You know that sinking feeling when your adult kids visit for the holidays and you catch them checking their phones every five minutes? Or when they suddenly remember an “urgent” errand halfway through Sunday dinner?
I’ve been there. After raising two sons who now have families of their own, I’ve learned the hard way that certain habits we develop as parents can turn visits into obligations rather than the joyful reunions we hope for.
The truth is, our adult children want to enjoy spending time with us. But sometimes, without realizing it, we create an atmosphere that makes them feel like teenagers again—and not in a good way. Over the years, both through my own mistakes and watching other families navigate these waters, I’ve identified eight habits that can transform visits from something they endure to something they genuinely look forward to.
1. Treating them like they’re still fifteen
Remember when your kids were teenagers and you’d inspect their rooms, comment on their appearance, and remind them about basic hygiene? Well, some of us never stopped.
I once watched a friend greet her thirty-something daughter at the door with “Did you forget to brush your hair this morning?” The visit went downhill from there. When we treat our grown children like they haven’t aged past their teenage years, we’re essentially telling them we don’t respect who they’ve become.
Sarah Epstein, LMFT puts it perfectly: “Some parents struggle to maintain an updated template of who their children are.”
Your adult child manages a team at work, pays a mortgage, and maybe even raises their own kids. They don’t need you to remind them to wear a jacket when it’s cold.
2. Offering unsolicited advice about everything
Last month, my son mentioned he was thinking about refinancing his house. Before I knew it, I’d launched into a twenty-minute lecture about interest rates, complete with stories from when Linda and I bought our first home in the eighties.
His eyes glazed over. Message received.
We mean well, but constant advice-giving sends the message that we don’t trust their judgment. Whether it’s about their parenting style, their career choices, or their weekend plans, sometimes the best support we can offer is simply listening without jumping in with solutions.
3. Making every conversation an interrogation
“How’s work? Are you getting that promotion? Why not? What about your boss—is he still giving you trouble? And your savings account—are you putting enough away?”
Related Stories from The Artful Parent
- Psychology says good parents aren’t the ones who make the fewest mistakes — they’re the ones who repair the relationship after the mistakes, and repair, offered honestly and without defensiveness, teaches a child something about love and accountability that getting it right the first time never could
- I grew up in a house that was full of love and short on money and I have spent my entire adult life financially comfortable and occasionally homesick for something I cannot name that had nothing to do with the money and everything to do with how full the house was despite the shortage
- Psychology says people who find it easier to forgive strangers than family aren’t being inconsistent — the stranger never had the power to form them, and forgiveness scales directly with how much the person held the power to shape who you became and chose to use it the way they did
Sound familiar? When visits feel like job interviews, our kids start giving one-word answers and looking for the exit. There’s a difference between showing interest and conducting a cross-examination.
Instead of rapid-fire questions, try sharing something about your own life first. It creates a more natural back-and-forth and takes the spotlight off them for a moment.
4. Guilt-tripping about visit frequency
“Your brother visited three times last month” or “Mrs. Johnson’s daughter comes every weekend” might seem like harmless observations, but they’re actually relationship poison.
I learned this lesson when one of my sons finally told me that my comments about visit frequency made him dread coming over even when he had free time. The guilt made visits feel like obligations rather than choices, which sucked all the joy out of them.
Quality beats quantity every time. One genuinely enjoyable afternoon together is worth more than ten guilt-induced visits where everyone’s counting the minutes.
5. Refusing to respect their boundaries
When one of my grandchildren was young, I thought it was cute to sneak him extra cookies when his parents said no. It wasn’t cute—it was undermining their authority and showing disrespect for their rules.
Boundaries aren’t just about grandkids and cookies, though. They’re about respecting when your adult children say they need space, when they ask you not to discuss certain topics, or when they request that you call before dropping by.
Fighting their boundaries doesn’t bring you closer; it pushes them further away.
6. Living in the past
Do you find yourself constantly bringing up embarrassing childhood stories? Or comparing everything to “the good old days” when the kids were small?
While nostalgia has its place, constantly living in the past prevents you from building new memories and relationships with the adults your children have become. They want to be seen for who they are now, not just as extensions of their childhood selves.
7. Making everything about you
Your daughter shares exciting news about a work achievement, and somehow the conversation becomes about your career thirty years ago. Your son mentions he’s stressed, and suddenly you’re listing all your health problems.
As parenting expert, Jeffrey Bernstein Ph.D. notes, “Overhelping, overworrying, and overreacting push grown kids away.”
This includes making their experiences about our own feelings and reactions. Sometimes our kids just need us to celebrate with them or offer a sympathetic ear without redirecting the focus.
8. Criticizing their spouse or parenting
Nothing sends adult children running faster than criticism of their partner or parenting choices. Even if you think you’re being helpful, comments about their spouse’s job, appearance, or family can create lasting damage.
The same goes for their parenting. Unless they’re asking for advice or there’s genuine danger involved, keep your opinions to yourself. Remember, they’re figuring it out just like we did—through trial, error, and finding what works for their family.
Closing thoughts
Here’s what I’ve discovered after all these years: our adult children don’t need us to be perfect parents. They need us to be good company.
Think about it—what makes you want to spend time with someone? Probably the same things that make our kids want to visit: feeling respected, heard, and accepted for who you are.
The beautiful thing is, it’s never too late to change these patterns. I’m still working on some of these myself, and every small improvement makes a difference.
So here’s my question for you: which of these habits hits closest to home? Because recognizing it is the first step toward those visits you’ve been dreaming of—the ones where nobody’s watching the clock.
