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21 Signs of Controlling Parents

Having a sense of autonomy and control is essential to our health and well-being​1​.

However, in the last two decades, there has been a disturbing decrease in the sense of control among college students​2​.

They believe forces outside of themselves control their lives.

Having a controlling mother or father is, at least in part, a prevalent source of such helplessness.

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Types of Parental Control

There are two types of parental control – behavioral control and psychological control.

Behavioral Control

Behavioral control refers to supervising and managing children’s behavior.

These overbearing parents discipline their kids’ behavior, monitor their whereabouts, and oversee their social life​3​.

Behavioral control is intended to regulate children’s behaviors to conform to the prevailing family or social norms.

Autonomy and regulation are both essential in a child’s development.

Autonomy allows a child to develop a separate identity away from their parents.

This process of individuation is particularly important during adolescence when teenagers are getting prepared for adulthood​4​.

At the same time, parents need to provide adequate structure for the child to learn to inhibit disruptive behavior and engage in socially acceptable behavior​5​.

Structure and guidance in behavior are necessary to facilitate favorable personality development.

Behavioral control, to a certain extent, is paramount in a child’s healthy development.

It aims to monitor, teach and regulate appropriate behavior.

However, when parents go overboard and control every minute detail of their children’s behavior, they become over controlling parents​6​.

Psychological control

Psychological control refers to intruding into children’s emotional and psychological development.

Controlling parents are nonresponsive to their children’s emotional and psychological needs.

They constrain, invalidate, and manipulate the kids’ psychological experiences.

They also stifle the independent expression of emotions​7​.

A Dad or Mom in control may manipulate children’s feelings, thoughts, or ideas through the parent-child relationship using guilt, love withdrawal, showing disappointment, disapproval, and shaming​8​.

In addition, they want to keep their kids emotionally dependent and enmeshed with them​9​.

Psychologically controlling parents are experienced by their children as being intrusive, overprotective, possessive, directive, and controlling through guilt​10​.

Ways of Controlling

Children can experience parental control differently depending on what measures controlling parents use. Here are two orientations of controlling practice.

Internally Controlling

Psychological control is often exerted through subtle, non-verbal cues.

These parents appeal primarily to forces and regulations that reside within the child, such as when parents activate feelings of shame and guilt.

Because the control is more internal, covert, and nonobvious, most psychological control measures are internally controlling parenting practices.

Externally Controlling

Externally controlling parenting is done in an open and overt fashion.

Shouting, hitting, punishing, and rewarding are the common strategies used to coerce children with external contingencies.

Psychological control is not always internally controlling.

Some parents engage in personal attacks or erratic emotional behavior such as alternating between caring for and attacking their children.

Strict parenting, harsh parenting and helicopter parenting are all externally controlling parenting types.

All of these parenting styles are authoritarian parenting styles.

Signs of Controlling Parents

Whether a parent is controlling depends on a combination of several factors​11​:

  • type of control (behavioral vs psychological)
  • way of control (internally controlling vs externally controlling)
  • level of control (moderate vs high)
  • the temperament of the child (does the child perceive them as controlling)

Despite the complexities, there are some parenting practices that are considered controlling “on average”.

Signs of controlling parents include:

  1. Demand blind obedience and conformity
  2. Do not allow children to participate in or question the parents’ decisions
  3. Do not let their child make their own decisions
  4. Do not encourage choice or independence
  5. Dictate every aspect of the child’s life
  6. “Help” the child without being asked
  7. Use reasons such as “because I said so” to discipline
  8. Believe children should be seen, but not heard
  9. Manipulate and exploit the parent-child bond, through such as guilt induction or love withdrawal
  10. Discipline through punishment and coercion
  11. Use negative, affect-laden expressions and criticisms, such as disappointment and shame
  12. Criticize any choices their child make
  13. Unrealistically high standards and expectations
  14. Many rigid rules
  15. Arbitrarily add family rules for more control
  16. Lack of empathy for their child
  17. Refuse to see things from their child’s perspective
  18. Believe they are always right
  19. Always tell you what to do
  20. Do not respect your privacy
  21. Emotionally immature

Psychological Effects of Controlling Parents

Psychologists have found that different controlling factors can cause different effects on daughters and sons, especially teenagers.

Lack of behavioral control has long been associated with behavioral problems.

These kids act out more and are less capable of inhibiting disruptive behavior.

A moderate amount of behavioral regulation and monitoring is good for children.

Enforcing boundaries and monitoring are associated with positive outcomes such as less acting out and better academic performance​12​.

But when the control is at a high level, the negative impact on children’s development can be long-lasting​7​ whether it’s behavioral or psychological.

At high levels of behavioral or psychological control, adolescents feel that they are incompetent and they don’t matter​6​.

Parents who are very behaviorally controlling undermine their children’s confidence in their abilities.

Excessive parental assistance during tasks and interrupting a child’s problem-solving communicate doubt regarding the child’s competencies.

As a result, these children suffer from lower self-esteem.

They are less self-regulated, higher in acting out, and lower in academic achievement​13,14​.

Many psychologists believe that psychological control is particularly damaging to a child.

The insidiously manipulative tactics used by an internally controlling father or overbearing mother can induce feelings of undue loyalty towards parents to comply with their authority.

These children’s compliance is driven by a desire to avoid feeling guilty or losing their parents’ love​11​.

So when they are rejected by their parents, they feel resentment.

This mixture of ambiguous and conflicting feelings toward parents creates a sense of inner tension.

Children of psychologically controlling parents are more prone to suffer from low self-esteem, and mental health issues, such as anxiety, depression​15​, and antisocial behavior​16​.

On the other hand, externally controlling parents have different impacts on their children.

Kids model their behavior after their parents’ behavior.

Externally controlled children frequently witness their parents engaging in overt aggressive and controlling behaviors.

They are more prone to physical aggression towards others​17​.

They are more likely to become bullies or victims of bullying.

They also tend to pass this type of harsh parenting to the next generation​18​.

How To Deal With Controlling Parents

“Why are my parents trying to control my life?”

If you’re an unfortunate child who has controlling parents, I sympathize.

It is hard for children or teenagers to deal with controlling parenting on their own because they are completely relying on their parents.

Asking for counseling at school or requesting to see a therapist can provide the support to get through this.

Some kids also use negotiation as a more autonomous way of coping​19​.

Also see: How to Deal With a Controlling Parent as a Teenager

If you were or have been a controlling parent, the best thing to do for your child is to seek professional help for yourself.

Children usually employ one of two non-autonomous ways of coping – compulsive compliance or oppositional defiance.

Neither one is good for your child.

If you’re a grownup, having a controlling parent can make you feel disrespected​16​.

Unfortunately, research shows that controlling parenting behavior is unlikely to change over time​20​.

If you suffer from depressive or anxiety symptoms, seek professional help as soon as possible.

When looking for therapeutic help, look for one who is proficient in relational therapy​21​ and in dealing with controlling parent issues.

References

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    Ballash N, Leyfer O, Buckley AF, Woodruff-Borden J. Parental Control in the Etiology of Anxiety. Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev. Published online November 7, 2006:113-133. doi:10.1007/s10567-006-0007-z
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    Marcia JE. Identity in adolescence. Handbook of adolescent psychology. 1980;9(11).
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    McClure EB, Brennan PA, Hammen C, Le Brocque RM. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology. Published online 2001:1-10. doi:10.1023/a:1005260311313
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    Barber BK, Xia M, Olsen JA, McNeely CA, Bose K. Feeling disrespected by parents: Refining the measurement and understanding of psychological control. Journal of Adolescence. Published online April 2012:273-287. doi:10.1016/j.adolescence.2011.10.010
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    Joussemet M, Vitaro F, Barker ED, et al. Controlling Parenting and Physical Aggression During Elementary School. Child Development. Published online March 2008:411-425. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.2007.01133.x
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    Simons RL, Whitbeck LB, Conger RD, Wu C. Intergenerational transmission of harsh parenting. Developmental Psychology. Published online 1991:159-171. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.27.1.159
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    Kuczynski L, Kochanska G. Development of children’s noncompliance strategies from toddlerhood to age 5. Developmental Psychology. Published online 1990:398-408. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.26.3.398
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    Barber BK, Maughan SL, Olsen JA. Patterns of Parenting across Adolescence. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development. 2005;108:5-16.
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    Jordan JV. A Relational Approach to Psychotherapy. Women & Therapy. Published online June 13, 1995:51-61. doi:10.1300/j015v16n04_05

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