“I Can’t Honestly Say That I Like Him”: Dad Of 5 Doesn’t Feel Proud Of Any Of His Kids
Raising children is hard. And even when you do your best, things don’t always turn out the way you hoped.
One dad went to Reddit to admit something he’s ashamed to say out loud: he isn’t proud of any of his five children. He says he poured everything he could into them, from education to hobbies, trying to help them grow into independent, ambitious adults. But in his eyes, none of them lived up to what he imagined, and now he blames himself, calling himself a failure as a father.
Read his confession below.
The man went online to get a confession off his chest
Image credits: Getty Images / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
He has five children, but isn’t proud of how any of them turned out
Image credits: Kindel Media / Pexels (not the actual photo)
Image credits: RDNE Stock project / Pexels (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Getty Images / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
He later returned to address the reaction to his post
Image credits: Getty Images / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
Image credits: throwrasaddadd
Image credits: SHVETS production / Pexels (not the actual photo)
Too many expectations can backfire and leave kids less motivated, not more
If you’re a parent who genuinely cares about your child, you naturally want them to do well. For a lot of people, that comes with a universal checklist: staying out of trouble, doing fine in school, maybe getting a degree, finding a solid job, building a stable future. It’s not a bad list. It’s also not the whole point.
Because the moment “doing well” turns into “proving yourself,” kids can start to feel like love and approval come with terms and conditions. And even when pressure comes from good intentions, it can still land as, I’m only worth something when I perform.
That’s one of the big takeaways Dr. Carly Claney writes about in Relational Psych: direct or indirect parental pressure can weigh on kids’ mental health and self-image, and it often backfires. For example, kids who grow up around frequent criticism or impossible expectations are more likely to internalize it, slipping into harsh self-talk that follows them long after the moment passes. And when parents comment on weight or closely police eating, research links that kind of messaging to worse body image and disordered eating risk.
Pressure can also push kids toward perfectionism, which sounds productive until it turns into chronic stress, fear of failure, and “never good enough” thinking. The American Psychological Association has pointed out that rising parental expectations and criticism are linked to higher perfectionism in students, alongside mental health concerns.
Image credits: Kindel Media / Pexels (not the actual photo)
Kids do better with healthy encouragement than fear of failure
Obviously, parents set expectations out of love and concern. The problem is that while a certain amount can be healthy and grounding, once expectations cross a line, they can start doing more harm than good.
Psychologist David Braucher makes a useful point in Psychology Today: expectations can communicate to a child that what they do matters to their parents. If parents are too accepting of anything and everything, it can slip into permissiveness and signal to a child that they don’t really matter.
“Children know this because when something that matters to them goes awry, they get upset. So, it is not a leap to assume that we don’t get upset because we don’t really care,” he says.
But the balance changes when a parent’s expectations are built around a fantasy, not the child in front of them. When those hopes don’t match a kid’s interests, talents, and natural tendencies, it stops being motivating and starts crushing their confidence. For example, if a child has no musical talent but keeps being pushed to “excel” anyway, it’s not hard to see how they’d end up with a constant sense of low self-esteem.
In the case of the author of this story, we obviously don’t know what went on behind the scenes day to day, or how his kids would describe their upbringing. But even in his own post, he spends less time on their feelings and happiness than on pride, embarrassment, and how their choices make him look like a failure. So it’s fair to guess that his kids may have grown up under heavy expectations, and as adults, they stopped trying to live up to them.
To support kids without that kind of pressure, Dr. Claney suggests shifting the focus to encouragement that builds confidence. Praise effort, not only results, so kids learn that progress matters even when they don’t “win.” She also recommends being careful with appearance-based comments, even the well-meaning ones, since they can make kids feel watched and judged.
Another big one is autonomy. Let them take the lead sometimes with age-appropriate choices instead of micromanaging, and keep rules clear but open to discussion so they feel heard. And when your child pushes back or is struggling, validate their feelings first. It doesn’t mean you have to agree, but it shows them they’re safe to be honest with you.
At the end of the day, achievements come and go. What sticks is whether a child feels loved for who they are, not just what they do.
Readers shared their perspectives, personal experiences, and advice
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
Explore more of these tags
I remember this case of a woman who was almost executed beause most of her babies died. There was rage and assumption that she was the one k*****g them. Some quack of a mathematican doctor was a witness saying that she 100% k****d them based on statistical analysis... Any mathematician worth their fking salt however would NEVER use statistics to prove CERTAINTY! Ah yes "Kathleen Folbigg" was her name... The commenters by default blaming the dad must have the same low level IQ and inflated sense of ego as the ppl who added more ruin to Kathleen Folbigg 's life... Cus turns out her kids died of a rare genetic disorder...All they did was add more to that immeasurable pain she felt... Reading this that is what I thought of. The father was clearly happy an proud of his middle kid that was having a normal life. Yet all these insane assumption were made...
Yeah, that was in Aus. She was imprisoned for almost 20 years if I remember correctly.
Load More Replies...It isn't just the parents that raise a child. Society has a much bigger say in it than we would like to believe. That being said, this father sounds like he did the best he could. There is no manual or set of steps that guarantee a good outcome in life. All you can do is try your best with what you know and hope the probabilities in life break in your favor. You can't predict or control the little moments in life that will have a profound effect on who you become. A parent definitely can't control that. You can do everything right and still fail.
Sometimes, despite a parent being a good parent and doing everything right, their children do not adult well. And, this family could have been devoid of love and nurture. OP could have no insight into his and his ex's failings as parents. One side of the story has been presented; would be nice to hear the children's side. My opinion is five children is too many for any family; no set of parents has the emotional energy to give each one what they need. Life is complicated and fast pace; it is not 1950.
So, looking at the timing of everything, I guess my immediate question would be: so what happened in the marriage break-up? The narrative being given here is how everything was so peachy keen and supportive earlier, but has now gone to crapola since...but provides absolutely nothing regarding the ex or how the marriage went wrong. And yes, hearing the kids side would be brilliant. This screams unreliable narrator.
This post gives me the ick! Maybe he should try talking to his kids instead of blasting their “faults” all over social media!
Totally! The writing of that Reddit post is the reason his kids are failures. Anyone could fix their life in the time it takes to write a reddit post. It isn't like about venting about things has ever helped a person before.
Load More Replies...OP: "I don't know where I went wrong, Internet!" Also OP: "Stop telling me where I went wrong, Internet!"
I remember this case of a woman who was almost executed beause most of her babies died. There was rage and assumption that she was the one k*****g them. Some quack of a mathematican doctor was a witness saying that she 100% k****d them based on statistical analysis... Any mathematician worth their fking salt however would NEVER use statistics to prove CERTAINTY! Ah yes "Kathleen Folbigg" was her name... The commenters by default blaming the dad must have the same low level IQ and inflated sense of ego as the ppl who added more ruin to Kathleen Folbigg 's life... Cus turns out her kids died of a rare genetic disorder...All they did was add more to that immeasurable pain she felt... Reading this that is what I thought of. The father was clearly happy an proud of his middle kid that was having a normal life. Yet all these insane assumption were made...
Yeah, that was in Aus. She was imprisoned for almost 20 years if I remember correctly.
Load More Replies...It isn't just the parents that raise a child. Society has a much bigger say in it than we would like to believe. That being said, this father sounds like he did the best he could. There is no manual or set of steps that guarantee a good outcome in life. All you can do is try your best with what you know and hope the probabilities in life break in your favor. You can't predict or control the little moments in life that will have a profound effect on who you become. A parent definitely can't control that. You can do everything right and still fail.
Sometimes, despite a parent being a good parent and doing everything right, their children do not adult well. And, this family could have been devoid of love and nurture. OP could have no insight into his and his ex's failings as parents. One side of the story has been presented; would be nice to hear the children's side. My opinion is five children is too many for any family; no set of parents has the emotional energy to give each one what they need. Life is complicated and fast pace; it is not 1950.
So, looking at the timing of everything, I guess my immediate question would be: so what happened in the marriage break-up? The narrative being given here is how everything was so peachy keen and supportive earlier, but has now gone to crapola since...but provides absolutely nothing regarding the ex or how the marriage went wrong. And yes, hearing the kids side would be brilliant. This screams unreliable narrator.
This post gives me the ick! Maybe he should try talking to his kids instead of blasting their “faults” all over social media!
Totally! The writing of that Reddit post is the reason his kids are failures. Anyone could fix their life in the time it takes to write a reddit post. It isn't like about venting about things has ever helped a person before.
Load More Replies...OP: "I don't know where I went wrong, Internet!" Also OP: "Stop telling me where I went wrong, Internet!"

























































28
16