Parenting Style Test
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summary
intro
graphs
details
advice
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Snapshot Report |
Perfect Parent Syndrome |
35 |
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You scored fairly low on this scale. According to your responses, you have a hard time imagining why someone would strive to be a "perfect parent". You don't especially want to invite that kind of stress into your life, or into the lives of your kids, for that matter. You want your kids to be able to enjoy their childhood and look back fondly on it. You trust that even if you let them watch some TV, and even if you aren't always involved in all their activities, they'll still manage to become happy and functional people. People who want to be "perfect parents" risk stressing themselves out - in addition to the rest of their family - because of their constant struggle for perfection. |
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Snapshot Report |
Perfect Parent Syndrome |
35 |
|
You scored fairly low on this scale. According to your responses, you have a hard time imagining why someone would strive to be a "perfect parent". You don't especially want to invite that kind of stress into your life, or into the lives of your kids, for that matter. You want your kids to be able to enjoy their childhood and look back fondly on it. You trust that even if you let them watch some TV, and even if you aren't always involved in all their activities, they'll still manage to become happy and functional people. People who want to be "perfect parents" risk stressing themselves out - in addition to the rest of their family - because of their constant struggle for perfection. |
You scored fairly low on this scale. According to your responses, you have a hard time imagining why someone would strive to be a "perfect parent". You don't especially want to invite that kind of stress into your life, or into the lives of your kids, for that matter. You want your kids to be able to enjoy their childhood and look back fondly on it. You trust that even if you let them watch some TV, and even if you aren't always involved in all their activities, they'll still manage to become happy and functional people. People who want to be "perfect parents" risk stressing themselves out - in addition to the rest of their family - because of their constant struggle for perfection.