
When parents fail to provide all the love and care a child deserves and rely on their children for the same, it leads to Parentification. As a result, a child becomes a caregiver. It makes a child handle all the adult responsibilities even before he/she becomes an adult. The word parentification was given by Ivan Boszormenyi Nagy who was an American psychiatrist, which describes what happens when the roles of a child and the parents are reversed. Parentification affects the process of child development and the child’s mental and physical health negatively.
Read More: The Basics of Child Psychology
According to Jacinda K. Dariotis, “Parentification is like increasing the activities that the adults should be doing. The outcomes will be more negative for the children if it starts earlier and lasts longer.” A common example is when a child is told by their relatives that he is the ‘man of the house now’ after his father passes away. After hearing this, a child starts taking this role very seriously and starts worrying about his mother and siblings.
Studies and Research on Parentification
- According to the National Alliance for Caregiving approximately 1.4 million children in the United States experience and are experiencing parentification.
- It was found that during the COVID-19 pandemic, children in Poland had to take care of their education when many families experienced illness or job loss.
- A research by Jones and Wells in 1996 found that many children who had grown up very quickly showed characteristics like “people pleasing”.
- DiCaccavo (2005) argues that parentification makes a child a failure as he/she is attempting to perform tasks that are beyond his/her capabilities.
Types of Parentification
There are two types of Parentification :
- Instrumental Parentification is when a child is held responsible for the household tasks in the family. For example, cleaning, grocery shopping, paying the bills, cooking etc.
- Emotional Parentification is when a child is held responsible for the emotional tasks in the family. for e.g. taking care of parents, taking care of siblings, listening to parents’ complaints and frustrations, serving as a mediator in parents’ arguments.
Causes of Parentification
Parentification can arise from :
- Divorce
- Financial problems
- Parents who were neglected in their childhood
- Depressed parents
- Death of a parent or sibling
- Drug or alcohol addiction
- Disability of parents
- Toxic relationship between parents
Effects of Parentification
Parentification leaves lasting effects on a child that remain till adulthood. Some of the effects are:
Signs of Parentification
- You felt responsible for your siblings or your parents.
- You felt like you had to be the peacekeeper.
- You felt like your family would not make it without you.
- Your childhood lacked the fun that other kids had.
- You were given responsibilities that were not age appropriate.
- You tend to be the caregiver in your relationships
- You felt overworked between school and family responsibilities.
How to Heal From Parentification?
Remember that healing takes time, and it’s okay to seek support and guidance as you navigate this process. You deserve to live a fulfilling and authentic life, free from the burdens of your past experiences. Keeping a childhood photo or writing a letter to the inner child are some of the exercises that are helpful in healing from parentification. Parentification can have long lasting effects that can be painful. If you experienced parentification try reversing the effects by being a parent you never had and start taking care of yourself. You deserve unconditional love and care. Reaching out to a mental health professional might heal you from parentification and trauma.
References +- Corelli, C. (2024, January 22) Parentification: The Heavy Burden Borne By A Parentified Child. https://www.carlacorelli.com/family/parentified-child-parentification-definition
- Dariotis, J., et al (2023, June 21). Parentification Vulnerability, Reactivity, Resilience, and Thriving: A Mixed Methods Systematic Literature Review. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10341267
- Gifford, B. (2023, February 15). What is parentification, who does it affect, and is it always bad? https://happiful.com/what-is-parentification
- Guha, A. (2021, July 31). The Parentified Child in Adulthood. https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/of-prisons-and-pathos/202107/the-parentified-child-in -adulthood
- Gupta, S. (2023, January 5). What is Parentification? https://www.verywellmind.com/parentification-types-causes-and-effects-7090611
- Harris,N. (2023, July 24). What Are the Warning Signs of Parentification? https://www.parents.com/kids/development/what-is-parentification-spotting-the-warning-signs-an d-how-to-let-kids-be-kids/
- Johnson, J. (2022, April 29). What to know about parentification. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/parentification
Mom Guilt and Strategies to Overcome It
May 2, 2024 Parenting9 Poor Habits that Children Inherit from Their
April 29, 2024 ParentingTop 7 Tips for Safe Baby Sleep Every
April 15, 2024 Awareness, Parenting“Spare the Rod, Empower the Child”
April 11, 2024 Education, ParentingTEACCH: Embracing Neurodiversity, Cultivating Independence
April 8, 2024ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7sb%2FYnJ%2BopJ%2BcwG%2BvzqZmn6Gembavs4ybmKWZnpiybrnAp5igoZ6cerOx0qmmp6uZl7attdOinKxlkZvBpr6MqZirnZ6ptqe1wpqroqeeZA%3D%3D