What's happening.
Your 14-year-old, at the kitchen table: “You promised you'd come to the recital tonight. You promised.” You forgot until that moment. You have a meeting.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
I'm trying my best. I have an important meeting.
Your meeting is more important than me.
That's not what I said. Don't twist my words.
(logs another broken-promise data point; stops believing future promises)
- “I'm trying my best” is the parent comforting themselves while the teen is losing trust.
- “Don't twist my words” attacks their characterization rather than addressing the actual broken promise.
- Long-term: promise-breaking is one of the most-cited trust ruptures in adult-child relationships.
What works — and why.
You're right. I promised. I'm so sorry. I'm going to move the meeting — give me ten minutes.
(stunned silence)
(comes back ten minutes later) Moved. I'll be there. And — going forward — I'm going to stop making promises I'm not 100% sure I can keep. Less promises, more keeping them. Both for you.
- Moving the meeting is the proof. Words about valuing the recital without action are worse than the original broken promise.
- “I'm going to stop making promises I'm not 100% sure I can keep” is the systemic change that prevents the next break.
- “Less promises, more keeping them” is the actual policy. Many parents over-promise to manage their guilt; the teen pays the cost.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- You're right. I promised. I'm so sorry.
- I'm going to [move the conflict] — give me ten minutes.
- I'm going to stop making promises I'm not 100% sure I can keep.
- Less promises, more keeping them.