Why lighthouse parents have more confident kids
Plus: The self-importance of luxury dining

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Isabel Fattal

Senior editor

In 2024, Russell Shaw made the case for the Lighthouse Parent. “A Lighthouse Parent stands as a steady, reliable guide,” Shaw writes, “providing safety and clarity without controlling every aspect of their child’s journey.” The term, used by the pediatrician Kenneth Ginsburg and others, is a useful rejoinder to the strong pull of intensive parenting. Parents’ first instinct is often to give a solution, to get involved, to fix it. It’s a natural impulse—“we’re biologically wired to prevent our children’s suffering, and it can be excruciating to watch them struggle,” Shaw writes.

But that mindset is both exhausting for adults and damaging for kids. Instead, try to think of yourself as a lighthouse: ready to illuminate the way when your kid needs you, ready to stand back when they don’t.

On Parenting

(Corey Hendrickson / Gallery Stock)

When so many people think hovering is what good parents do, how do you stop?

(Illustration by Charlotte Ager)

You can micromanage your kid’s life or ask for community help with child care—but you can’t have both.

Sometimes, the best thing a parent can do is nothing at all.

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