good in me or even to allow me to see the good or the potential within myself. I was always a failure in their eyes—a common theme among estranged adults.

My parents also repeatedly failed to respect my boundaries and at times would list off reasons why I could not have the ones I had set. They often guilted me for having boundaries or even basic needs.

My parents never admitted the hurt they caused me. They never admitted the years of abuse and neglect. It was always somehow my fault. They were also unwilling to listen or allow me to have a productive conversation about my feelings. Again, I’m not saying I’m perfect, but I didn’t deserve to be treated in the manner I was during my formative years.

Each time I would invite them to come visit me or take an interest in my life they gave me a list of reasons why they couldn’t come or why I was not good enough for them to bother caring.

Each interaction cut me deeper, causing me to get depressed and shut down.

When I got engaged, my father listed all the reasons why he thought my relationship would fail, and my mother expressed frustration at the thought of having to help me plan a wedding. I couldn’t force them to care, and the tremendous emotional effort I was making was taking a toll on me. I felt I had no choice but to accept that the relationship I so desperately wanted would never be and let go.

For me, this was the right decision because it freed me from the bondage of hope that one day I might be good enough and it allowed me to live a meaningful and happy life.

I must reiterate that there is a reason your son and daughter has cut you out of their life because no one would make this decision lightly.

If you care about rebuilding a healthy relationship with your estranged child, these are some steps that you can take.

Realize that people remember events differently and be open to seeing their perspective.

Sometimes we remember things so differently that we’re inclined to deny the other person’s reality. Please don’t do this, as it will only create walls and cause them to recoil and pull away.

If your child says they did not like it that you pushed them into doing sports and only cared about them winning games, don’t shut the conversation down by saying “You were good at sports.” If your child says that you always criticized them about their weight, don’t tell them that you were trying to help them lead a healthier lifestyle.

Listen and try to understand their point of view. Simply allowing them space to share how they experienced their childhood can help them feel heard and respected.

If it helps, keep communications in writing to start.

Oftentimes, it’s hard to really hear what someone is saying when you feel attacked, accused, and emotional. If conversations are upsetting both parties, try communicating by e-mail so that you can read and reread what they have to say in order to digest the message being communicated. Try your best to understand their experiences and empathize with them whenever you can, and odds are they’ll be more willing to do the same for you.

Avoid being critical.

You may not agree with your child’s lifestyle or their actions, but repeatedly criticizing and voicing your disapproval will only cause them to pull away. Don’t call them names or make reference to their past failures. Work on being supportive and providing them with validation whenever possible.

This might be hard to do if you feel they’re being critical of you. Criticism tends to shut people down—on both sides. But replacing criticism with validation can help heal old wounds.

Be self-reflective.

It can be hard for anyone to take a critical look at themselves and examine their actions in order to admit that they’ve harmed someone. This can be a painful process that forces you to see yourself in a new light. Sometimes, as painful as it is, it has to be done.

This doesn’t mean that you are inherently bad. Most people parent as they were parented and repeat harmful patterns without realizing it.

It takes tremendous courage to examine yourself and admit that you caused pain. Remember you don’t need to do this alone. Seeing a trained counselor or psychologist can help you understand yourself better.

Take responsibility for your actions.

Many estranged adults, myself included, never felt we got the apology we longed for. If you have wronged your adult child, even if you feel you were a good parent on the whole, own up to your mistakes and apologize. This simple act will go a long way toward rebuilding the relationship.

Respect boundaries.

It can be tough to honor a firm boundary when you feel an urget need to talk things out. But you can’t force someone to hear you until they’re ready. If your son or daughter has said that they don’t want to see you for the next month, don’t show up at their door. This will only leave them feeling intimidated and disrespected and cause them to pull away.

Be willing to change your behavior.

If your son or daughter has described behaviors of yours that bother them, make a conscious effort to change. Show them that you are capable of taking their constructive criticism and applying it. Listing off ways that you think you have changed isn’t enough. Your actions need to speak for themselves.

This is, of course, a two-way street. Adult children are also capable of doing things that upset their parents. And in a perfect world, they’d hear you and make changes too, if necessary. But you can’t control their behavior—only your own.

Understand that distance isn’t always permanent.

Sometimes we need to take a break from family and friends in order to heal from childhood trauma and focus on our own health and well-being. This is a natural part of the healing process. If you have been asked to give your son or daughter space, honor their request.

Never use guilt.

As harsh as this might sound, your adult child doesn’t owe you anything. By inflicting guilt on them—telling them they should have a relationship with you because you’ve done and sacrificed so much—you invalidate their feelings and exert power and control that could cause them to pull away even further. It’s far better to create a new relationship from a foundation of mutual understanding than try to force one on a foundation of guilt and shame.

Don’t try to buy them back.

If your child asks you not to send gifts or give them money, don’t. You might think the gifts are a way to repair the relationship, but this never works and only breeds resentment. Estranged children can also see gifts as a means of exerting power and controlling, forcing us to feel obligated to have a relationship we do not feel comfortable having. Relationships can never be bought.

Offer to go to therapy.

This can feel intimidating at times, but your willingness to go will send a strong message that you’re open to rebuilding a healthy relationship. Many times it can be easier to talk about sensitive subjects in front of a trained neutral third party that can help us work through our emotions and misunderstandings. If your child declines your invitation to go to therapy, see a therapist on your own.

Allow for growth and change.

Some of the healthiest relationships we will ever have grow and change as we do. Don’t expect your child to like the same things or act the same way as they did before; this is simply not realistic. You must adapt and grow as they do and be open to the fact that the relationship may change.

If all else fails, work on accepting the situation.

Not every story has a happy Hollywood ending. Sometimes all we can do is accept the choices other people have made, let go, learn from the experience, and move on with our lives. If your child insists that they cannot have a relationship with you, respect their choices, as painful as this may be. Don’t contact them repeatedly. Remember that nothing in life can be forced, not even relationships.

I’m not saying that parents are solely responsible for healing broken relationships with their children. We have to do our part too, but often we’ve tried for years only to feel invalidated, disrespected, and rejected.

Had my own parents done any of these things it might have been possible to reconcile with them and work together to heal.

About Jen Hinkkala

Jen Hinkkala is PhD student, researcher, and teacher of arts education in Canada. She strives to understand what factors and experiences lead to higher levels of wellness, resiliency, and self-care among arts educators and students. Jen is also a life coach and specializes in self-care, well-being, time management, performance anxiety, estrangement, overcoming abuse, career paths, and anxiety. Jen runs a support group for estranged adults and a group to support personal development. Follow her here: Twitter / Blog.

See a typo or inaccuracy? Please contact us so we can fix it!
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
35 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
sianelewis
sianelewis

You’ve been very brave. I wish I’d had he courage to do the same. Best wishes for the future.

Sam
Sam

This is futile. Parents like this are emotionally immature and will not change. They do not understand that they are the parent, you are the child, and you owe them NOTHING. They act as if they are the child and you are the one who should be responsible for them.

Meg Amor
Meg Amor

Excellent post, thanks. I come across so many people who feel like rotten, awful people because they can no longer cope with the negative stuff being dumped on them by their parents. Parents are people and aren’t always fit to be parents, like some people aren’t fit to be airline pilots. And it’s okay to walk away. Sometimes that’s the only recourse for mental health and sanity.

Marie
Marie

What if the estrangement comes from parental alienation.. leaving an abusive marriage?

Yllas
Yllas

Funny how every ‘estranged parent’ will swear on pain of death, on their mother’s grave, on a stack of bibles – they were the best parent EVER. They never did or said ANYTHING and just cannot imagine how things got this bad. ‘Of course we made mistaaaaakes, we aren’t perrrrrrrfect.’ and they blame their kids for being too sensitive, too soft, too this, too that. Like its some kind of mad conspiracy. …. I don’t know, is it? And what good do apologies do after a lifetime of parents unacknowledged ugly behavior? A little bit at a time, it all adds up. Apologize?

Padma
Padma

My three children have all cut me out in the past year to different degrees. I am not perfect but have done my best. I have always shown pride in their achievements, interest kn their lives and friends and tried to be with them for holidays and occasions though family time and holidays were not things they wanted to be with me for. One made a poor choice in a partner and because they are an adult though I thought it was a poor choice and told them so I supported them in making that choice largely so I could maintain a relationship not only with them but to establish one with the two grandchildren I have from their relationship with that partner. That choice of mine was not respected by the siblings and so I was cut off completely by one and largely by the other. The partner has become worse and worse to me and recently for my own sanity I have had to draw a boundary there losing contact with adult child 3 and the grandchildren. Part of me says to let them go and leave the door open so they can return if they choose. Part of me says life is short and push to reestablish but I have not found a way to do so. One thing I do know it that it is painful probably for all of us and as a mother I yearn to heal the pain. So sad sometimes the tears flow for hours. I meditate and I try self care and patience…. Any suggestions welcome.

Ralph
Ralph
Reply to  Marie

I had the same problem with my 2 daughters. Their mother alienated them from me when they were young. I attempted to attend family counseling with them but they said they didn’t want to go. When they were older, I also tried to reconcile and apologize for any hurt I may have caused them because of the divorce from their mother. She tried to do the same with my son but he and I still have a good relationship but his sisters have alienated him to do his contact with me.

Shannon Pascual
Shannon Pascual

I’m remembering more times when I was negative with my children or in front of my children. I have apologized. It’s been more than six months since I’ve seen my older daughter. I am doing okay with giving her space and letting her heal. I want to give her as much time as needed. Unfortunately, I am disappointed and hurt that she will not recognize that as a grandparent I really miss my grand daughter who is in 1st grade and my grandson who is 2 and barely knows me.
I’m scared that I will never get to hug my grandkids again. But my daughter is thinking that a “bad parent” makes a “bad grandparent.” I disagree.
I think that I should offer to take them for a day long visit and show her that I’m trying to change from the person she remembers from her childhood.
It seems that longer we are apart the more difficult it will be to find common ground.

Nancy Paladino
Nancy Paladino

One sentence. Honor
Thy mother and father.

Nancy Paladino
Nancy Paladino

This world has become too “victim hood”.

Willow Rose
Willow Rose

With all due respect, the younger generation seems uniquely challenged by distress tolerance. Many of the things you mention are not worth ending relationships over. I supported my children’s dreams and goals. If they wanted to play sports, they did. If the didn’t want to play, the didn’t have to. I didn’t push them to achieve, but supported and cheered all their successes. When they became older teens and young adults, I let them make their own decisions. I am not alone – there are thousands of us out here, still wondering what we did – thousands of us who HAVE listened if our children will talk, have acknowledged different experience of the same situations, have apologized and done our best to make amends. I have gone to therapy and would jump at the chance to go to family therapy where a neutral party can hear both sides. You ask us to practice some self awareness, but in all honesty, it’s a two way street. I think there is room for disgruntled adult children to practice this as well. Estrangement is a power play used as a control tactic. When I became an adult, I didn’t need to prove to my parents that I was in charge of my own life. I just was, I set a clear boundary. Their advice – even unwanted – did not cause me any stress because I knew the decisions were mine, I didn’t have give one fig about what they thought. That was my power. It sometimes feels like estrangement is more about being afraid that you aren’t strong enough to set boundaries without going into full blown estrangement,

Margaret
Margaret

Shannon, you sound like a woman trying to do better as you’ve moved into a later phase of your life and that’s all that can be asked of any of us. Unfortunately, sometimes people in families can become very attached to being the victim and even with time, changed behaviors and apologies, are reluctant to let that role go. Send your grandchildren little cards and gifts when appropriate and let them know that Grandma is thinking of them and loves them. Do the best you can with what you’re working with now. I wish you and your family all the best.

Aly
Aly
Reply to  Margaret

I completely disagree with you, here. Shannon, your daughter is the parent now, not you. You don’t get to decide whether or not you get a relationship with her children. You may have negative feelings about this and dismiss my response, however, it is the truth. You had the opportunity to parent, and if you utilized that opportunity to exert control and treat your daughter as property, that was on you. Your grandchildren are not your property and your daughter gets to parent them as she (and her partner, if she has one) sees fit. It is a constitutional right. She does not owe you a relationship with her children, in fact, she does not owe you anything. You chose to bring her into this world and that comes with the responsibility of meeting her needs. Not just physical needs, but emotional needs. If she does not feel that you’ve met them, she has the right to walk away from you. Stop treating her and her family as if they belong to you; they don’t. If her children grow up and wish to know you, that will be their choice and their mother will not have control over that. I strongly advise that you completely back off and allow your daughter to heal. If she reaches out, do your part to make amends, respect her boundaries and stop treating her as your property. If this is permanent for her, do your best to find your own way to have a fulfilling life.

Margaret
Margaret

Wow, all I could feel when reading your reply was your anger. I’m sorry for whatever has caused that for you.

Aly
Aly
Reply to  Margaret

You’re wrong, actually. I’m just a person who respects other people’s boundaries and doesn’t claim ownership of other humans and children.

tbo7891 .
tbo7891 .
Reply to  Nancy Paladino

I agree but you see where this whole culture is going without Christ in their life Bless you and I pray for all of us Amen.

Cat
Cat
Reply to  Margaret

If there’s anger there, it’s usually the righteous anger of a child who had to endure years of parental invalidation and invasive control with no escape.

Cat
Cat
Reply to  Willow Rose

Part of your ongoing problem may be your opinion that the offenses listed above are “not worth ending relationships over.” If someone tells you that you wronged them, and your reaction is to say that they shouldn’t be hurt by what you did and then criticize them for poor distress tolerance, you’re adding invalidation to injury.

A parent has unique power over a child’s self-image, so the impact of your actions is magnified. What were mere words for you are stinging wounds to your kids. When an axe cuts down a tree, that’s just another day at work for the axe, but that’s the end for the tree. The axe forgets, but the tree remembers.

Hoffgrad
Hoffgrad
Reply to  Nancy Paladino

I absolutely agree with you.

Patricia
Patricia

I would write her a heartfelt note of apology and tell her that you realize your mistakes and would like the opportunity to show her you have changed. I don’t think a day long visit is a good idea. Your daughter sounds like she needs time to heal as well. It is tough waiting. It’s been 5 years since I have seen my grandchildren but we have to let go of control and accept what is after we have taken appropriate action. Life is too short and we all reap what we sow. Keep the faith!

Patricia
Patricia
Reply to  Meg Amor

Some adult children are not emotionally mature enough to know how to deal with negative or toxic parents. My mom is very negative and I continue to set firm boundaries with her and it is working for the most part. Distancing for long periods of time is the easy way out and requires no effort or growth.We all have areas we need to grow in and difficult family situations are an environment to learn, not run away.

Patricia
Patricia
Reply to  Aly

I’m going to agree with Margaret. I sense a lot of anger in your comment. Where does grace and forgiveness factor in? No parent is perfect and we all make mistakes. She recognizes her mistakes and has taken ownership. The daughter should at least give her a second chance. That is selfish of the daughter who sounds like she needs time to heal as well. Grace grace to all.

Donna
Donna
Reply to  Nancy Paladino

This statement is used to shame people. Our parents, can not just blindly meander through our lives, setting fires and disrespecting boundaries and be met with honor. This is an example of why, our children are angry at us, and it doesn’t matter if they believe/follow in God’s commandments or not. As human we all deserve to be treated with respect, but if we have repeatedly shown ourselves to not be worthy of said respect then blanket honor serves no one. And yes, before you go off on me. I do believe in God.

Donna
Donna

As parents we make mistakes,but your daughter has set a boundary. How are you different as a grandparent?

Donna
Donna
Reply to  Patricia

Sadly, in order to grow…one must be willing. My parents were not.

Layla Melodie
Layla Melodie
Reply to  Nancy Paladino

Stop shaming people with cherry-picked religious doctrine that you pick and choose the most convenient parts from to suit you.

Leslie Hershberger
Leslie Hershberger

In my 40s when I first began therapy, I did it privately, and talked to a few close friends about it. I never cut off my parents, because I saw them as deeply wounded and human too. That would have felt indulgent and cruel given what they had experienced in their lifetime. I’m so glad I never did as they are gone now.

With that said, I had to practice setting strong internal boundaries and when necessary, tell my parents how I felt when they made racist or mean comments or mean comments. I’m so glad there was no social media at that time because I think I would have felt worse and amplified.

I listen to people for a living, and life is hard, regardless of the generation. Everyone is carrying some thing difficult. I appreciate your generation has normalized therapy, you’ve challenged confining gender norms, demanded change in systemic racism and called out the excesses of capitalism and the way it’s destroying our planet.

With that said, other generations paved trails too in their own way. They had trauma too but had to deal with an environment where therapy was seen as weak and deviant . They suffered in silence and we witnessed it and experienced the fallout. Materialism promised relief, but it’s ultimately soul sucking and earth destroying.

Compassion goes a long way and it’s easier to have compassion at a distance than it is to have compassion up close with your family. I sometimes wonder if your children will hold you to the impossible standards to which you’ve held your parents. It’s painful to witness all the cutoffs. I’ve found that even when parents try, it’s not enough. I’ve seen so many good enough parents cut off….it’s being called a Silent Epidemic and I’ve wondered if it’s born in a culture of individualistic therapy. I vet therapists now before I refer clients. I ask them their position on cutoffs.

I’ve wondered if that’s where Millennial misery comes from. There’s a sense of disconnection and loneliness that comes from thinking you’re the only generation who has suffered pain, loss, loneliness and injustice. We’ve all experienced it. We’re just more aware of it now.

It’s so hard to be human. You’re not alone in it. I like the practice of calling in rather than calling out. It’s harder than othering earlier generations because then you have to face your own shadow.

I’ve let go of the notion that any of us can heal generational trauma completely. It’s part and parcel of being human as there are external factors we could never have imagined like war, pandemics and mass shootings.

At 63, my parents, my sister and 3 close friends have died. I’ve had to look in the mirror and face mistakes, regrets and the bittersweet realities of my life and my family’s life.

I’ve more compassion than ever before for all of us. I am grateful for the human values of connection and forgiveness even when it’s hard. I’m even more grateful for the people who will have the hard conversations even when it’s hard. The strangest thing I’ve learned is that Wisdom isn’t about knowing more. It’s the humbling realization of how much you don’t know

Layla Melodie
Layla Melodie
Reply to  Patricia

Ma’am, that is OKAY for you. If you want to constantly work on your relationship with a toxic parent, then kudos. What you fail to realize is that it will not work for everyone. You can’t apply normal relationship rules to abnormal, dysfunctional ones. I would NEVER give another adult the advice that they should continue to allow a person that is controlling, manipulative and narcissistic into their space even if they have the bio title of parent simply because I have too much compassion for others who just want to live in peace.

Layla Melodie
Layla Melodie
Reply to  Nancy Paladino

No, you’re just dysfunctional.

Stella
Stella
Reply to  Patricia

as you said below, we all reap what we sow. Nobody owes you a relationship.

Stella
Stella

Your daughter is not a mere conduit to you enjoying a relationship with grandchildren. Instead of focusing on missing out on that, perhaps focus on why it isn’t possible and consider what you can do to repair the primary relationship with your daughter that would make it possible. Even then, I would be deeply insulted in her place that you are only making an effort in order to see the grandchildren and not to see your daughter. Your attitude reeks of entitlement, almost as if you had somehow used a surrogate to give yourself grandchildren.

Stella
Stella
Reply to  Patricia

if adult children are “not emotionally mature enough” to deal with their parents’ toxic waste dump, that is the parents’ fault for not parenting them properly. You don’t blame a tree for not growing properly because it didn’t get enough light. This isn’t any different.

Stella
Stella

As a therapist, you should know better than to judge others and to try to claim the moral high ground.

Stella
Stella
Reply to  Nancy Paladino

Why are you reading this page if your takeaway is to double down and blame your children for not wanting anything to do with you?

Guest
Guest

Leslie, thank you for this.