Discover how influence fosters emotional resilience and connection in families. Traditional parenting often confuses control with leadership. We manage behaviors, issue consequences, and tighten our grip when things fall apart.
But what if real power in parenting isn’t about control at all — but about influence? In this blog, we explore the vital difference between parenting for compliance versus parenting for connection. Control says, “Do it because I said so.” Influence says, “I matter to you, so my guidance lands.” I unpack how fear-based parenting strategies can backfire, especially for kids navigating mental health, substance use, or emotional overwhelm. Through the lens of Family WellthCare Coaching, I offer a new model: parenting as relational leadership. With insights from psychology, somatic work, Internal Family Systems, and lived family dynamics, you’ll learn how to shift from managing behavior to modeling regulation. The result? Children who trust, relate, and grow. If you want to become the kind of parent your child turns to — not away from — this post is for you. Why Control Feels Safer (But Doesn’t Work) Every parent has been there: You ask nicely, they push back. You threaten, they escalate. You raise your voice, they shut down. And before you know it, you’re locked in a power struggle that leaves both of you drained. Control feels like the fastest way to get a child to stop doing something harmful or start doing something helpful. But what it creates in the long term is fear, disconnection, and compliance without understanding. Parenting from control says: “You have to listen to me because I’m bigger, louder, and in charge.” Parenting from influence says: “You want to listen to me because we have a relationship that matters to you.” The difference? One is fear-based. The other is trust-based. What Influence Really Means in Parenting Influence is not weakness. It’s leadership grounded in safety, respect, and presence. Influence doesn’t mean permissiveness. It doesn’t mean letting kids do whatever they want. It means that your connection is strong enough that they care about your guidance. It’s earned, not imposed. Influence builds when:
When Control Backfires: A Real Family Example I once coached a father who was struggling with his 17-year-old son, who had been skipping school, vaping, and shutting down. Every conversation turned into an argument. The dad, a former athlete and high-achiever, was terrified his son was throwing his future away. So he tightened the rules. He tracked his location. Took away his phone. Gave lectures about discipline and consequences. None of it worked. Through Family WellthCare Coaching, we paused the behavior management and explored the father’s fear underneath his need for control. We asked:
The turning point came when the dad asked his son a simple question over breakfast: “Is there anything you wish I understood about how hard things feel right now?” His son looked up, blinked back tears, and said, *”I feel like a disappointment. So sometimes I stop trying.” Control had silenced that truth. Influence made space for it. Parenting as Relational Leadership What if we stopped seeing ourselves as managers of behavior and started seeing ourselves as relational leaders? Leaders set tone. Leaders regulate under stress. Leaders create belonging. Leaders model what they hope to see. And that’s what our kids need — especially when they’re struggling. Influence = Modeling + Attunement + Boundaries
Why Control Is a Trauma Response Let’s name something many people don’t: Control is often what we reach for when we’re terrified. When our kids struggle, many of us go back to how we were raised — rules, fear, and consequences. But these strategies often come from unresolved fear, perfectionism, and old family systems. When I coach families, we always ask:
Influence Doesn’t Mean Immediate Change — It Means Lasting Change A family I worked with recently had a 14-year-old daughter who was pulling away, spending all her time online, and showing signs of depression. Her mom tried everything: therapist referrals, chore charts, even bribery. Nothing stuck. So we paused. We got curious. And the mom began writing her daughter small notes each day. Not about performance, but about presence:
That’s influence. It doesn’t come on our timeline. But it lasts a lifetime. The Family WellthCare Framework: Practical Shifts to Build Influence 1. Pause Power Plays If you’re tempted to “win” an argument with your child, you’ve already lost the connection. Pause. Breathe. Reframe. 2. Speak with Your Nervous System Kids don’t hear what you say when your tone is tense. They hear your body. Regulate yourself first. 3. Ask Instead of Tell Influence is invitational. Try questions like: “What do you think would help right now?” or “What feels hard about this for you?” 4. Repair Without Shame If you lose your cool, go back and name it. “That wasn’t the parent I want to be. I’m still learning too.” 5. Be Their Safe Place, Not Their Surveillance When kids feel watched, they hide. When they feel safe, they open. Final Thoughts: Lead With Love, Not Leverage You don’t have to control your child to guide them. You don’t have to dominate them to influence them. You have to know them. Attune to them. Grow with them. And most importantly, you have to do the inner work to stop parenting from fear and start parenting from emotional wealth. That’s what Family WellthCare is about: leadership, not management. Legacy, not compliance. Connection that outlives the conflict. Want to learn how to lead your family with influence, not control? Join Family WellthCare Coaching and begin your family’s emotional reinvention today. www.familyaddictionrecovery.net
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AuthorTimothy Harrington's purpose is to assist the family members of a loved one struggling with problematic drug use and/or behavioral health challenges in realizing their innate strength and purpose. Archives
June 2025
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