Supporting Your Anxious Child: What Research Suggests Parents Can Do to Help

If you’re parenting an anxious child, you’ve probably asked yourself some version of this question:
Am I helping… or am I making it worse?

I’ve asked it, too—often in the middle of the night, sitting beside my anxious child as worries spill out. School. Friendships. Separation. Sleep. All the endless “what ifs.” Every instinct in me wants to make the fear disappear. I reassure. I explain. I adjust plans. I tiptoe. I problem‑solve.

And sometimes, despite all that love and effort, the anxiety gets louder instead of quieter.

If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone.

As both a family therapist and a parent of an anxious child, I want to say this clearly: your child’s anxiety is not a sign that you’re failing. Supporting an anxious child does not mean eliminating fear. The real work—hard, slow, imperfect work—is helping our children learn that they can live with fear and still move forward.

Decades of research on childhood anxiety point to something that can feel deeply counterintuitive: consistently avoiding fears or accommodating anxiety can actually strengthen it over time. This isn’t because parents are doing anything wrong—it’s because anxiety grows when it’s treated as something too dangerous to face. What helps most is a balance of warmth and confidence:
“I see how hard this feels, and I believe you can handle it.”

Attachment research echoes this idea. Children don’t need parents who remove every obstacle or discomfort. They need a secure base—someone who stays emotionally present while gently encouraging small steps forward. Neuroscience adds another layer: before children can regulate themselves, they borrow our nervous systems. Our calm matters more than our explanations.

What I’m learning, again and again, is that my steadiness matters more than my solutions. When I slow myself down, name what I’m seeing (“This feels really hard right now”), and resist the urge to immediately fix or reassure, something shifts. Not instantly. Not perfectly. But enough. My kids begin to learn that big feelings don’t have to take over the room—and that discomfort can be tolerated and worked through.

This is where many parents get stuck. Reassurance feels kind, and in the moment, it is. But repeated reassurance (“You’ll be fine,” “There’s nothing to worry about,” “I promise nothing bad will happen”) can unintentionally send the message that anxiety is something to escape rather than face. Research‑based approaches, including cognitive behavioral therapy, emphasize helping children gradually approach fears—with support—instead of avoiding them altogether.

That doesn’t mean being cold or dismissive. It means leading with empathy and confidence. It means saying, “I know you’re scared, and I’m right here,” instead of, “Let’s make this go away.” It means helping your child practice being brave, not fearless.

Parenting an anxious child also asks us to look inward. Anxiety is contagious. When our child is distressed, it can stir our own fears: What if this never gets better? What if I’m handling this wrong? That’s human. And it’s why self‑compassion matters so much. You don’t need to be perfectly calm or always know the right thing to say. You just need to be willing to pause, notice, and repair when things go off track.

So if you’re parenting an anxious child and feeling exhausted, unsure, or overwhelmed, please hear this: you don’t have to take the fear away. You’re not supposed to. Your role is to stay close, stay steady, and help your child learn that they can move through hard things with support.

That’s not easy work. But it is meaningful work. And being “good enough” at it—imperfect, learning, trying again—is more than enough.

Resources You Might Find Helpful

  1. Helping Your Anxious Child – Rapee & Hudson
    Practical, research‑based strategies for supporting anxiety without feeling like you have to fix everything.

  2. Breaking Free of Child Anxiety and OCD – Eli Lebowitz
    A compassionate guide to reducing anxiety‑accommodating habits while staying warm and connected.

  3. The Power of Showing Up – Daniel Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson
    Explores how presence, calm, and emotional connection help children feel secure.

  4. The Still Face Experiment – Ed Tronick (short video)
    A powerful reminder that repair matters more than perfection.

  5. Self‑Compassion – Kristin Neff
    Support for parents learning to be kind to themselves while guiding children through big feelings.

Kate Mills, MA, LCPC

Kate Mills, MA, LCPC, is a compassionate counselor specializing in life transitions, interpersonal challenges, trauma recovery, and emotional resilience. She works with individuals, couples, children (ages 5+), adolescents, and families, using creative approaches like play, art, music, and person-centered talk therapy to meet each person where they are.

Kate is committed to fostering healing by creating a nonjudgmental and safe space where clients feel heard and supported. Whether coping with grief, anxiety, depression, or navigating relationship dynamics, she helps others cultivate meaning, connection, and hope.

The information provided in this blog post is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional psychotherapy, counseling, diagnosis, or treatment. Reading this content or engaging with this website does not establish a therapist–client relationship.

If you are experiencing emotional distress, mental health concerns, or are in crisis, please seek support from a licensed mental health professional or an appropriate healthcare provider. If you or someone else is in immediate danger, call 911 or your local emergency number right away.

Individual circumstances and needs vary, and professional guidance is essential to determine what type of support is appropriate for you.

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