What is parentification and how does it affect children?
Part of Childhood Roles cluster.
Deeper dive: Explore related questions below.
Short Answer
Parentification is when children are made responsible for adult tasks or emotional care. They become pseudo-parents, sacrificing their own childhood to support the family system.
What This Means
You cooked meals, managed siblings, mediated conflict, paid bills, or emotionally supported parents while still a child. This was not maturity or helpfulness; it was role reversal. You did the emotional and practical labor of adulthood before you had the resources or consent to do so. Your needs were sidelined because the family needed you to function above your developmental level. As an adult, you may struggle to play, rest, or receive care because you never learned how. You are exhausted from a childhood of over-functioning.
Why This Happens
Parentification occurs when parents are unable or unwilling to fulfill their roles—due to mental illness, addiction, disability, absence, or simply having too many children without adequate support. The family system requires certain functions to operate, and when adults cannot provide them, children are drafted. Often the most sensitive or responsible child becomes the parentified one. This is not the child's choice; it is the system's adaptation to dysfunction.
What Can Help
- Grieve the lost childhood: Mourn what you missed while being adult too soon.
- Learn to receive: Practice letting others care for you.
- Set boundaries: You are not responsible for everyone anymore.
- Play and rest: These are not indulgences; they are developmental needs.
- Therapy: Process the anger and grief of parentification.
When to Seek Support
If you recognize parentification in your history and are struggling with burnout, inability to receive care, or resentment toward family, therapy can help you reclaim your right to be cared for.
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Research References
Van der Kolk (2014) • Porges (2011) • Felitti et al. (1998) • APA Trauma • NIMH PTSD