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7 Habits Parents Use to Stay Close With Adult Kids

Summarized from US Top News and Analysis

A parenting expert studied 200+ families and found key habits that keep kids confiding in parents well into adulthood.

Most parents assume their kids will naturally stay close as they grow up. Spoiler: that's not how it works. Parenting expert Reem Raouda studied more than 200 parent-child relationships and identified seven specific habits that separate the families where adult kids still pick up the phone — and actually share what's going on in their lives.

What Raouda found isn't about grand gestures or perfect parenting. It's about what you do early, consistently, and often without realizing the long-term impact. The parents whose adult children still confide in them weren't the ones who had all the answers. They were the ones who created an environment where kids felt genuinely safe to talk — no judgment, no immediate fix-it mode, no dismissal.

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The research cuts through a lot of parenting noise. You don't need to be your kid's best friend or avoid all conflict. What matters is building trust through small, repeated behaviors that signal to a child: you can bring your real self here. Those signals compound over years, and by the time a kid hits adulthood, the pattern is already set.

If you're parenting right now, this is actionable intelligence. The habits Raouda outlines aren't complicated, but they do require intention. Miss the window early, and you may find yourself on the outside looking in when your kid faces the moments that actually matter — relationships, career pivots, mental health struggles.

This one's worth reading in full before your next conversation with your kid. Continue reading at US Top News and Analysis.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q.Who is Reem Raouda?

Reem Raouda is a parenting expert who has studied more than 200 parent-child relationships to identify habits that foster lasting closeness between parents and their children.

Q.How many families did the parenting study cover?

The research examined more than 200 parent-child relationships to determine what habits keep kids comfortable confiding in their parents into adulthood.

Q.When should parents start building these habits with their kids?

According to the research, the key habits should be established early in childhood, as the patterns set during those years shape whether adult children continue to confide in their parents later in life.

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