Skip to content

Written by Online therapist Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst, Ph.D.

No One Prepares Us to Parent, Why the Most Important Job Has No Training

When No One Prepares Us To Parent, The Most Important Job We Do Come With the Least Training

Parenting shapes generations, yet most of us enter it with nothing more than instinct, memory, and whatever modeling we absorbed, healthy or not, from the adults who raised us.

When you think about it, parenting is the most critical role you will ever have. Yet the preparation for this role is either completely absent or distorted by our untrained parents.

I remember a high school exercise from the ’60s in which teens were given an egg or an apple and told to care for it as though it were an infant. Teens were paired up as father and mother, and the “baby” required 24/7 monitoring. The eggs broke fairly quickly, and the apples were bruised and battered. A few of the apples had big bites taken out of them. Actually, this was a pretty realistic experiment. Our children do get bruised and battered by their parents, and parts of them appear to be damaged.

We require hours of supervised training before we allow a teen to drive. In Maryland, where I live, the teen, or potential driver of any age, must pass a 30‑hour course with at least six hours behind the wheel. Honestly, those six hours sound scary to me. A potential driver must pass a written test on the rules of the road and a practical skills demonstration before they get a license. Yet they can produce children as young as 12 without a single bit of scrutiny.

We know that parenting classes are beneficial. We send abusive parents to classes where they learn to manage their emotions, understand the process of guiding children, and develop skills for problem‑solving and building emotional connections with their children. However, to participate in one of these classes, you have to be court‑ordered after committing a crime of child abuse. Now, think of that.

Why don’t we prepare our teens to parent? I think we have this stodgy sense of parenting as though it is boring, mundane, or tedious. We see ourselves as meant for something grand. I will admit that parenting, like any job, has boring parts and parts that we want to avoid. Yet our character is built in this process, one interaction at a time. Think of the potential for greatness if we prepared our parents to understand developmental processes, to know about emotional development, and to have a way to encourage character building in their children.

Parenting is the most meaningful job on earth. The character we nurture will make the decisions that shape our old age and the end of our lives. The character that we nurture will make decisions that impact the future for generations to come.

Why don’t we have a training ground for parenting?

For more reflections on emotional development, parenting, and family systems, visit Psychology Today’s insights on raising emotionally healthy children and Greater Good’s research on parenting and empathy.

If you’re navigating the challenges of parenting—or healing from the parenting you received—therapy can offer clarity, grounding, and practical tools. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support emotional growth for parents and children alike.

related blog post by Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst, Ph.D.

Read more of my stories and reflections

Person reading about an elderly couple smiling on a porch, symbolizing Real Commitment and emotional connection in Maryland and DC.

Understanding Real Commitment | Love Is a Decision

Why Real Love Requires Choice, Real Commitment, and Courage I know that you feel love, and that the sensation is thrilling when it happens. There is the immediate attraction to someone who throws you for a loop and makes your heart pound. There is the joy of seeing your child
Read My Post
Woman in New England healing from surgery and reading with her dog after Groundhog Day, symbolizing emotional renewal and a new beginning in Maryland and DC.

Spring Cleaning | Why Clearing Space Brings Emotional Renewal

Why Clearing Space, Inside and Out, Feels So Good and Brings Emotional Renewal Check your emotional reaction to that title. Some people respond with enthusiasm, eager for warmer weather, open windows, birdsong, and the ritual of sorting closets. I recently examined my own closet—not to clean it, but because I
Read My Post
Man looking at a white lily blooming in soft rainlight, symbolizing emotional renewal and strength in boys in Maryland and DC.

Emotional Strength in Boys | Why Connection Matters More Than Toughness

Why True Strength in Boys Begins With Connection, Not Toughness What if emotional strength in boys has nothing to do with toughening them up? What if it begins with helping them stay connected to themselves? In this conversation on Advisor with Stacey Chillemi, I sit down with Lisa Urbanski to
Read My Post
A person sitting quietly on a beach at sunset after being under work pressure, symbolizing emotional freedom and emotional frequency in Maryland and DC.

Find the Right Radio Station | Understanding Your Emotional Frequency

How Tuning Into Your Emotional Frequency Shapes Connection Many of you will be familiar with this. You’re driving down the road. If you are alone, you get to put the radio station anywhere you want. If the passenger seat is occupied, a negotiation begins, and sometimes the radio simply goes
Read My Post