I used to think that parenting had to follow a script—the one handed down, often silently, through generations. A script built on fear, control, silence, or survival. But somewhere along the way, I realized something powerful: I am allowed to raise my children differently from how I was raised.
That doesn’t mean I don’t respect where I come from. It means I get to look at what hurt me, confused me, or made me feel small—and say, “Not this time.” I get to pause. Reflect. Choose.
Just because I was raised with shouting doesn’t mean I have to shout. Just because I wasn’t listened to doesn’t mean I won’t listen. Just because affection was rare doesn’t mean I can’t be warm, soft, and present. I am not betraying my family or my culture by changing. I am healing a pattern—and building something new.
There is space in this world for generational change. There is space for me to honour the strength of those who came before me, while also correcting what wasn’t right. My children are not here to carry the weight of my pain. They are here to become who they are. And I get to walk beside them, learning too.
Parenting differently is not rebellion. It’s love. It’s awareness. It’s a quiet, everyday kind of revolution—and I am allowed to be part of it.