There’s A Hidden Cost to "Helpful" Parenting

The well-meaning thing that's working against your child's independence, and a quick way to switch things up at home

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My four-year-old was perched precariously on a stool, arm stretched skyward, attempting to balance a tall triangle block at the very top of his building. Every parental instinct screamed at me to rush in – to help, to warn, to protect. It wasn’t that I was worried about him getting hurt- I was worried the crash would wake my sleeping toddler and then we’d all pay. Instead, I froze in the doorway, my “snack time!” announcement dying on my lips. Carefully, I crept backward out of the room. Snack could wait.

Later, at dinnertime, surrounded by my husband eagerly trying to coerce the toddler to eat, spilled milk, and said toddler dropping peas and rice to our eagerly waiting dog, I said:

“Nate-Nate, today when you were building, I was about to interrupt you to tell you it was snack time, but instead, I stopped!”

He stared up at me with curious brown eyes, wondering what I would say next.

“I stopped because I saw you working so hard on getting that tall triangle all the way to the tippy top of your building. You were standing so carefully on your stool and reaching your arm up to balance it. It looked important, so I decided that snack could wait.”

“You saw me?!” He asked?

“Yes,” I said. “And then, your sister woke up, and I had to run upstairs, so I didn’t get to see what happened! Now there’s a very tall and sturdy building in the playroom. How on earth did you manage to build that all by yourself?”

The pride that lit up his face as he detailed this engineering feat (with the delightful thoroughness only a four-year-old can muster) showed me exactly what I would have stolen from him with my “helpful” intervention.

There’s A Hidden Cost to “Helpful” Parenting

The well-meaning “Wow, what a beautiful drawing! Is it a house?” The rushed “Let me help you with that before it falls.” The automatic “Don’t forget to clean up before starting something new!”

These moments seem innocent enough. After all, isn’t being interested in our children’s play exactly what “good parents” do?

But here’s the real truth: our constant hovering, suggestions, and even our enthusiastic praise might be less than helpful.

We’re all guilty of it, myself included. And once I started noticing the specific moments where my “helpfulness” was actually getting in the way, I couldn’t unsee them.

Before you dig in, please know this: No one, myself included, should aim to do this one hundred percent of the time. This post is written not to call out your flaws or suggest that you parent your child “correctly.” It is meant to support you as you learn and grow alongside your child.


The first is praise — and I know that sounds counterintuitive. But “Wow, what a beautiful drawing! Is it a house?” shifts their focus from the thing they’re making to your reaction to it. The creation becomes about approval. Imagine that you are cooking a delicious stew. You’ve got your ingredients laid out, the aromas are swirling, and you are in the zone. And then, your well-meaning partner enters the room- Is that chicken? Smells good! What’s in it? Can I taste? Now you’ve lost concentration, started explaining that it’s not chicken, it’s beef, and managing their reaction… You see what I mean, right?

I’ve started saving my play observations for dinnertime, for the car ride home, for a quiet moment later. Kids light up when they realize you were paying attention without interrupting.

The second is the rescue. The tower is wobbling. Every instinct says fix it. But that wobble is exactly where the learning lives. The crash teaches frustration tolerance in real time. If they do ask for help, try putting it back on them. We want our kids to see themselves as the experts of their own play, even when it doesn’t work out the way it intended. “Hmmm, yeah, I see what you are saying. That top piece does seem to be unsteady. I’m not sure what to do there. What do you think?” and then actually wait. Later you can acknowledge it: “You kept trying different ways to make that work. How did you end up figuring it out?”

Then there’s the one right way trap. “That’s not how that toy works. Here, let me show you how.” I’ve said it. We’ve all said it. But their unexpected uses of things are usually where the most interesting play happens. I remember walking into the playroom, and my kids were using blocks as ice skates, gliding across the carpet. I wanted to say, “Blocks are for building. We don’t stand on blocks.” But I waited. And you know what? 45 minutes later, I peeked in and saw that they had set up an ice skating rink, complete with a hot chocolate stand made of blocks and loose parts. They’d pulled their hats and mittens from the coat closet and wore them all afternoon as they played. Sometimes, kids know how to use the materials better than we do.

Cleanup is a sneaky one. The constant “clean up before you start something new” feels responsible, but it chips away at complex, evolving play. A designated area where things can stay out, a single daily cleanup time, and, this one changes things, a quick photo of their setup so they can come back to it later. Here is a deep dive into clean-up time.

And finally: the warning. “Five more minutes until clean-up time!” feels gentle, but in my experience, this makes a lot of kids anxious and has the opposite effect of the one we were after. Especially the kids who already have a hard time with transitions. Instead, I like to gently bend down and say, “It’s almost time for the next thing, which means taking a break from this game. Choose one last thing to do and meet me in the kitchen.” This puts the ball back in their court and gives them a little more control.

Independent Play Benefits The Whole Family

Your interest in your child’s play matters enormously. The key is timing that engagement thoughtfully. Save your observations and questions for natural connection points, like dinner time, car rides or walks. You’ll be amazed at how much more meaningful these conversations become when they’re not during play.

Think of it this way: Every time you bite back that helpful suggestion or hold off on that well-meant comment, you’re not just allowing play to continue uninterrupted. You’re saying to your child, loud and clear: “I trust you. I believe in your capabilities. I respect your process.”

How do you feel about “helpful” parenting? Let me know in the comments below. I answer every single one. x. Lizzie

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Something Playful: The Board Game Edit