Unhealthy signs Unhealthy parenting signs, which could lead to a family becoming dysfunctional include: • Unrealistic expectations • Ridicule •
Conditional love • Double standards or giving "mixed messages" by having a dual system of
values (i.e. one set for the outside world, another when in private, or teaching divergent values to each child.) • The absentee parent (seldom available for their child due to
work overload, alcohol/drug abuse,
gambling, or other addictions.) • Unfulfilled projects, activities, and promises affecting children (''"We'll do it later."'') • Giving to one child what rightly belongs to another • Gender
prejudice (treats one gender of children fairly; the other unfairly.) • Discussion and exposure to sexuality: either too much, too soon or too little, too late • Faulty
discipline based more on
emotions or family
politics than on established rules (
e.g.,
punishment by "surprise".) • Having an unpredictable emotional state due to
substance abuse,
personality disorder(s), or
stress • Parents always (or never) take their children's side when others report acts of misbehavior, or teachers report problems at school •
Scapegoating (knowingly or recklessly
blaming one child for the misdeeds of another) • "Tunnel vision" diagnosis of children's problems (for example, a parent may think their child is either lazy or has
learning disabilities after falling behind in school despite recent absence due to illness.) • Older
siblings given either no or excessive
authority over younger siblings with respect to their age difference and level of
maturity. • Frequent withholding of consent (
"blessing") for culturally common, lawful, and age-appropriate activities a child wants to take part in • The "know-it-all" (has no need to obtain child's side of the story when accusing, or listen to child's opinions on matters which greatly impact them.) • Regularly forcing children to attend activities for which they are extremely over- or under-qualified (e.g. using a preschool to babysit a typical nine-year-old boy, taking a young child to poker games, etc.) • Either being a
miser ("
scrooge") in totality or selectively allowing children's needs to go unmet (e.g. a father will not buy a bicycle for his son because he wants to save money for
retirement or "something important".) • Disagreements about
nature and nurture (parents, often non-biological, blame common problems on child's
heredity, when faulty parenting may be the actual cause.)
Dysfunctional styles "Children as pawns" One common dysfunctional parental behavior is a parent's
manipulation of a child in order to achieve some outcome adverse to the other parent's rights or interests. Examples include verbal manipulation such as spreading
gossip about the other parent, communicating with the parent through the child (and in the process exposing the child to
the risks of the other parent's displeasure with that communication) rather than doing so directly, trying to obtain information through the child (
spying), or causing the child to dislike the other parent, with insufficient or no concern for the damaging effects of the parent's behavior on the child. While many instances of such manipulation occur in
shared custody situations that have resulted from separation or divorce, it can also take place in intact families, where it is known as
triangulation.
List of other dysfunctional styles • "Using" (destructively
narcissistic parents who rule by fear and conditional love.) •
Abusing (parents who use physical violence, or
emotionally, or
sexually abuse their children.) •
Perfectionist (fixating on order, prestige, power, or perfect appearances, while preventing their child from failing at anything.) •
Dogmatic or
cult-like (harsh and inflexible
discipline, with children not allowed, within reason, to dissent, question
authority, or develop their own
value system.) • Inequitable parenting (going to extremes for one child while continually ignoring the needs of another.) •
Deprivation (control or
neglect by withholding love,
support, necessities,
sympathy,
praise,
attention, encouragement,
supervision, or otherwise putting their children's well-being at risk.) • Abuse among
siblings (parents fail to intervene when a sibling physically or sexually abuses another sibling.) •
Abandonment (a parent who willfully separates from their children, not wishing any further contact, and in some cases without locating alternative, long-term parenting arrangements, leaving them as
orphans.) • Appeasement (parents who reward bad behavior—even by their own standards—and inevitably punish another child's good behavior in order to maintain the peace and avoid
temper tantrums.
"Peace at any price.") • Loyalty manipulation (giving unearned rewards and lavish attention trying to ensure a favored, yet rebellious child will be the one most loyal and well-behaved, while subtly ignoring the wants and needs of their most loyal child currently.) • "
Helicopter parenting" (parents who
micro-manage their children's lives or relationships among siblings—especially minor conflicts.) • "The deceivers" (well-regarded parents in the community, likely to be involved in some charitable/non-profit works, who abuse or mistreat one or more of their children.) • "
Public image manager" (sometimes related to above, children warned to not disclose what fights, abuse, or damage happens at home, or face severe punishment ''"Don't tell anyone what goes on in this family"''.) • "The
paranoid parent" (a parent having persistent and irrational
fear accompanied by
anger and
false accusations that their child is up to no good or others are plotting harm.) • "No friends allowed" (parents discourage, prohibit, or interfere with their child from making friends of the same age and gender.) • Role reversal (parents who expect their minor children to take care of them instead.) • "Not your business" (children continuously told that a particular brother or sister who is often causing problems is none of their concern.) • Ultra-
egalitarianism (either a much younger child is permitted to do whatever an older child may, or an older child must wait years until a younger child is mature enough.) • "The guard dog" (a parent who blindly attacks family members perceived as causing the slightest upset to their esteemed spouse, partner, or child.) • "My baby forever" (a parent who will not allow one or more of their young children to grow up and begin taking care of themselves.) • "The cheerleader" (one parent "cheers on" the other parent who is simultaneously abusing their child.) • "Along for the ride" (a reluctant
de facto,
step,
foster, or
adoptive parent who does not truly care about their non-biological child, but must co-exist in the same home for the sake of their spouse or partner) (See also:
Cinderella effect). • "The politician" (a parent who repeatedly makes or agrees to children's promises while having little to no intention of keeping them.) • "It's taboo" (parents rebuff any questions children may have about sexuality,
pregnancy, romance,
puberty, certain private body areas, nudity, etc.) •
Identified patient (one child who is forced into going to therapy while the family's overall dysfunction is kept hidden.) •
Münchausen syndrome by proxy (a much more extreme situation than above, where the child is intentionally made ill by a parent
seeking attention from physicians and other professionals.) ==Dynamical==