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When Fear Sounds Like Love

The Subtle Ways “What If” Shapes How We Parent

Erin Miller's avatar
Erin Miller
Apr 08, 2025
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Cross-posted by unpopular PARENT
"I don’t usually share full guest posts here, but I’m experimenting this week, and this one struck a nerve. In "When Fear Sounds Like Love," Erin Miller examines how fear can quietly shape our parenting—not in loud, obvious ways—but in how we guide, hover, protect, and try to soften the world. Her voice is distinct from mine, but the heart of what she’s saying feels deeply aligned with what I’m trying to do with Paternal Progress. This is the kind of writing that pushes the mission forward. I’m proud to share it."
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Derek Moeller-Smith
 young girl paddles a canoe alone on calm water, wearing a lifejacket. The view is from behind as she heads toward a small island in the distance.
©Elena-Photo via Canva

Fear doesn’t always announce itself.
It sounds reasonable.
Looks responsible.
It hides inside care and calls itself protection.

Some of that fear is instinct—centuries of wiring reminding us to keep our kids safe.
But a lot of it is learned. Reinforced by a world that monetizes anxiety, rewards control, and constantly reminds us what could go wrong.

And while fear has a place, it doesn’t belong in charge.

When “what if” becomes the lens through which we parent, it doesn’t just shape how we protect—it reshapes how we speak, what we allow, what we affirm, and what we quietly shut down.
It replaces curiosity with caution. Love with management.

The most dangerous thing about fear-based parenting is that it rarely looks like fear.
It disguises itself as love.
It looks like concern.
It feels like commitment.

Until it doesn’t.

What if they get hurt?

Nothing flips our instincts on faster than the thought of our kids getting hurt.
Of course we want to keep them safe. We’re supposed to.
We’re the backstop, the first call, the emergency contact.
The responsibility is heavy, and the stakes feel high.

We say no. We hover. We steer them toward the safest route.
Not out of control—but out of care.

“Children should be kept as safe as necessary during play, not as safe as possible.” —Dr. Emilie Beaulieu

But when safety becomes the priority above all else, freedom disappears.
And with it? Growth. Confidence. Competence.

Risk is where our kids learn to listen to their instincts.
It’s how they figure out what they can handle.
It’s where trust is built—trust in the world, and trust in themselves.

We’re not talking about recklessness.
We’re talking about the everyday chances to stretch.
To try.
To face something uncertain—and come out the other side stronger.

Like letting them climb higher than we’d like.
Light the campfire themselves.
Or ride their bike beyond where we can see them.

Moments that feel risky—not because they’re unsafe, but because we won’t be right there if something goes wrong.

When we block all the doors to danger, we also lock the doors to growth.
And often we overprotect not because of our kids’ capacity, but because of our own unprocessed fear.
That’s our work to do. Not theirs.

Helpful question:
Is this about their safety—or my discomfort with not being in control?

What if they fail?

This one doesn’t yell. It disguises itself as support.
Encouragement. Involvement.

But often, it’s control in disguise—a subtle belief that failure means something is broken, and our job is to fix it before it cracks.

We think we’re helping.
But when we step in too soon or too often, we rob them of the very thing they need most: ownership.

“Let me look over that before you turn it in.”
“Tryouts are tough—you sure you’re ready for that?”
“This is important. You don’t want to mess it up.”

We don’t mean harm. We mean to help.
But over time, we send the message:
Trying is risky.
Effort only counts if it leads to success.
Mistakes aren’t part of the process—they’re problems to avoid.

When we soften every edge, we also blunt their resilience.
They learn how to be polished, not how to persist.
And we wonder why they start to play it safe.

While painful to admit, we often step in not to protect them, but to protect ourselves.
Watching our kids fail forces us to face our own discomfort. Our helplessness.
Maybe even the parts of us that never got to get it wrong safely.

We manage the outcome because their pain pokes at ours.

The urge to rescue can feel like love.
But what our kids need isn’t rescue.
It’s room to try, to stumble, and to see that they can survive.

Helpful question
Am I supporting their effort—or managing (or avoiding) my discomfort?

What if they don’t fit in?

We don’t just want our kids to be accepted—we want to protect them from the cost of standing out.

That urge doesn’t usually come from the present—it comes from our past.

The one who felt too loud, too quiet, too smart, too sensitive.
We remember what exclusion felt like, and we’re determined to spare them from it.

So we try to shape them just enough.
We tone down the flavor.
Not too much—just enough to make them easier to swallow.

“Are you sure you want to wear that out?”
“Maybe don’t tell anyone about that today.”
“You don’t want people to think you’re being rude.”

But behind those nudges is the message:
Being yourself might cost you something.
Better to play it safe.

The risk? Our kids start trading authenticity for approval.
And they pay for that approval with the very parts they were told to hide.
Over time, the edits add up.
And they slowly lose touch with who they really are.

It makes them easier to be around—but harder to be themselves.
It can buy comfort for a while.
But when real differences show up—and they will—these kids won’t know how to stay rooted in themselves.
Because they were taught to fit in, not how to belong.

Often our discomfort with their difference isn’t about them at all.
It’s about our fear of being judged through them.
That’s not theirs to hold.

Helpful question:
Am I helping them belong—or teaching them to become more palatable?

What if I’m not doing enough?

The pressure to do enough rarely feels like fear—it feels like responsibility.
But it creeps in quietly. A slow burn of second-guessing, comparison, and pressure. There’s always more we could be doing. One more thing to check. One more way to improve. One more gap to fill.

So we stay busy. Add structure. Explain ourselves. Say yes when we’re tired.
Not because we’re chasing gold stars—but because we’re chasing a feeling that’s hard to name.
Am I enough?

And society does us few favors.
There’s no shortage of advice, benchmarks, or voices reminding us what we should be doing.
So we move faster. Do more. Perform harder.
And in the process, our kids feel less of us.

What if we’re not doing more for them, but to outrun something in us?
We overfunction not because our kids need more, but because stillness makes us feel what we’ve been avoiding.
The emptiness. The buried fear.
The parts of ourselves we’ve ignored while trying to get it all “right.”

And when we model that love looks like constant effort, we risk teaching our kids that stillness is selfish—and that their worth lives in what they do, not who they are.

They don’t need more from us. They need more of us.
Not constant motion—just honest presence.
They feel the difference, even when they don’t have the words for it.

Helpful question:
Am I doing this to meet their needs—or to silence my insecurity?

What if they become someone I don’t understand?

It’s one thing to know our kids will grow into themselves.
It’s another to realize that who they’re becoming feels unfamiliar.
Someone who doesn’t think like us, vote like us, live like us.
Someone who makes choices we wouldn’t make.

We feel that fear in our gut—and then dismiss it.
”I’ll always love them,” we say.
But love that can’t hold difference isn’t love—it’s expectation.

This fear shows up more as they get older.
They begin to think differently. Choose differently.
Sometimes live in ways that feel foreign to us.
And they should.
That’s what becoming themselves looks like.

Some of it makes us proud. Some of it catches us off guard. Some of it scares us.

That’s part of the deal. They’re not supposed to be our mirror.

For some, the shifts are small—the clothes, the music, the tone.
For others, they’re bigger—values that clash, identities we didn’t expect, choices that carry real consequences.

In a culture full of voices not our own, we’re not only watching who our kids become. We’re trying to figure out who’s shaping them.

It’s real. And sometimes it’s not just hard—it’s heartbreaking.

But we can wound our kids deeply without yelling or criticizing.
Our silence. Our distance. Our disappointment.
They feel it even when we think we’re hiding it well.

Yes—we can draw boundaries. We can hold convictions.
We can even say, “I don’t agree with this choice.”

But if we pull back every time they become harder to relate to, we make love feel conditional.
And conditional love doesn’t build trust—it creates shame.

This doesn’t mean we stop guiding.
It means we stop trying to shape them into versions of ourselves—and stay present enough to walk beside them as they become who they are.

Because parenting is a long game.
And our kids are far more likely to return later—for perspective, for presence—if they don’t have to earn our love first.

Helpful question:
Is it more important for my view to be heard—or for my presence to feel safe when they’re ready to listen?

After the “What If”

Fear’s not going anywhere. But our relationship with it can change.

We don’t have to eliminate fear to parent differently.
We have to stop outsourcing it to our kids.
Let ourselves hold the discomfort instead of handing it to them.
Let the tension stay ours. That’s part of the job, too.

It takes discipline and practice to interrupt fear before it drives our decisions.
But we can build that muscle—slowly, intentionally, and together.

Sometimes the better question is: What might they gain from the experience?

Protection has its place. But preparation is what lets them live boldly. Fully.

It’s rarely about stopping them from something and almost always about helping them do ‘the thing’ as safely as necessary.

Our discomfort isn’t always their danger.
Our kids deserve to live beyond our limits.

Fear doesn’t settle when we keep it inside.
It steadies when we name it—with people who won’t inflame it.

And of course it feels hard.
That’s not a sign we’re getting it wrong.
It’s a sign we’re doing something that matters.

The payoff isn’t always obvious.
But we’re parenting for more than this moment—we’re parenting for who our kids will become because of it.

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