TLDR: Ram Dass presents a dharmic approach to parenthood centered on releasing parental control and allowing children to unfold according to their own evolutionary path. Rather than viewing parenting as a project of molding the child into a predetermined form, this perspective honors the child as a conscious being with their own incarnational purpose. The core insight is that the parent's work is internal—managing their own conditioning, expectations, and attachments—rather than external control over the child.
What Does It Mean to Allow Children to Grow?
In the spiritual context Ram Dass teaches, allowing children to grow means stepping back from the impulse to remake them in the parent's image or according to the parent's timeline. This isn't neglect or abdication of parental responsibility; rather, it's a shift in the parental posture from manager and controller to witness and guide.
The conventional parenting model often treats children as projects—malleable raw material to be shaped toward a predetermined outcome. Parents set goals for their children's behavior, achievement, and identity, then apply pressure and correction to ensure compliance. While protection and basic guidance remain necessary, the spiritual approach recognizes that each child arrives with their own consciousness, karma, and incarnational purpose. Allowing them to grow means creating space for that unfolding rather than forcing it into a specific mold.
This approach doesn't mean permissiveness. Structure, boundaries, and loving guidance remain essential. The difference lies in the internal stance: the parent moves from "I must control this outcome" to "I will hold space while this being learns and grows."
How Does Parental Conditioning Interfere with a Child's Development?
Parents typically bring unconscious patterns, fears, and unfulfilled ambitions into the parenting relationship. A parent who was criticized harshly in childhood may become either overly critical themselves or swing to the opposite extreme, over-praising mediocre work to avoid repeating their own experience. A parent who felt unsupported in their artistic aspirations may push their child toward music or art with intensity that serves the parent's needs rather than the child's natural inclination.
These conditioned patterns operate beneath awareness. The parent genuinely believes they're acting in the child's best interest when they're actually projecting unresolved material. The child then has to navigate not only their own developmental needs but also their parent's unconscious agenda. This creates confusion in the child's sense of self—they internalize the message that their inherent nature is somehow not quite right, and that they must perform according to an external template to be valued.
The spiritual work for parents, then, becomes self-awareness. As Ram Dass emphasizes throughout his teachings on consciousness, the parent must examine their own conditioning, notice their triggers and expectations, and gradually loosen the grip of these patterns. This doesn't happen through willpower or self-judgment; it happens through mindful observation and compassion toward oneself. As the parent becomes more aware and less driven by unconscious conditioning, they naturally create more space for the child to be who they are.
What Role Does Incarnation Play in Understanding Parenthood?
The concept of incarnation—the idea that consciousness takes form in a body for specific evolutionary reasons—reframes the parent-child relationship entirely. In this view, the child is not a blank slate or a project, but a conscious being who has incarnated for their own learning and development. The parent is not the sole author of the child's character; the child brings their own essence, karma, and purpose into existence.
This perspective suggests that the parent's role is not to determine who the child becomes but to honor and support the being who is already here. The child's struggles, talents, difficulties, and natural inclinations are not mistakes or problems to be fixed but part of their incarnational curriculum. A child who is naturally shy is not deficient; they may be learning specific lessons through introversion. A child who is restless and challenging may be wired to question authority and think independently—traits that serve them in their particular life path.
When parents operate from this understanding, they can ask different questions: "What is my child here to learn?" rather than "How do I make my child into what I think they should be?" This shift reduces the subtle violence that occurs when a child is constantly corrected and redirected away from their natural self.
How Can Parents Release Control Without Abandoning Responsibility?
This is the central tension that spiritual parenting asks us to hold. Releasing control does not mean releasing responsibility. Parents still provide structure, safety, guidance, and loving boundaries. The difference is one of consciousness and intention.
A parent provides a boundary—"You cannot stay up past 9 PM on a school night"—not as a power move or expression of parental authority, but as part of a loving structure that honors the child's developmental needs and the family's rhythms. The parent remains open to the child's perspective, listens to their reasoning, and adjusts if there's genuine cause. The difference is subtle but profound: the boundary comes from care rather than control.
Similarly, a parent guides a child toward learning—encouraging effort, modeling values, reading books together, having conversations about difficult topics—not as indoctrination but as offering the wisdom the parent has gathered. The child is free to accept or reject, integrate or question. The parent's role is to offer, not to enforce.
This also means the parent must manage their own anxiety. Much controlling behavior arises from parental fear: fear that the child will fail, be hurt, make a wrong choice, or not measure up. The parent's internal work involves examining these fears, finding the roots in their own history, and gradually building the capacity to tolerate uncertainty. Can the parent let the child try and potentially fail? Can they allow the child to make age-appropriate mistakes? This capacity grows as the parent's own sense of self becomes less dependent on outcomes and more rooted in presence and love.
What Is the Parent's Real Work in Supporting Growth?
If the parent is not controlling the child, what exactly is the parent doing? The parent's work becomes internal and relational rather than managerial. Internally, the parent works on their own conditioning, wounds, and reactive patterns. Every time a parent feels the urge to control, criticize, or redirect the child, it's an opportunity for the parent to pause and ask: "Where is this coming from in me? What am I afraid of? What was modeled for me as a parent?"
This kind of honest self-inquiry is difficult and ongoing, but it's where genuine growth happens. As the parent becomes more conscious and less driven by automatic reactions, they naturally parent differently. They're less triggered, more present, and better able to respond to the actual child in front of them rather than the child they imagined or the child they were.
Relationally, the parent's work is to show up with presence and attention. Children need to be seen and known. They need adults who are genuinely curious about their inner world, not just their behavior or achievements. They need permission to have emotions, ask questions, and grow at their own pace. A parent can create this by practicing deep listening, asking open-ended questions, and noticing the child's unique gifts without agenda.
The parent also models something crucial: what it looks like to be human, to struggle, to learn, to make mistakes and repair them, to grow. Children learn far more from what they observe than from what they're told. A parent who is actively working on their own consciousness—meditating, examining their patterns, treating others with kindness even in difficulty—teaches the child that such work is possible and valued.
How Does This Approach Honor Both Parent and Child?
The conventional parenting model often places the parent in an exhausting position of needing to control and manage every aspect of the child's development. The parent becomes hyper-responsible, anxious, and often resentful when the child doesn't comply with expectations. The child, meanwhile, feels unseen and unsafe—not because the parent doesn't love them, but because the parent's anxiety and control create an atmosphere where the child's inherent nature is under constant scrutiny and correction.
A spiritual approach to parenting honors the parent's human limitations and needs. Parents are imperfect beings with their own conditioning, wounds, and capacity limits. Expecting a parent to be perfect or to control every outcome is unrealistic and cruel. Instead, this approach asks the parent to be honest, to keep trying, to examine their own patterns, and to apologize and repair when they miss the mark. This is far more sustainable and models genuine humanity for the child.
Honoring the child means recognizing their agency, their own wisdom, and their right to grow into who they actually are. It means the parent can be relaxed about certain things—the child's tastes in clothes, music, or friends (within safety boundaries), the child's learning style or speed, the child's emerging values and interests. When the parent releases the need to control these, both parent and child experience more ease.
There's also a spiritual dimension to this mutual honoring. In traditions that teach karma and incarnation, both parent and child are understood as teachers for one another. The child is not just learning from the parent; the parent is learning through the relationship with the child. The child's challenges teach the parent patience, acceptance, and presence. The child's authenticity and emerging self-knowledge remind the parent what genuine humanity looks like. When parenting is approached as a mutual learning relationship rather than a one-directional project, it becomes sacred work.
Where to Go from Here
For parents interested in integrating this perspective, the first step is honest self-observation. Notice when you feel the urge to control, correct, or redirect your child. Pause and ask: What am I afraid of? What was modeled for me? What do I actually need here—and is that need the child's responsibility to meet? This kind of inquiry gradually reveals the patterns that drive controlling behavior.
Second, invest in your own inner work. Whether through meditation, therapy, journaling, or spiritual practice, create space to examine and gradually untangle your own conditioning. As you become less reactive and more conscious, your parenting naturally shifts. You don't have to force a new parenting style; it emerges from your own increasing presence and self-awareness.
Third, practice genuine listening with your children. Ask them questions about their inner world, their fears, their dreams. Listen without planning your response or judgment. This alone communicates to children that they matter, that they're worth knowing, and that their experience has value.
Finally, release the fantasy of the perfect child or the perfect parenting outcome. Children are real humans with their own consciousness, preferences, struggles, and growth edges. Your job is not to sculpt them into a predetermined ideal but to provide a container of love and structure within which they can unfold. As Ram Dass teaches across his body of work, the path of conscious living includes conscious parenting—which means living with less certainty, more presence, and deeper compassion for both yourself and your child.



