Psychology says the parents whose adult children gradually stop visiting aren’t usually the ones who were cruel or absent — they’re often the ones so focused on providing and protecting that they never learned to simply be company, and children grow up moving towards the people they feel easy with rather than the people they owe the most to

by Lachlan Brown
March 27, 2026

There’s a version of this story that’s easy to tell. The parent was cruel. The parent was absent. The parent did something unforgivable, and the adult child walked away.

But that’s not the version I keep hearing. The version I keep hearing, from friends, from readers, from people in my own life, is quieter and more confusing than that.

It’s the parent who worked two jobs so their kid could go to a good school. The parent who drove to every game, paid for every lesson, fixed every problem before it became a problem. The parent who did everything right on paper.

And now their adult child calls once a month. Maybe less. Visits are polite but short. There’s no hostility. There’s just distance.

Psychology has a lot to say about why this happens. And most of it has nothing to do with bad parenting.

The disconnect between providing and connecting

A 2021 study out of Ohio State University led by psychologist Sarah Schoppe-Sullivan found something striking: when it comes to why adult children pull away, parents and children almost never agree on the reason. Only 18% of mothers in the study believed they were at fault. Meanwhile, research on the children’s side consistently points to emotional factors like a lack of emotional intimacy, conflicting expectations, and feeling unseen in ways that have nothing to do with material provision.

That gap in perception is the whole story, really. A parent can genuinely believe they gave everything. And the child can genuinely feel they got everything except the one thing they actually needed, which was to feel emotionally known.

Dr. Joshua Coleman, a clinical psychologist who has spent over four decades working with estranged families, describes this as a generational mismatch in expectations. For many parents, especially those raised in households where survival was the priority, love was expressed through sacrifice. You showed up by providing. You protected by controlling. Emotional conversation wasn’t part of the toolkit because nobody handed it to them.

But the generation they raised grew up in a different psychological landscape. One where emotional intelligence, boundaries, and feeling safe in a relationship became the baseline for whether people stayed close to you. Not obligation. Not guilt. How you made them feel.

Attachment theory explains the drift

John Bowlby, the British psychiatrist who developed attachment theory, argued that the quality of emotional responsiveness between a caregiver and a child shapes the blueprint for every relationship that child will have for the rest of their life. Not whether the caregiver was present. Not whether food was on the table. Whether the child felt emotionally safe.

When a parent is consistent, warm, and emotionally available, the child develops what Bowlby called a secure attachment. They grow up feeling confident that relationships are safe and that they deserve closeness. When a parent is physically present but emotionally unavailable, dismissive of feelings, or focused primarily on problem-solving rather than listening, the child often develops an avoidant attachment style. They learn early on that their emotions aren’t really welcome, so they stop bringing them.

And here’s the part that breaks my heart. Children with avoidant attachment don’t usually rebel. They don’t slam doors. They just quietly move toward the people who feel easier to be around. By the time they’re adults, the drift is already complete. It doesn’t look like estrangement. It looks like a slow fade.

It’s not about ingratitude

This is where it gets painful for parents, because from their perspective, they gave everything. And in a material sense, they did. But the research keeps pointing to the same conclusion.

A study published in the Journal of Marriage and Family by researchers at Purdue University found that one of the strongest predictors of estrangement between mothers and adult children was a perceived difference in values and outlook on life. Not abuse. Not neglect. A sense that the parent and child were operating in fundamentally different emotional languages.

And population-level data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth shows that about 6% of respondents report a period of estrangement from their mothers, with the average age of first maternal estrangement being 26. For fathers, the number jumps to 26%. These aren’t extreme outlier cases. This is happening in ordinary families, between people who love each other but have no idea how to reach each other.

The adult child isn’t thinking, “my parent was terrible.” They’re thinking, “I don’t know how to be myself around them.” And rather than navigate that discomfort forever, they do what humans have always done. They move toward ease.

The provider trap

I think about this in my own life. I have a young daughter, and there’s a version of fatherhood that’s easy to fall into, especially when you’re building something. Work hard. Provide well. Make sure she has everything she needs.

But “everything she needs” isn’t just a roof and an education. It’s me sitting on the floor playing something pointless for twenty minutes and being genuinely present. It’s not fixing her problems but letting her feel whatever she’s feeling without rushing to make it better.

That distinction, between providing and being present, might be the most important parenting insight I’ve come across. And it’s one that a lot of well-meaning parents miss entirely, because they were raised in environments where presence was a luxury and provision was love.

This connects to something I’ve been sitting with from Buddhist philosophy. There’s a concept around non-attachment that people misunderstand as not caring. It’s actually the opposite. It’s caring without needing to control. Being present without needing to fix. I explored this at length in my book, Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego, and it’s reshaped how I think about every close relationship in my life, especially parenthood. The ego says, “look at everything I’ve given you.” Presence says, “I’m here. What do you need from me right now?”

What this means if you’re the parent

If your adult child has quietly pulled away and you can’t figure out why, the answer probably isn’t that you did something wrong. It might be that you did a lot of things right but missed the emotional piece that would have made everything else land differently.

That’s not a condemnation. It’s an opportunity. Because unlike material provision, emotional availability isn’t something that expires. You can start at any point.

Coleman’s research shows that the parents who successfully reconnect with estranged adult children are almost always the ones who lead with empathy rather than defensiveness. Who say, “I think I may not have given you what you needed emotionally, and I want to understand that,” rather than, “after everything I did for you.”

The second response is about the parent. The first one is about the child.

And that shift, from performing love to actually connecting, is the whole difference between a child who visits out of obligation and one who visits because they want to be there.

 

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