Your Parents Mean Well. But They're Not Your Best Career Advisors.
You have a decision to make. A job offer, a pivot, something at work that's gone sideways. So you call your mom.
She listens. She asks questions. And then you notice it — the slight shift in her tone when you mention the salary, the pause before she responds to the part about moving cities, the careful "well, whatever you think is best." You hang up more confused than when you called.
Here's what's actually happening. Career conversations with your parents are never just about your career. They're about their hopes for you, their unresolved anxieties, things from their own professional lives they never fully worked through. And while all of that is happening on their end, you're running your own parallel process — calibrating every signal they send, bracing for reactions that may not even come, editing your real thinking into something more presentable.
That's a lot of noise for a decision that requires a clear head.
The people you actually need are close enough to know you deeply, but far enough outside the family dynamic to give it to you straight. They're probably already in your life. Here's how to find them — and use them well.
1. Find the right person
You need someone who knows you well and has no stake in what you decide. That combination is rarer than it sounds.
Start at the edges of your inner circle. A family friend who watched you grow up. A former coach or professor who knew you before you figured out who you were professionally. An older sibling or cousin who's navigated their own career without needing yours to look a certain way.
Pay special attention to people who've struggled. The uncle who got laid off at 52 and had to rebuild from scratch. The aunt who spent 15 years in the wrong field before finally making a move. People who've been through something hard have had to genuinely reckon with what went wrong — and that reckoning is worth more than polished advice from someone who's never had to course-correct.
2. Ask questions that actually unlock something
Once you've found the right person, most people waste the conversation by asking the wrong things. "What do you think I should do?" rarely produces a useful answer.
Tailor your questions to what they've actually lived. For someone who's navigated real turbulence: "Was there a moment you knew something was wrong but stayed anyway? What kept you there?" For someone with a long, stable career: "Looking back, what would you have done differently in your first five years?" For anyone: "Knowing what you know now, how would you think about a decision like mine?"
The goal is to understand how someone actually felt when they were in the thick of it — not the retrospective wisdom, but the real-time confusion. That's where the useful stuff lives.
3. Stop making your parents' life decisions
None of this means you stop talking to them. But you have to know what the conversation can realistically deliver.
Even the most well-meaning parents struggle to be neutral observers of your life. Their hopes color what they hear. Their anxieties shape what they say. And you're probably not helping — softening your real thinking, performing more certainty than you feel, managing the room instead of actually talking.
So don't bring them a live decision. Bring them a different kind of question: What have you noticed about me over the years? My patterns, my blind spots, the things I might not see clearly about myself? These questions play to what they actually know — you, up close, over time — and they remove the pressure of feeling like their answer will determine what you do next. That's when people, parents included, tend to say something real.
One more thing: your parents may have genuinely useful connections. A former colleague, a friend in your field, someone who's done exactly what you're considering. That's worth asking about directly.
The goal isn't to shut your parents out. It's to stop treating that call as your primary source of career guidance — and to recognize that the conversation you haven't made yet might be the most useful one you have all year.
