Parenting With Survivor Guilt: Supporting Your Kids While Managing Your Mental Health

How to be a good parent while managing Survivor Guilt — practical strategies and how to talk to your children.

Parenting with survivor guilt is one of the most complex challenges — and manageable with the right support and strategies.

The Truth About Parenting with Survivor Guilt

Children of parents with survivor guilt are at higher genetic and environmental risk — this is real. But parental survivor guilt that is acknowledged and managed has far less impact than survivor guilt that is denied.

Practical Strategies for Parenting with Survivor Guilt

  • Prioritize survivor guilt treatment: You cannot pour from an empty cup
  • Repair well: When survivor guilt affects your parenting, the repair conversation matters more than the mistake
  • Build village: Enlist other trusted adults so your children have support beyond you
  • Maintain structure: Routine is especially stabilizing for children when parent has survivor guilt

Talking to Children About Your Survivor Guilt

Age-appropriate honesty reduces children's self-blame (kids often think parental distress is their fault): 'Mommy/Daddy has a sickness that sometimes makes me feel sad/tired/worried. It's not your fault. I'm getting help.'

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free