Emotionally Immature Parents: Signs, Effects, and What You Can Do

If you’ve ever felt like you were the caretaker in your relationship with one or more of your parents, you’re not alone.

“I realized I wasn’t the problem when I understood that I was an only child to a two-parent household and they still couldn’t meet my needs.”

An emotionally immature parent struggles to regulate emotions, empathize with others, or take responsibility for their actions.

A mindmap infographic titled "signs of emotionally immature parents" with an angry storm cloud in the centre and signs surrounding it such as unpredictable moods, and dismissing their child's emotions.

As psychologist Lindsay Gibson explains, they often behave more like impulsive, self-centered children than dependable adults. They may love their kids, but consistently fail to meet their emotional needs.

This matters because growing up with an emotionally immature parent can leave lasting emotional scars.

Below, we’ll define emotional immaturity in parents, outline common signs, and explore its impact and what you can do to heal.

Common Signs of Emotionally Immature Parents

Below are five common signs, with examples, that you may recognize from your own upbringing:

1. They Overreact and Struggle to Regulate Their Emotions

These parents have big reactions to small issues. They are easily angered, upset, or thrown into drama by minor inconveniences.

A simple request or a child’s mistake might trigger yelling, crying, or a days-long sulk. Because they can’t regulate their feelings, their emotions end up dominating the household.

You may have felt like you were walking on eggshells around your parent. For instance, if dinner was late or plans changed unexpectedly, they might explode in anger or melt down in self-pity.

2. They Avoid Responsibility and Blame Others

An emotionally immature parent finds it extremely hard to say “I’m sorry” or admit fault. Instead, they deflect blame onto others (often onto you or your siblings).

If you tried to confront them about something hurtful they said or did, they might respond with denial or by turning it back on you: “Well, I wouldn’t have yelled if you kids weren’t so impossible!”

They may portray themselves as the victim, rather than take responsibility. This can leave you, the child, constantly second-guessing yourself – you’re made to feel everything is your fault, when in reality the parent refuses to be accountable.

3. They Make Everything About Themselves

Conversations with emotionally immature parents inevitably wind back to their feelings, needs, or dramas.

If you come to them upset about a problem, they might dismiss it or compare it to their problems (“You think you’re stressed? Let me tell you what kind of day I had…”).

They expect emotional caretaking from their kids – wanting you to comfort them, listen to their rants, or even mediate their conflicts – yet they are unwilling or unable to truly empathize with your feelings.

They might even act as though being the parent entitles them to violate boundaries or be inconsiderate. As Dr. Gibson puts it, such a parent behaves as if parenthood “exempts them from respecting boundaries or being considerate.”

4. They Can’t Handle Emotional Intimacy

Real, heart-to-heart emotional conversations are virtually impossible with emotionally immature parents.

Instead, interactions stay surface-level – talking about the weather, the chores, or their latest interest – but never about the feelings underlying anything. If you try to share your deeper emotions or need comfort, they may shut down, change the subject, mock you, or even get angry.

As Dr. Gibson observes, “They might be very socially skilled… But when it comes to that kind of emotional closeness where you open up to each other, that’s where they really back up.”

The moment you start expressing vulnerable feelings, the parent may withdraw or act dismissive, reinforcing the message that your vulnerability is “too much” for them.

5. They Parentified You

In an emotionally immature household, the flow of support can reverse: you end up acting like the parent (known as parentification).

Perhaps you were expected to soothe your dad’s anxieties, or mediate your mom’s disputes, or take care of younger siblings because the parent wouldn’t.

You might have been praised for being “so mature and understanding,” but in truth you were deprived of a real childhood.

“My mom would vent to me about her relationship problems when I was 12, but if I cried about school, she’d say I was being dramatic.” — one forum user.

Being parentified often leads to a mix of resentment and guilt in the child – resentment at having to bear adult burdens, and guilt if you ever don’t step up to take care of your parent.

How This Affects You in Adulthood

Growing up under these conditions can cast a long shadow. As an adult child of an emotionally immature parent, you might notice some of these lasting effects:

  • Difficulty setting boundaries or saying no: You feel guilty or anxious when asserting your needs, because you’re used to catering to others (especially your parent).
  • Feeling overly responsible for others: You habitually try to “fix” people’s problems or moods, a role you learned when you had to manage your parents’ emotions.
  • Suppressing your own emotions to keep the peace: You tend to bottle up feelings or avoid conflict at all costs. This was how you coped in childhood to avoid triggering your parent.
  • Chronic self-doubt or perfectionism: Growing up constantly blamed or trying to earn approval, you now second-guess yourself or strive to be perfect. Nothing you do ever feels good enough, and you’re harsh on yourself.
  • Attracting emotionally unavailable partners: It’s common to gravitate toward familiar dynamics. Many adult children of immature parents find themselves in one-sided relationships as adults, often with partners who are distant or inconsiderate of their needs.

These patterns aren’t signs of weakness—they’re adaptive responses to an unpredictable environment. As Gibson notes, children of immature parents often learn to put others’ needs first “as the price of admission to a relationship.”

Why They Act This Way (But It’s Not Your Job to Fix It)

When you finally see your parents’ emotional immaturity, it’s natural to ask why.

Many such parents were raised by emotionally stunted or neglectful caregivers themselves. They may never have learned self-regulation or empathy because no one modeled it for them.

This understanding can bring compassion—but not obligation.

You can empathize with the child your parent once was without excusing their adult behavior. You didn’t cause their immaturity, and you can’t cure it.

Emotional growth is a choice only they can make. Your job isn’t to educate or heal them—it’s to protect and nurture yourself.

As Gibson explains, calling a parent “emotionally immature” can help identify the problem without demonizing them. But boundaries are still necessary. You needed a parent, not a project.

How to Cope With an Emotionally Immature Parent

Dealing with an emotionally immature parent is challenging, but there are healthy ways to protect yourself and find peace. Here are some coping strategies:

Set and enforce clear boundaries

Decide what you will not tolerate (e.g., yelling, unsolicited advice about your life, constant phone calls) and communicate your limits calmly.

You might say, “I’m not available to have this conversation when you’re screaming. Let’s talk when we’re calm,” and then stick to it.

Expect pushback, but remember: setting boundaries is key to breaking the old pattern of walking on eggshells.

Limit emotional exposure (low contact or “gray rock”)

If interactions with your parent often leave you drained or upset, it’s okay to minimize contact – even with family.

Gray rocking means responding to an emotional parent in a neutral, non-reactive way (like a gray rock) so they lose the fuel for drama.

For example, if your parent starts blaming or provoking you, you might reply with a brief, bland response and no emotional investment.

The goal is to make interactions less triggering for you (and less interesting for them if they’re seeking a reaction).

Build a support network (and lean on it)

One of the healthiest things you can do is find support outside the parent-child dynamic. Cultivate relationships where you can receive the empathy, validation, and listening ear that your parent couldn’t provide.

Talking with others who “get it” can be hugely validating – you’ll realize you’re not the only one with this experience, and you’re not crazy for feeling the way you do.

The point is to seek validation and care from healthy sources. You no longer need to chase it from your parent.

As you connect with people who treat you with respect, it becomes easier to see that your parents’ behavior was a reflection of them, not your worth.

Practice reparenting and self-care

Since your parent wasn’t emotionally mature, you likely didn’t get some of the nurturing you deserved.

Part of healing is essentially reparenting yourself – giving your inner child the care and attention it always needed.

For example, you might write a compassionate letter to your younger self, engage in activities you loved as a kid, or develop comforting routines (like a calming tea at night or positive self-talk in the mirror).

Treat yourself with the patience and validation a good parent would give. You might say to yourself, “It makes sense that I’m hurt – I deserved love and I didn’t get enough of it.

Over time, you can develop a stable inner voice that soothes and affirms you, even when your parent cannot.

Detach from their approval

Deep down, many adult children of immature parents continue to seek approval or acceptance from the parent – a holdover of trying to “earn” love as a child.

A crucial coping step is consciously letting go of that quest. Recognize that you may never get the validation or apology you crave from your parent, and that’s a reflection of their limitation, not your value.

Instead of hoping “maybe this time they’ll understand me”, accept that they might not be capable of it.

It doesn’t mean you don’t care about them; it means you release yourself from basing your self-worth on their reactions. Seek feedback from mentors, friends, or colleagues who appreciate you.

By reducing your dependence on your parents’ approval, you reclaim power over your own happiness.

Emotionally Immature vs. Abusive or Narcissistic: How to Tell

The line between emotional immaturity and abuse can be blurry. Intent and consistency often distinguish them.

  • Intent: Abusive or narcissistic parents hurt to control; emotionally immature parents hurt out of ignorance or defensiveness.
  • Consistency: Immature parents can be kind one day and cruel the next, while abusive parents show a more deliberate pattern of harm.
  • Capacity for empathy: Immature parents may occasionally show remorse but rarely sustain change; narcissists typically don’t see a problem at all.

Ultimately, labels matter less than your experience. If your parent’s behavior left you anxious or unloved, your pain is valid.

Emotional immaturity isn’t an excuse for harm. You’re allowed to name your experience and set boundaries, regardless of whether they “meant it.”

When to Seek Help

Healing from an emotionally immature upbringing takes time—and often support. Therapy can help you understand your family dynamics, set boundaries, and reframe self-blame.

Consider seeking help if you:

  • Struggle with guilt, anxiety, or depression tied to your upbringing
  • Repeat unhealthy relationship patterns
  • Feel paralyzed by conflict or boundary-setting
  • Understand the problem, but can’t move past it emotionally

Therapies like schema therapy, internal family systems (IFS), or inner-child work can be especially helpful.

Group therapy or support groups for adult children of dysfunctional families can also reduce shame and help you feel understood.

Reaching out for help isn’t weakness—it’s courage. You’re not doomed to repeat your parent’s patterns.

With support, you can break the cycle, nurture yourself, and build relationships based on the emotional safety you always deserved.

Saul McLeod, PhD

BSc (Hons) Psychology, MRes, PhD, University of Manchester

Editor-in-Chief for Simply Psychology

Saul McLeod, PhD., is a qualified psychology teacher with over 18 years of experience in further and higher education. He has been published in peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Clinical Psychology.


Olivia Guy-Evans, MSc

Associate Editor for Simply Psychology

BSc (Hons) Psychology, MSc Psychology of Education

Olivia Guy-Evans is a writer and associate editor for Simply Psychology. She has previously worked in healthcare and educational sectors.

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