Сара Макларен аккуратно разворачивает идею «достаточно хорошего родительства». В центре — не идеальность, а способность восстанавливать связь после срыва. Когда взрослый признает ошибку и извиняется, ребенок получает важный опыт: отношения можно чинить, а напряжение переживаемо. Автор показывает, как культ идеального родителя превращает дом в тревожный проект управления рисками. Практический вывод — меньше контроля, больше живого контакта и ясных границ.
Сара Макларен: Ловушка «хорошего родителя», или почему детям полезно, когда мы ошибаемся
Sara McLaren: The ‘Good Parent’ Trap, or Why Children Benefit When We Make Mistakes
Sara McLaren: La trampa del ‘buen padre’, o por qué los niños se benefician cuando cometemos errores
Sara McLaren: The ‘Good Parent’ Trap, or Why Children Benefit When We Make Mistakes
Sara McLaren carefully unfolds the idea of “good enough” parenting. At the centre is not perfection but the capacity to restore connection after a rupture. When an adult acknowledges a mistake and apologises, the child gains a vital experience: relationships can be repaired and tension is survivable. The author shows how the cult of the ideal parent turns home into an anxious risk-management project.
The pursuit of flawless parenthood is exhausting and ultimately counterproductive. Children who never see their parents make — and recover from — mistakes are deprived of one of life’s most important lessons: that imperfection is human and that ruptured bonds can be restored. The parent who snaps and then genuinely apologises models emotional honesty. The parent who pretends never to err models something far more troubling: that mistakes must be hidden and that vulnerability is shameful.
McLaren draws on the concept of “good enough” parenting, originally developed by the paediatrician and psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott. The good-enough parent does not strive to anticipate every need or protect the child from every frustration. Instead, they allow small failures, experience them alongside the child and then take the steps to make things right. This cycle of rupture and repair is not a sign of poor parenting — it is the engine of healthy attachment.
The practical message is clear: less control, more authentic contact and clear boundaries. Rather than eliminating all conflict and difficulty, the goal is to demonstrate, again and again, that the relationship is resilient enough to survive them.