
Every parent knows the moment: youโre watching your child move through the day, maybe with a little more attitude, a little less patience, or in the throes of pushing boundaries, and you see yourself.
Itโs humbling, sometimes confronting, and always a call to pause.
The quote โYour kids will become who you are, so be who you want them to beโ is a challenge to notice how our reactions, beliefs, and ways of being shape not only our tweens, but the culture that exists within our families.
The New Tween Reality
Parenting tweens today means navigating shrinking childhoods and expanding online worlds. Where once the transition between child and teen felt like a gentle ramp, now itโs more of a tightrope walk.
Social media, constant connectivity, and layers of school wellbeing programs bring both opportunities and pressure, but thereโs still a disconnect between what our kids hear at school and what they see at home.
Our influence as parents is less about what we say and more about what we live. Tweens are mirrors of our truest selves, absorbing, reflecting, and amplifying the standards, values, and emotional habits that walk through our doors each day.
A Turning Point: Life Beyond the Scroll
With social media soon to be banned for under-16s, we may be standing at the edge of something extraordinary.
For years, our kids have been growing up in a digital landscape that shaped how they see themselves and others, one that rewards comparison, performance, and instant reaction. This change offers a rare opportunity: a chance for this generation to rediscover life beyond the scroll and the group chat.
What might our homes feel like if conversation replaced content?
If presence replaced performance?
If curiosity, creativity, and connection took centre stage again?
For all the fear and uncertainty surrounding the digital age, this shift could be the reset many families have longed for, a chance to slow down, look up, and re-learn how to connect
face-to-face.
Advocacy Trauma and the Invisible Burnout
The other day, someone sent me a post about โthe burnout no one talks aboutโ, advocacy trauma.
It resonated deeply. As a parent of a neurodiverse tween, I know the ache of trying to help others see beyond judgement; of fighting for understanding and inclusion in systems that werenโt built for difference.
That advocacy can be exhausting. Too often, the harsh reactions to a childโs impulsive or out-of-the-box behaviour are overshadowed by the righteous condemnation of others. The consequences handed down by โthe systemโ, or those within it, can far outweigh the action that triggered them.
Itโs a quiet heartbreak shared by many parents, whether their child is neurodivergent or simply different in ways the world doesnโt easily accept.
Invitations to Reflect, Breathe, and Lead
Parenting tweens offers daily invitations to look within.
How do we speak about others when our kids are listening?
Do we lead with compassion or with criticism?
Do we forgive, or do we hold grudges and write people off when things get hard?
Every frustrated sigh, every eye-roll, every moment of impatience is observed, absorbed, and imitated.
Our children are our greatest teachers, but the lesson isnโt only about patience or boundaries, itโs about authenticity. If we want our children to be kind, resilient, and curious, we must live those same qualities in front of them.
So the question becomes: who are we, really, beneath our advocacy, our fears, and our quick judgements?
Making Space for Intention and Impact
The gap between being a child and becoming a teen is now a short jump, not a leisurely walk. Online influences often arrive faster than wisdom, and while schools do extraordinary work teaching wellbeing, these lessons only truly take root when mirrored in everyday family life.
The real work happens at home, in the moments when our tweens challenge us or reveal our own unhealed places. Here, intention matters just as much as impact.
So next time you catch yourself speaking about others, pause, breathe, and consider what your child is learning from you about how to treat people, handle conflict, and recover from mistakes.
Each time we choose understanding over judgement, or repair over resentment, we gift our tweens a living example of what it means to grow up whole, because, in the end, our children donโt just become who we want them to be, they become who we are, and that, perhaps, is the greatest invitation of all.
Amanda Stokes is an educator, facilitator, and the founder of The Knowing Self Program that supports emotional awareness, psychological safety, and stronger relationships across school communities. Her work draws from both professional experience and personal lessons learned the hard way. To learn more, visit www.theknowingself.com.au