Coaching Your Family Relationships
Is your relationship with your adult child strained, distant, or heading toward estrangement?
Do you replay conversations, walk on eggshells, or wonder what you did wrong?
Are you dealing with family conflict, difficult adult children, or toxic in-laws — and feeling powerless to fix it?
You’re not alone.
I’m Tina Gosney, Family Conflict Coach and Family Life Educator. I help parents move from anxiety, overfunctioning, and emotional reactivity to calm, confident connection — even when their adult child won’t change.
Grounded in Bowen Family Systems theory and nervous system science, this podcast will help you:
1. Understand why stress spreads through a family system
2. Recognize patterns like overfunctioning, fixing, triangles, and emotional cutoff
3. Stop walking on eggshells
4. Navigate adult child conflict without losing yourself
5. Repair strained relationships with your adult child in a healthy way
At the heart of this work is the Differentiated Connection Map — balancing two core needs in every family:
• Closeness and belonging
• Individuality and autonomy
Through my HEAL framework, you’ll learn how to:
Hold onto yourself
Engage with calm clarity
Allow space for difference
Lead with grounded love
You cannot control your adult child.
But you can change your position in the system.
And when one parent becomes steadier, the entire family shifts.
If you’re searching for how to repair your relationship with your adult child and reduce family conflict without losing yourself — you’re in the right place.
Coaching Your Family Relationships
Boundaries with Your Adult Child: Stepping Back When You're Used to Being Needed
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Let us know what you think about the podcast!
Episode 216 - Boundaries with Your Adult Child: Stepping Back When You're Used to Being Needed
If you're a parent of an adult child and you're still worrying, managing, advising, and rescuing — this episode is for you. Today we're diving deep into the over-functioning parent dynamic: what it is, why it happens, and what it's really costing both you and your child. Drawing on Bowen Family Systems and attachment research, we unpack the four hidden drivers of parental over-functioning — from distrust and anxiety to identity and fear — and explore what it actually looks like to prepare your child for the road, instead of trying to clear it for them.
Tina Gosney is the Family Conflict Coach. She works with parents who have families in conflict to help them become the grounded, confident leaders their family needs.
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If you want support putting what you’re learning into practice, come join The Connection Community in Bridge to Connection. You’ll get step-by-step relationship lessons, practical tools to calm anxiety and reduce conflict, and live monthly coaching calls to help you stay steady and build real connection with your child—especially when things feel tense. Learn more and join at https://www.courageous-connections.com/bridge-to-connection3
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Tina is certified in family relationships and a trauma informed coach.
Visit tinagosney.com for more information on coaching services.
You know, sometimes you just call to check-in and somehow you end up doing their laundry list of problems in your head, spinning out in your head for the next few hours. You give advice, they don't take it, you give it again, maybe a little bit louder, maybe a little bit more urgently. You lie awake at night replaying a decision that they made, like a job they didn't take, a person that they're dating, money that they spent, and you're thinking, if I could just get them to see what I see, then everything would be fine. You've rearranged your life, your finances, your emotional bandwidth, your entire nervous system around an adult who doesn't live under your roof anymore. And then somewhere in the back of your mind, there's this voice, it's really hard to listen to sometimes, but it wants to whisper, is this even working? Is any of this actually working? If any of this sounded like something that you've been through, this podcast is for you. I want to welcome you to Coaching Your Family Relationships. If you are a new listener, welcome. I'm so glad to have you here. And if you've been here with me for a while, welcome back. I am so glad that you've come back. I am Tina Gosni. I'm a family conflict coach and a family life educator. On this podcast, we talk about what to do when your relationship with your adult child feels strained, confused, or even painful. And we do it through a family systems lens. Because here is the really the thing that I want you to hold on to is that when one person in a family becomes more steady, more calm, more grounded, the entire relationship system, the entire family can begin to shift. Today we're going to talk about and go deep on one of the most painful, misunderstood, under talked about dynamics in family life, which is overfunctioning parents of adult children. These are not, I'm not talking about the helicopter parents of teenagers or small children. I'm not talking about hovering over homework. I'm talking about the parent who has a 25-year-old or a 32-year-old, maybe even a 45 or a 55-year-old, and they are still managing, fixing, rescuing, advising, worrying, and maybe even quietly controlling, often without even fully realizing what they're doing. By the end of this episode, I want you to understand why you're doing this, what it's costing both you and your child, and most importantly, I want you to see what it looks like to actually prepare your child for the road of life instead of trying to clear it out for them. So let's get into this. Whether this is your first episode or you've been a listener for a while, I want to say something before we dive in. If you are an overfunctioning parent, I need you to know something before anything else. You are not a bad parent. Full stop. In fact, you're here listening to this show, and that shows that you have already, you've already questioned, you're already curious, you're already open to maybe seeing something differently. And that takes genuine courage. That is a difficult thing to do because these relationships are so important and precious to us, and it's hard to let go. But I'm also not going to let you off the hook today because love is not enough of an explanation. In fact, love is what motivates overfunctioning. It doesn't explain it, it definitely doesn't justify it. So let's be honest together. Okay. Today's episode is structured into four parts. Part one is what overfunctioning actually is, what it looks like in families with adult children. Part two is four hidden drivers, the real reasons that parents are overfunctioning, most of which are invisible to the parents themselves. And part three, the core truth of this entire conversation. You cannot clear the road of life for your child. It was never even possible to do that. And the cost of trying to do that is enormous. Part four is what does the shift look like if we do it slowly and perfectly, but we are very relational about how we do it, about how we are going from road clearing to road preparing. That's what we're going to talk about. And I want to be also super honest right up here with the front. I am a recovering, overfunctioning parent. So I resonate very deeply with the things that I'm going to talk to you about because this is something that I had a lot of trouble with in my younger years. Okay, so here's part one. What is overfunctioning? What does it look like? Well, this term overfunctioning comes from Bowen family systems. And that was developed by a psychiatrist called Murray Bowen in the mid-20th century. It's this concept about how that changed how therapists and coaches understand families and family relationships. We're not a collection of individuals that just happen to be either living together or related to each other, but the family functions as one system, an emotional system, a relational system. And systems have patterns and pressures and these kind of invisible rules and expectational pools that keep everybody in their role, they keep everybody in their place and they keep patterns in place as well. So in a family system, overfunctioning and underfunctioning are almost always paired together. They're two sides of the same coin. So when one person functions above their level, which means they're doing more, they're managing more, they're worrying more, they're fixing more, another person in the system functions below their level. They pull back, they disengage, they let somebody else do the work, they let someone else carry the weight. And slowly, over time, they develop what we call functional helplessness. But here's something that's very critical. Neither the over-functioning person nor the under-functioning person usually chose their role consciously. It just gradually evolved over time, over years, and sometimes even over generations. Once the system is established, both people keep doing things, behaving in ways that reinforce it. They keep doing the same patterns, even when both of them hate the pattern. You don't have to, you don't change something just because you hate the pattern. You just keep doing it because you don't even see that it's a pattern. So what does an overfunctioning look like when the child is now an adult? I'm going to give you some real life scenarios and just see if any of these feel familiar. Scenario number one: your adult child calls you with a problem, maybe something at work, maybe a conflict with their partner, maybe they're under some financial stress. And within about 90 seconds, you're in solution fix-fit mode. You're Googling stuff, you're making calls, you're sending them articles or podcasts. You drafted a three-point plan. You've already thought about this problem more than they have. Their life becomes your project to manage. Okay, that's scenario number one. Scenario number two, your adult child never explicitly asks for help, but somehow you're always there. You're paying a bill they didn't ask you to pay. You're calling their landlord on their behalf. You're reaching out to a friend that they have conflict with. Maybe you're over at their home mowing their lawn or fixing something. You're smoothing something over before they even know that it needs to be smoothed. You're operating in the background, just quietly managing consequences before anything can come around. Okay. Scenario number three. This is the advice repeater. You've given them the same piece of advice 15 times. You know you have, and yet that 16th time feels necessary. Because surely if you say it right this time, if you have the right tone with the right framing and you say the right words, they're finally going to hear it. And this time they're going to get it. So you say it again and again and again. You might even, at this point, there might come a point where you stop giving explicit advice and now you're just trying to get them to listen implicitly because you do something like mention a podcast that you listened to that you thought was really interesting. But your ulterior motive is to get them to listen to the podcast because you know they're the ones who really need to hear it. And maybe they'll listen to that other person even if they won't listen to you. Okay. Scenario number four. This is the emotional first responder. Your adult child's mood is your mood. If they're struggling, you're devastated. If they're anxious, you can't sleep. Your emotional state is so entangled with theirs that you have essentially outsourced your inner peace to someone who is now a separate adult that doesn't even live with you. They're a separate human being. But when they hurt, you hurt. When they make a poor choice, you feel it like it has become like this, you know, physical injury to yourself. Scenario number five. Maybe they paid a late a bill late, maybe they have a strained friendship, a job they might lose. You find yourself intervening, you find yourself rescuing, you make the problem go away. And maybe they ask you to, maybe they don't. But the watching them experience the consequence of that choice is so unbearable to you. And so you step in and you're their safety net. Here's what's important to notice about all five of those scenarios that I just gave you. In every single one of them, the parent is convinced they are helping. And in a very narrow, like immediate specific way, they are helping. At least they might be. So the bill gets paid, the conflict gets smoothed over, a consequence gets avoided. But let's zoom out because we have a hard time when we are activated to zoom out because we want to zoom in. Our natural nervous system response is to zoom in. So let's zoom out. Let's look at this pattern. What happens over months or years? What is it doing to this adult human being? What message is being sent? Not in words, but in behavior, about their capability, about their judgment, about their right as a human to stumble and make mistakes and recover on their own terms. Well, we're going to come back to that, but first let's talk about why parents overfunction and why it's almost never what it appears to be on the surface. So there are four hidden drivers of overfunctioning. And if you ask most overfunctioning parents why they do what they do, they're going to give you some version of this answer. Because I love them, because I want what's best for them, because I care so much about them. And I understand that so well. That love is real, it is genuine, it is deep. And take this from one over-functioning, recovering person, parent. I know how much you care, and I know that you want what's best for them. But love is the fuel and it's not the engine. If we really want to understand why a parent is overfunctioning with an adult child, we have to look at the engine. We have to look at what is actually driving the behavior. What's underneath that love? What's underneath the good intentions? What's underneath that saying of like, I'm just trying to help? Based on the clinical literature on family systems, on attachment, and on anxiety, I want to walk you through the four hidden drivers. And these are the real reasons that parents overfunction. And they just exist below the surface. We're rarely conscious of them. So the first one is that we don't trust that they're going to make the right choices. And it's really painful to name. Um, so I'm just gonna name it. It's significantly a part of overfunctioning is a lack of trust in their judgment. So that might be earned. You might have seen them use poor judgment in the past. And so maybe they earned that way that you're thinking about them. Maybe they have really made some genuinely concerning choices. There, maybe there have actually been really dire consequences, real messes and real moments where you thought, see, they can't do this without me. They need me to guide them. But here's the thing about distrust in family systems. It tends to become a self-fulfilling prophecy. When a parent consistently communicates through their actions, maybe sometimes through their words, but definitely through their actions, like, I don't trust you to make the right call. And their adult child receives that message, whether they even know that they're receiving it, sometimes they just feel it and it becomes internalized without even like having it be a conscious thought, they respond to it in one of two ways. They will either internalize it and begin to doubt themselves, like they genuinely struggle to trust their own instincts, because someone that they love and respect has spent years sending signals that your instincts are not reliable. Or the second thing that they do is they rebel against it. So making choices, making their own choices feel like they're asserting their independence, even when they know that those choice, those choices are not the best ones. Because part of them is just not making a life decision. They're making this statement like, you don't control me. I make my own choices. So neither outcome is what the parent wants, but both are predictable when distrust is underneath the relationship. It's like that undercurrent in the relationship. So here is the harder question: How much of your distrust in your child is actually distrust in yourself? And this is where family systems get really honest because overfunctioning parents will often grow up in systems where they were not trusted. This is how we pass things down from generations. Someone else managed your choices and your instincts and your capabilities were overridden, or maybe they were never, you were never given the space when you were younger to develop your own instincts. And now unconsciously you repeat that dynamic. Either because that's the only template and example that you've had, or because part of you has not really ever resolved your own relationship with your own trust and your own autonomy. So developing the ability to trust ourselves and exercise our own autonomy, these are really vital things to human development. And we can't be a really healthy human being unless we have spent the time developing the ability to trust ourselves. So here's hidden driver number two. We don't believe that they are capable of making adult decisions. This might sound like the same one, but it's not, and they're related. I want to show you why they're related and not the same. So distrust is about judgment. Like you might choose wrong, but this one is about capacity. You aren't equipped to choose at all. So it's very insidious because it lives underneath this genuine love and care. And they're usually the most devoted, attentive, present parents that you're ever going to meet, which is exactly the problem. So when a parent is so deeply, deeply involved in managing every dimension of this child's life from childhood and into the late elementary years and early adolescence and the late teen years, and it carries over into adulthood. That child never gets the opportunity to develop the competencies that come from navigating difficulties and making mistakes. So I want you to think of it this way: competence is not a trait that we're born with. We have it or we don't have it. It's actually a muscle. And muscles that they grow through resistance. Think about if you never work out a muscle, it becomes very weak. But if you work a muscle consistently over time and challenge that muscle, it grows stronger. When parents overfunctioning, they're overfunctioning for their child, they are removing the resistance. So they're preventing the very experiences, the mistakes, and the stumbles and the recoveries and the thoughts of like, I got to figure this out. They're removing those from their child, and that's what builds adult capacity. And then sometimes that same parent looks at their child and thinks, they're not capable of handling this on their own. And they're not, what they're not recognizing is that that incapability that they're seeing is at least in part a direct result of their years of overfunctioning in their child's life. This is one of the most heartbreaking loops in family systems works, is um, you know, this overfunctioning parent has created the very thing that they were trying to prevent. Here's hidden driver number three. This I, you know, thought of like, I am so terrified that you are gonna make a mistake that will change the trajectory of your life, an irredeemable mistake. And this one is purely driven out of anxiety. I want you to sit with that for a moment because I think that's the most honest driver and the one that parents are most ashamed of. And the fear, if we strip it down, it's like, what if something they make a choice that ruins their life? What if they make a choice like the wrong job, they marry the wrong person, they get into the wrong financial situation, they struggle with something that damages them permanently. And I watched it coming and I didn't stop it. That fear is not irrational. It totally comes from love. It comes from this parent's deepest protective instinct. It's that same instinct that made you hover over their crib and made you, you know, stand behind them when they were starting to walk so they didn't fall and hurt themselves. It's that same impulse that made you, you know, grab their hand when they cross the street. But the truth is that anxiety doesn't want you to hear this, is that very few adult mistakes are actually irredeemable. And I want to say that again because I think that, you know, it gets lost in all that worry and anxiety, is that very few adult mistakes are actually permanently, life-destroyingly irredeemable. People recover from bad marriages. People recover after financial disasters. People change careers, they move to a different city, they change the direction of their life, people leave harmful relationships, people get sober, people go back to school, people find their way back to themselves after years or even decades of wandering. The human capacity for resilience is extraordinary. It's one of the things that most consistently predicts whether someone can recover from a hard season of life, and that is backed by decades of resilience research, which is this secure sense of self-efficacy. It's this belief that is developed through experience that I am capable of getting through hard things. That belief is built in the crucible, in the fire of difficulty, not in safety that prevents the fire from happening. When a parent's anxiety drives them to prevent every foreseeable mistake, they are not protecting their child from a ruined life. They're protecting their child from the experiences that build resilience. And those experiences help us to survive. And then we become we gain the confidence to do hard things. And the the thing that no parent wants to accept that we really want to um avoid believing is that we cannot protect our child from life. You can delay it, you can buffer it, you can soften some edges, but you can't prevent hard things from coming to your child because that's not even possible. Your child is going to go through hard things. And are they going to face those hard things with the muscle memory of someone who has navigated difficulties before? Or are they going to face them as someone who's been protected and buffered their entire life, that hasn't developed the tools to handle hard things? They don't have a history, they don't have internal evidence that they're capable of getting through hard things. Here's hidden driver number four, and this is a really tough one. This is the belief that their choices reflect onto you. Nobody wants to say this out loud, and it's real, and we have to name it. That some portion of that parental overfunctioning, and this percentage varies widely from one person to another. It's about the parent's own image. It's about their reputation, about their sense of identity. So when your adult child is struggling, if they're failing, if they're making choices that you don't agree with, there is part of the parent's brain that translates that into what does this mean about me? How does this define my worth? Did I do the parenting thing right? Was I a successful parent or was I a failure as a parent? And what are other people going to think? What are the neighbors going to think? What will my family think? What does this mean about me? This is not a character flaw. This is a natural, profoundly human response. And it's intensified in cultures that have very strong narratives about what successful parenting looks like. Now we live in a world where parenting is heavily evaluated publicly, and where parents have absorbed this message over generations that your child's outcome are a direct referendum on your parenting. But I want to tell you something, and this is really important. When your primary motivation for intervening in your adult child's life is a management of your own image or your own reputation, you are no longer acting in their interest. You are acting in yours. And that is not love. And they feel that. Your adult child feels that. Even when they can't put their finger on it, even when they don't have, you know, the words to define it or express it, they feel the difference between my parent is intervening because they're afraid for me, and my parent is intervening because they're afraid of the mistake of my mistake and how it makes them look. So the second one breeds resentment and very deep resentment. And that can erode the relationship quickly or very quietly over years. So here are the four drivers: distressed, doubt of their capability, fear of irredeemable mistakes, and the protection of your own identity. And the most important thing I want to say about all four of them, as they're almost never about your adult child. They are about you. They're about your history, your anxiety, your unresolved fears, your unmet needs, your unexamined beliefs about what it means to be a good parent. And as I say that, I want to assure you that this is not an accusation. This is an invitation. Because the moment that you recognize that your overfunctioning is about you and not them, then that becomes something that we can work with. There's a path that becomes more clear to us. I want to tell you something that I think is the most important sentence in this entire conversation, in this entire podcast. Are you ready for this? You cannot clear the road of life for your child. It is not possible. And it never was. No matter how much money you have, no matter how well connected you are, no matter how smart, how devoted, how sacrificial your love is, you cannot remove the difficulty from your adult child's path. You can surely postpone it. You know, you can delay it, you can relocate it, but you cannot eliminate it. And every moment that you spend trying to clear a road that cannot be cleared is a moment that you're not doing the one thing that would actually help them, which would be prepare them for the road that they're going to travel. So let's make this more concrete. Clearing the road looks like paying off debt so they don't have to face financial consequence. Um, calling their boss, their landlord, the professor, the friend, whoever to fix the problem before they have to. Um, giving advice so persistently and repeatedly that they don't even hear their own voice anymore. Making a hard decision for them so they don't have to sit in the discomfort of having the uncertainty of not knowing what to do. And even stepping in before they've been given the chance to step in for themselves. Okay, so those are all examples of what the road look, what it looks like when you're trying to clear the road. This is an example of what it looks like when you're preparing them for the road. You sit with your own discomfort long enough to let them sit with theirs. You ask them, what are you thinking about doing, instead of telling them what to do. You let them make a choice you disagree with, and you stay present to support the aftermath rather than prevent it. You say, I believe that you can figure this out, and you even mean it. You're not pretending that. You mean that even when it's so hard to say that. And you trust that that difficulty that is in their life is for them and not happening to them. So clearing the road and preparing for the road, these are not the same thing. They require completely different things from you as a parent. Road clearing requires effort, resources, energy, control, fixing. But road preparing requires something so much harder: restraint, trust, tolerance of your own anxiety, and ultimately it requires a lot of faith. So I want to tell you about a metaphor I came back to often when I worked with overfunctioning parents. I want you to think of the process that a butterfly uses to emerge from its cocoon, from its chrysalis. That butterfly, I used to collect butterfly cocoons and put them in an aquarium when I was a child. And I loved so much to watch that butterfly come out of its chrysalis and spread its wings. And then I would go take it outside and set it free. The butterfly has to struggle. It has to push. It takes a long time. And if you're watching this, it could look like they're suffering. And there were times when I was a child that I really wanted to just like help it to come out, you know, to just like open up that cocoon a little bit. And that's what we do as parents. We're so well-meaning and loving, and we think I can help them. So it would be so easy for me when I was a kid to take a small pair of scissors and just like gentle, gently, you know, lovingly open this chrysalis. But if I did that, the butterfly can come out easily with no struggle, but then it dies. Because the struggle, that resistance that they have to go through, that effort to push through the cocoon and the chrysalis is what pumps the fluid into the butterfly's wings. And without a struggle, those wings do not develop. And without a butterfly's wings developing, they can't fly and there's they can't live. And so the difficulty was not a mistake in the design. The difficulty was the design. The same as with us. Your adult child's struggles are not evidence that you failed. In many cases, they are evidence that the process is working exactly as it is supposed to. Your job is not to cut open the chrysalis. Your job is to trust the process, to be there, to stay in the relationship, but to let the struggle do its necessary work. Now, I do want to be honest about something because I don't want this to become a simple, a simplistic, you know, okay, just back off and let them fail message, because that's not what I'm saying. There are situations, there are genuine crises, mental health emergencies, addiction, abusive relationships, and danger where parental involvement is not just appropriate, but it's necessary. And I am not talking about those situations here. So if that is the situation you are in, I am not talking to you. I am actually talking to the ordinary, grinding, daily, you know, accumulation of small interventions that, you know, taken one at a time, they seem harmless and even loving, but if we take them as a pattern over time, they communicate this devastating message that, you know, I don't believe that you can handle your life. And there is the message that your child receives when you overfunction. And it's not that I love you and not that I'm here, and not that you matter to me, but the message that they receive, the one that is delivered not in words, but in your behavior, is that you are not capable. You cannot be trusted with your own life. And without me, you're going to fail. And receiving that message over and over and over over time, over years, does so much damage. And it does more damage than the very mistakes you're trying to prevent. So let's go to part four. We're going to shift from road clearing to road preparing. This is the part you've probably been waiting for. So, okay, so what do I do with all of this? And I want to start by saying something that actually runs counter to most self-help content, and that this shift is not a technique. It's not a script, it's not five steps. This is an internal shift. This shift begins inside of you in your relationship with your own anxiety, your own history, and your own definition and beliefs of what good parents do. You cannot manage and checklist your way to differentiation. You have to grow your way there by going internally first. That said, growth has starting points. So I want to give you some honest, practical, psychologically grounded starting points for this shift. So point one is get honest about whose anxiety you are managing. The next time you feel the urge to intervene, so to call somebody, to fix something, to advise, to rescue, I want you to just pause just for a moment and ask yourself, wait, whose anxiety am I trying to manage right now? This is not a rhetorical question. You actually want to ask it. So is this intervention for them? Would it actually serve their long-term development, their autonomy, their capability? Or is it for you? Is it to relieve your own anxiety, your worry, your inability to tolerate the uncertainty of watching someone that you love so much navigate something difficult? That question is not designed to shame you. It's designed to locate you. Because when you can see clearly that urge to intervene is about your anxiety, not about their needs, then you have a choice. You can act on your anxiety or you can sit with it. And sitting with anxiety is not a comfortable process. It does help us to grow. And it is necessary for growth for us to sit with our own anxiety and learn how to manage our own anxiety. And to learn how to do that from within and not to try to manage everything outside of us. One of the most important distinctions in this entire conversation is the difference between support and management. So support says, hey, I'm here, I love you, I believe in you, I'm available if you want to talk. And management says, I've already decided what you should do, and I'm going to tell you over and over again until you do it because I feel responsible for the outcome. Either way, I'm going to feel responsible for it. So support supports the relationship and it keeps you connected with your adult child without controlling them. Management is more like coercion, even when it comes from love, because it communicates, you know, your autonomy is less important than my need to see you do the thing that I think is right. So here's a simple test. When you reach out, when you offer something, when you have a conversation, are you leaving space for a different outcome than the one you already decided should happen? Or have you entered a conversation with your mind made up about what should happen? Because if your mind is already made up, then that is management. And management, even though you want to say it's coming from love, is not respectful. So here's a third starting point that you can uh that you can go to. So, and this is argu arguably the hardest one, because one of the deepest functions of overfunctioning parent is that it gives us a sense of control in the face of uncertainty. Parental anxiety at its core is this unbearable uncertainty of, you know, I love this person more than I love myself, and I cannot guarantee their safety or happiness. And that is terrifying. That has always been terrifying from the very moment that you became a parent. You signed up for a relationship where your love is so enormous and your control is so small. Overfunctioning is an attempt to close the gap, to make the control match the love, to do enough that the uncertainty becomes manageable. But it doesn't work. That uncertainty does not go away, it just gets temporarily masked by the activity of management. And what you're left with is an adult child who has not had the room to grow, and a parent that has more and more anxiety because the system requires you to keep overfunctioning and be constantly managing to keep that illusion of control alive. So this antidote, you know, it's about developing your own capacity to tolerate the not knowing. This is the inner work, and it may involve coaching, it may involve therapy, it may, you know, it's probably going to involve examining the stories that you tell yourself about what is going to happen if your child fails. And it's almost certainly going to involve sitting with this feeling of helplessness and grief, because accepting that you cannot control someone else's life involves a real loss. And that is a loss of a fantasy. That fantasy is the love, that love is enough to protect someone else from difficulty, but it's not. And accepting that is genuinely painful. But on the other side of that is something really remarkable, which is freedom. And it's your freedom and their freedom. Here's a fourth starting point: is that you need to start investing in your own life. This might sound really frivolous in the context of this conversation, but I promise you it's not. Overfunctioning parents are often parents who, you know, gradually, without really even noticing it, they allowed their own life to become smaller and to shrink. Their interests, you know, their relationships, their sense of purpose, their inner world, all of it has slowly been put onto their child and their child's life. And this happens because, you know, sometimes managing someone else's life is a way that we don't fully confront our own life. So I want to ask you, what are you afraid of? What if your days, what would your days look like if they weren't focused on their days? What wants to grow in you because of all that dormant energy has been flying outward towards them? This is not a judgment, it's just a question that could be worth sitting with and asking yourself. Because one of the most important things a parent can do for their adult child, one of the most concrete ways to shift this over-functioning dynamic is to build a life that is yours. Build your interests, build your friendships, build your creativity, your creative side, build a spiritual practice, build a way of you care for caring for your physical self. Build something that matters for you. Because when your life is full, the urge to vicariously live through or manage their life just naturally diminishes. And you're not pouring your need for meaning into their choices because you have your own. There is a completely unintentional gift in this too. It's and that is the gift of your adult child being able to watch you build a full and meaningful life. Watching you reinvent yourself after your active parenting years are over. You can show them what it looks like to keep growing and to keep choosing and to keep living a life with intention. That is preparation for the road for showing them how to do that when they get to that point in their life. This you don't have to give them advice, you don't have to intervene, you just model what that looks like for them. Here's a starting point number five is that you can repair the relationship and you should repair the relationship before you repair the dynamic. So for some of you, that overfunctioning has gone on so long that the dynamic is entrenched enough that there's a real relationship repair that is needed. And your adult child may be really angry, they may be withdrawn, maybe they, you know, engage with you sarcastically, or they just disengage. They might have stopped telling you things because they know it's going to result in a lecture, or you're going to try to fix something, or you're going to try to rescue them. Okay. So if this is the case, please don't start this shift by withdrawing without an explanation. There is a version of this story where the parent hears about everything that I've talked about today and decides to stop overfunctioning and simply just goes silent and stops calling and stops offering and stops being present. And then their adult child who has been sending signals for years, like, I need space, I need, I need you to let me make my own choices. You know, suddenly this parent is absent. And they don't see that as respectful, they see that as abandonment. Because the child who was overfunctioned with has they have their own complexity, their own internalization of this dynamic. They have may have come to rely on that overfunctioning parent even as they still resented it. They might feel, and this is kind of paradoxical, that if you stop showing up in the ways that you have, that it means you don't love them anymore because that's the way that they thought you showed your love for them. So this shift needs to be named. And this is not, this doesn't have to be a dramatic confrontation, but just as a conversation. It might look something like this. You know, I've been doing some thinking, and I realize I've been showing up in your life in ways that have not really benefited you. And I really want to do things differently because I love you so much and I want you to know I'm still here. But I want to trust you more too. And I want you to lead more of your own life and your own story. So that conversation, you say it simply and humbly and without an agenda for how they respond, that itself is an act of preparation. It's saying, hey, this road ahead in your life is yours to travel. And I think that you're ready for it. We've covered a lot of ground today. So let's just kind of wrap it all up. Overfunctioning in a family system is not a character flaw. It's an anxiety management strategy that became a relationship pattern. And it usually comes from love. But it is sustained by fear. Fear of your child's judgment, their capability, um, their potential for irredeemable mistakes, and yes, sometimes even your own reflection in their choices. But underneath all of it is this kind of magical thinking that if you do enough, if you manage enough, if you worry enough, if you give enough, that you can clear the road so they won't have to go through hard things. But that's not possible. The road cannot be cleared, but it can be prepared for. And what the preparation actually looks like is not you intervening. It's a relationship in one in which your child, your Adult child feels to their core, down into their bones, that you believe they are capable. You trust them to run their own life and that you'll be there when they need you. And you trust them to know when that is. That's the parent they need. They do not need the parent that clears the road. They need the parent who prepares them for it. Before I let you go, I want to leave you with a question. This is not an assignment, it's just something that you can think about, you know, as you are driving or doing dishes or doing something else this week. So this question is if you truly believed all the way down to your core that your adult child was capable of navigating their own life, what would you do differently? Would you stop doing something? What would you start trusting? That's your question to think about. Thanks for being here with me. And thanks for your honesty in listening. I know this was probably a difficult one for many people, but if this episode resonated with you, I'd love if you shared it with someone who needs to hear it. Maybe a co-parent, maybe a sibling, maybe a friend. These conversations are hard to start. And sometimes an episode like this is the way to open the door. Or at least to, you know, to crack the door open. So if you're navigating a particularly complex family dynamic, I want to be really clear. A podcast can be that, you know, that crack in the door. But a therapist or a coach, particularly one that is trained in family systems, relational therapy, and Bowen theory, can walk you through it. So please don't do this alone if you don't have to. Those happens to be, and those things happen to be the things that I'm trained in and the things that I specialize in. And I would love to support you in this if this feels like a like something that you are called to. I would love to have you reach out. So in the next episode, we are going to talk about the other side of the coin, the other side of this dynamic, what under functioning actually looks like in adult children and why it's not laziness or indifference. And you know, how how does this over or how does this under and over pattern get passed down in generations? You won't want to miss it. And until then, stay curious about your family system because it has a lot to teach you. Thanks for being here with me today. Remember, you don't have to do this perfectly. Just keep showing up and learning because when one person in a family becomes more grounded, the whole relationship system can begin to heal. This is Coaching Your Family Relationships, and I'm Tina Gosni. I'll be here with you next week with the under functioning adult child.