Parent First, Friend Never: How Modern Parenting Is Creating a Society of Entitlement and No Accountability
Parent First, Friend Never: How Modern Parenting Is Creating a Society of Entitlement and No Accountability
By TD Goodman Books
Let’s make this clear: You were never meant to be your child’s best friend.
You were meant to be their parent, their guide, their disciplinarian, their protector, and their builder.
We live in a time where too many parents have swapped roles—trying to be "cool," "liked," or seen as "one of the gang." But the cost? A generation of children who are:
- Ungrateful,
- Spoiled,
- Disrespectful, and
- Detached from consequences.
And when those kids become adults, we get what we’re seeing now: a broken society full of people who believe they’re never wrong, believe rules are suggestions, and think everyone else is to blame.
Being Their Parent Is Not Being Their Enemy—It’s Being What They Need Most
Children don’t need you to be their buddy.
They need structure.
They need correction.
They need someone to tell them "no" when the world keeps telling them "yes."
The job of a parent is to prepare a child for the real world, not protect them from it by padding them in emotional lies and overindulgence. When you give your child everything without requiring responsibility, you raise a tyrant. Not a leader. Not a respectful citizen. A narcissist in training.
The Dangers of Friend-Parenting
Here’s what happens when you choose to be their friend instead of their parent:
1. They become entitled.
They expect rewards without effort, praise without performance, and protection from every mistake—because that’s what "friends" do. But real life doesn’t work that way.
2. They stop respecting authority.
When you blur the lines, they don’t know where authority begins or ends. Teachers, bosses, law enforcement—suddenly everyone becomes an enemy when they’re corrected.
3. You start believing your child can do no wrong.
This is the most dangerous delusion. Parents become blind advocates instead of honest evaluators. You defend them even when they’re wrong, and you excuse behavior that should’ve been corrected years ago.
4. They don’t know how to handle discipline.
When they finally face real-world consequences—losing a job, failing school, being arrested—they’re emotionally shattered. Why? Because their "friend" at home always shielded them from discomfort.
5. Society pays the price.
This isn’t just a family issue—it’s a national one. Weak homes create weak citizens. No discipline at home means no regard for law, order, or responsibility in public.
What Real Parenting Looks Like
- It looks like telling them “no.”
- It looks like enforcing consequences when they mess up.
- It looks like love wrapped in truth, not lies to make them feel good.
- It looks like creating boundaries, not trying to be “the cool mom” or “the chill dad.”
Real parenting is tough love.
It’s late nights, hard talks, and standing firm even when your child is mad at you.
And guess what? That’s okay.
They don’t need you to be liked right now.
They need to be shaped into someone they can be proud of later. And when they become adults who know how to navigate life, they’ll come back and thank you—not for being their friend, but for being their rock.
Let’s Rebuild the Standard
If we want to fix this generation and the next, we need to go back to basics:
- Honor your role.
- Lead your home.
- Correct your child.
- Stop playing buddy.
A child who is never corrected at home becomes a menace in the street.
A child who’s never told “you’re wrong” becomes a broken adult who blames everyone else.
And a parent who refuses to parent isn’t raising a leader—they’re raising a liability.
TD Goodman Books stands for truth, accountability, and rebuilding families from the inside out.
Want more on parenting, discipline, and building strength through structure?
Check out:
- Off the Path: How to Get Your Life Off the Road of Failure
- Rising from the Ordinary: The Journey to Becoming Legendary
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