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You might be asking your child all the “right” questions:

  • “How was school today?”
  • “Did you eat your lunch?”
  • “Do you have any homework?”
  • “Why are you in such a mood?”

But there’s one question that rarely gets asked—and when it does, it can open the door to deeper connection, emotional safety, and trust.

So what’s the question?

“What’s been feeling heavy for you lately?”

Simple, right? But incredibly powerful.

Why This Question Matters

Kids (and teens especially) are constantly navigating emotions they don’t fully understand—stress at school, friendship drama, body changes, big feelings they can’t name. Most of the time, they keep it all bottled up, not because they don’t want to talk, but because they’re not sure it’s safe to do so.

Asking “What’s been feeling heavy?” sends a few key messages:

  • I care about your inner world, not just your performance.
  • It’s okay to not be okay.
  • You don’t have to carry everything alone.

It creates a moment where your child isn’t being evaluated, corrected, or rushed. It tells them: You’re allowed to just be a human here.

What Kids Really Want

In our work with kids and teens, we hear this again and again:

“I just wish they would ask how I’m really doing.”
“I don’t want to disappoint them, so I keep it in.”
“They only talk to me when something’s wrong.”

Parents often focus on behaviour—but underneath every outburst, shutdown, or attitude is usually an unmet emotional need. And kids are craving parents who slow down enough to be curious.

How to Use This Question in Real Life

Timing matters. Don’t spring this on them mid-tantrum or during a stressful moment. Instead, try:

  • In the car (no eye contact can make it feel safer)
  • At bedtime (when defences are down)
  • During a walk or casual hangout

Keep it low-pressure. You might say:

“Hey, I’ve been wondering—has anything been feeling heavy for you lately?”
“No pressure to answer right now, but I’m always here to hear it.”

And then—listen. No interrupting, fixing, or judging. Just hold space.

What If They Don’t Answer?

That’s okay. You’re planting a seed. The more consistently you show up with openness, the more likely they’ll come to you when it matters most.

Sometimes it’s not about solving the problem. It’s about being the person they can bring the problem to.

Final Thoughts

Parenting isn’t about having all the answers—it’s about asking better questions.

So next time you’re tempted to ask about homework or chores, pause and consider this instead:

“What’s been feeling heavy for you lately?” or “What’s stressing you out right now?”

You might be surprised what they say. And even if they say nothing, you’ve shown them something powerful:

That you’re here. That you care. And that their feelings matter.

Need help navigating the hard conversations with your child or teen?
Our team specializes in helping families build stronger connections and emotional resilience. Reach out by phone or email to learn how we can support you and your family: 902-812-1717 or office@growwellcounselling.ca