5 Signs Youโre Caught in One (and how to Break Free)

Have you ever yelled at your child and immediately regretted it? Or snapped at them, then lay awake at 2am replaying it and wondering what went wrong and whether youโre the worst parent ever? You can manage work, relationships, friendships, and life. So why is parenting the one place that feels so hard?
Youโre not alone. Parenting today feels heavier than it used to. Not because we are failing, but because weโre surrounded by noise and constant messages about what a โgood parentโ should be doing. But hereโs the part we donโt talk about enough: we donโt just parent from todayโs stress and exhaustion. We parent from everything that has happened to us.
The ‘perfect parentโ trap
Thereโs a pattern I see, something I call the โperfect parent trapโ. It isnโt about making mistakes. Itโs about something quieter and more confusing. Itโs trying harder than ever yet feeling less confident than you expected to feel. Itโs trying harder than ever and still ending the day wondering if youโre getting it wrong. Slowly, almost without noticing, you begin to doubt yourself, looking outward for answers instead of inward for steadiness. You lose trust in your own instincts.
I see this every day in my work with families. And Iโve felt it myself, that moment of wondering, โWhy did I react like that?โ Here are five signs you might be caught in it.
Youโre more reactive than you want to be
You snap when you meant to respond calmly. You raise your voice and instantly wish you could pull the words back, sometimes catching the look on your childโs face as you do. And what hurts most isnโt the behaviour; itโs the feeling that you werenโt the parent you wanted to be in that moment. Stress doesnโt create something new in us.
It reveals whatโs already there. Often, weโre not just responding to our child, weโre reacting from something older. A familiar feeling of not being heard, not being seen, not being enough. A question that gently shifts everything is this: Am I responding to the child in front of me, or reacting from the child within me? Your reactivity isnโt a character flaw. Itโs information.
You feel disconnected, even though youโre trying so hardย ย ย ย ย ย ย
Youโre doing more than ever, organising, reminding, negotiating and yet something feels further away. The power struggles are real and thereโs a quiet grief in missing your child while living under the same roof. For many of us, that disconnection feels strangely familiar. It doesnโt mean youโve ruined the relationship. It simply means something needs attention.
Youโre your own harshest critic
You know that voice. The one that says you should know better. That youโre overreacting. That other parents seem to cope more calmly. That voice didnโt appear out of nowhere. For most of us, it was shaped by how we were spoken to, corrected, or measured growing up. Self-criticism might feel motivating, but it rarely leads to lasting change. It usually keeps us stuck in shame. Self-compassion, on the other hand, creates the safety we need to pause, reflect, and try again.
Youโre exhaustedย ย ย
Not just physically tired – emotionally tired. Youโre carrying the invisible load of parenting: the planning, the anticipating, the emotional temperature-taking, the constant holding of everyone elseโs needs. You tell yourself you should be coping better. After all, everyone is busy. But exhaustion changes everything. Itโs hard to be patient when you havenโt had five minutes to breathe. It makes small problems feel enormous. It blurs your perspective. Sometimes what looks like a parenting failure is simply a nervous system that hasnโt had enough rest.
Youโre meeting everyoneโs needs except your ownย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย
You say yes when youโre depleted. You push through when you need a break. You tell yourself thatโs what loving parents do. But if you grew up believing that putting yourself first was selfish, it can feel uncomfortable to even consider your own needs. You disappear quietly from the equation. And when you shrink to keep everyone else steady, the whole family feels it. The parent you want to be doesnโt need to be perfect. They need to exist in the relationship too.
Breaking free doesnโt begin with a new strategy. It begins with a pause. A small, honest moment before you react. A willingness to gently ask yourself: Whatโs being stirred in me right now? In my work, I call these inherited emotional patterns Heartprints โ the invisible imprints left by how we were loved, soothed, corrected or misunderstood growing up. They quietly shape how we respond under pressure. When we begin to notice our Heartprints, something shifts. We move from reacting on autopilot to responding with intention. From blaming ourselves to understanding ourselves. From striving to be perfect to choosing to be present. Our children donโt need flawless parents. They need parents who are willing to pause, repair when things go wrong, and keep choosing connection, even on the days it feels hard. Parenting was never meant to be a performance. Itโs a relationship. And you are allowed to grow inside it too.

Lisa Taylor, author of The Perfect Parent Trap (Amba Press, $39.95), is a family therapist, relationships consultant, speaker and founder of Strengthening Families Australia. With over twenty-five years of experience walking alongside thousands of families, schools and organisations across Australia, Lisaโs heart-centred approach helps parents, educators and leaders strengthen relationships, heal generational patterns and transform how they connect with one another.
www.strengtheningfamiliesaustralia.com.au