The Conversations Many Parents Never Have About Dating
- Posted on February 16, 2026
Many parents talk to their children about dating — but often the conversations stop at surface-level things.
Is the person respectful to the family?
Do they go to church?
Do they have a job or go to school?
Does the family approve?
These things may matter, but they don’t automatically reveal whether someone is emotionally healthy, safe, or capable of a loving relationship.
Too often, young people are taught rules instead of wisdom.
They hear, “Don’t have sex,” but rarely hear conversations about boundaries, consent, pressure, or what to do when someone ignores a “no.” They learn how to maintain an image of a good relationship rather than how to recognize an unhealthy one.
The truth is: a person can look good on paper and still be unsafe behind closed doors. Someone can attend church, be polite in public, and still manipulate, control, or pressure their partner privately. Faith or reputation alone is not a guarantee of good character.
What many people needed growing up were conversations like these:
- You are allowed to have boundaries — and they should be respected.
- Consent is ongoing and cannot be forced, pressured, or guilted.
- Love should feel safe, not confusing or frightening.
- Someone who truly cares about you won’t push past your comfort level.
- You can always come home and talk about what happened without blame or shame.
For many parents, these conversations never happened because they were never taught themselves. Previous generations often focused on protection through restriction instead of equipping young people with emotional tools and relational awareness.
But times are changing.
Healthy dating guidance isn’t just about avoiding sex or maintaining appearances — it’s about teaching discernment, self-respect, and emotional safety. It’s about helping young people understand that character is revealed in private behavior, not public image.
Maybe the question shouldn’t just be, “Is this person a good match on paper?”
Maybe the better question is, “How does this person make you feel when no one else is watching?”
The goal isn’t fear. The goal is preparation.
Because rules may prevent mistakes for a while — but understanding helps people build relationships rooted in respect, safety, and genuine love.