If your parents let you fail when you were young you probably handle these 10 adult situations better than most

by Allison Price
February 1, 2026

You know that sinking feeling when your five-year-old comes home with scraped knees and tears streaming down her face because she fell off the monkey bars? My instinct is always to rush over, scoop her up, and promise we’ll never go near those metal rungs again.

But then I remember something. When I was her age, my parents let me fall off my bike about a dozen times before I finally figured out how to balance. They watched from the porch, ready to help if I really needed it, but they didn’t rush to catch me every single time I wobbled.

Looking back now, those scraped knees taught me more than any safety lecture ever could. And I’ve noticed something interesting: friends who had similar childhoods seem to navigate adult challenges with a certain ease that others struggle to find.

If your parents gave you room to fail and figure things out when you were young, you probably developed some serious life skills that serve you well today. Here are ten adult situations you likely handle better than most.

1) You bounce back from job rejections without spiraling

Remember when you didn’t make the soccer team in third grade and had to figure out what to do with that disappointment? That early practice with failure means job rejections don’t destroy you now.

While others might take weeks to recover from a “thanks, but no thanks” email, you probably dust yourself off and start applying again within days. You learned early that rejection isn’t about your worth as a person. It’s just one outcome that didn’t work out.

2) You can handle criticism at work without getting defensive

When your boss points out areas for improvement, do you immediately start crafting defensive arguments in your head? Or can you actually hear what they’re saying?

If your parents let you experience natural consequences, you probably learned that feedback isn’t an attack. Just like when you forgot your homework and had to explain it to your teacher yourself, you understand that criticism is information, not judgment.

3) You don’t panic when things don’t go according to plan

Last week, our family camping trip turned into a disaster when we arrived to find our reserved spot given away. My husband started getting stressed, but I just shrugged and said we’d figure it out.

Growing up in the Midwest with parents who believed in letting us solve our own problems, I learned that plans falling apart isn’t the end of the world. It’s just Tuesday. You adapt, you pivot, you find another solution.

4) You’re comfortable admitting when you don’t know something

Have you ever noticed how some people will pretend to know things rather than admit ignorance? If your parents let you fail, you probably aren’t one of them.

When I was teaching kindergarten, I watched parents swoop in to answer every question for their kids. But those of us who had to figure things out ourselves? We learned it’s okay to say “I don’t know, but I’ll find out.”

5) You take calculated risks without needing constant reassurance

Starting my blog, leaving teaching after seven years, trying cloth diapers with my first baby even though everyone said I’d give up? These decisions came naturally because I learned early that trying and failing isn’t catastrophic.

Friends who were cushioned from every potential failure often need endless validation before making big moves. But when you’ve been allowed to fail, you trust your ability to handle whatever comes next.

6) You don’t blame others when things go wrong

This one’s huge. When something goes sideways in your life, what’s your first instinct? If you grew up experiencing natural consequences, you probably look at your own role first.

My recovering perfectionist side still struggles with this sometimes, but those childhood experiences of facing my own mistakes taught me that blaming others doesn’t fix anything. It just keeps you stuck.

7) You can sit with uncomfortable emotions without immediately trying to fix them

When my two-year-old has a meltdown because his tower fell down, every part of me wants to rebuild it for him instantly. But I remember how my parents would let me feel frustrated when things didn’t work out.

As adults, this translates to being able to feel disappointed, angry, or sad without immediately reaching for distractions or quick fixes. You know these feelings will pass because you’ve felt them before and survived.

8) You’re better at problem-solving under pressure

Remember being eight years old and realizing you forgot your lunch money? If your parents made you figure it out instead of rushing to school with cash, you probably developed some serious problem-solving skills.

Now when deadlines loom or unexpected problems pop up, you don’t freeze. You’ve been practicing creative solutions since childhood.

9) You have realistic expectations of yourself and others

Growing up with parents who let you fail means you learned early that nobody’s perfect, including you. This makes adult relationships so much easier.

You don’t expect your partner to read your mind. You don’t assume your kids will never mess up. You don’t beat yourself up for not having it all together. You learned long ago that failure is part of being human.

10) You can start over without seeing it as defeat

Whether it’s a failed business, a ended relationship, or a career change, starting over doesn’t feel like the end of the world to you. Why? Because you’ve been practicing fresh starts since you were little.

Every time you fell and got back up as a kid, every time you had to try again after messing up, you were building resilience muscles that serve you now.

The bottom line

Watching my daughter navigate her own small failures, I sometimes have to sit on my hands to keep from jumping in. But then I remember the gift my parents gave me by letting me stumble.

They weren’t being cruel or neglectful. They were close enough to catch me if I really needed it, but far enough away to let me learn. And now, as an adult navigating everything from parenting challenges to career changes, I’m grateful for every scrape and bruise.

If your parents let you fail, they gave you something precious: the knowledge that you can handle whatever comes your way. Not because you’ll never fall, but because you know how to get back up.

And honestly? In a world that often feels uncertain and overwhelming, that might be the most valuable skill of all.

 

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