Why It Isn’t Your Job to Make Your Kids Happy

As parents we deeply feel our kids’s emotions. When they’re hurting our natural instinct is to step in and fix it, to say the right thing, offer a distraction, or highlight something positive to lift their spirits. One of the most impactful things we can do as parents is resist this urge. Our job is not to make our kids happy; it’s to help them build emotional resilience.

The Unintended Consequences of Prioritizing Happiness

When we focus on keeping our children happy, we unintentionally teach them that certain emotions like sadness, disappointment, or frustration are unsafe.

Imagine your child says, “I’m the only one in my class who can’t read.” That’s painful to hear as a parent. Maybe it’s true, maybe it’s not. Either way, our instinct might be to immediately reassure them: “Everyone learns at their own pace! But you’re amazing at soccer!” While this response is well-intentioned, what it actually teaches the child is that their discomfort needs to be quickly replaced with happiness.

Children don’t just learn from the situations they experience; they absorb what we model. If, every time they feel sadness or frustration, we rush to turn that feeling into something positive, they learn to fear those emotions rather than tolerate them.

Fast forward to adulthood: when they experience setbacks (“I’m the only one in my friend group who isn’t married”), they may feel an intense need to escape those feelings rather than process them. The result? Anxiety.

What Is Anxiety, Really?

Anxiety isn’t actually a feeling—it’s the experience of trying to run away from a feeling. But here’s the challenge: you can’t outrun an emotion that exists inside your body. When kids aren’t given space to experience a full range of emotions, they grow up fearing them. This leads to adults who avoid discomfort at all costs, whether through distraction, numbing behaviors, or chronic worry.

Resilience Over Happiness

The goal of parenting isn’t to ensure our kids are always happy. Instead, we want to help them build resilience, the ability to sit with and tolerate a wide range of emotions without needing to escape them.

So, what can we do instead? When our kids express painful emotions, we can:

  • Validate their feelings. “That sounds really hard. I can see why you’re feeling that way.”
  • Normalize all emotions. “It’s okay to feel sad about this. We all feel that way sometimes.”
  • Model emotional regulation. Show them that feelings come and go, and they don’t need to be feared. “I know you’re feeling upset right now. I’m here with you. Let’s take a deep breath together.”

Long-Term Emotional Health

Helping our children embrace discomfort doesn’t mean we ignore their pain, it means we sit with them in it. Over time, this helps them develop the emotional tools they’ll need throughout life: how to navigate big feelings, tolerate discomfort, and trust that emotions are temporary.

By shifting our focus from happiness to resilience, we empower our kids to become emotionally strong, adaptable, and confident in facing life’s inevitable ups and downs. And that, ultimately, leads to a deeper, more lasting sense of well-being.

Would you like my free 10 Ways to Have a More Resilient Teen? Grab it HERE!

I’m Stephanie
Hello, I'm Stephanie

Welcome to Living The Best You!
I’m a Certified Life Coach, Certified Subconscious Release Technique (SRT) Practitioner, and Christian mom who has raised 7 teenagers 🙂
 I understand what you’re going through.
If parenting your teen feels overwhelming, exhausting, or like you’re failing,
I want you to know you’re not alone and there is a way to fix it!


This is for you if…

❤️ You’re exhausted from overthinking, second-guessing yourself, and feeling guilty no matter what you do.
❤️ You find yourself getting frustrated with your kids (or your spouse) and then beating yourself up about it later.
❤️ You keep trying to be more positive, but deep down, the same doubts and worries keep creeping in.
❤️ You know your thoughts affect how you feel, but no one ever taught you how to actually change them.
❤️ You just want your family to listen, cooperate, and stop making everything so difficult.
❤️ You’ve tried everything to get them to change, but nothing seems to work—and you’re wondering if there’s another way.
❤️ You’re open to something new, even if you’re not totally sure how it works yet.

This is NOT for you if…

🚫 You just want a quick fix and aren’t willing to do any inner work.
🚫 You believe your emotions and reactions are completely out of your control.
🚫 You’re okay with things staying the way they are and don’t want to make any changes.