Why Kids Brag and What Parents Can Do About It

Our children are still learning how to navigate socially in this world, and it is our job as parents to help guide them with love and compassion.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

"I am the best reader in the whole class!"

"I am so much smarter than all of my friends."

Sound familiar? There are several reasons that children brag. They are still learning how to navigate socially in this world, and it is our job as parents to help guide them with love and compassion.

Reasons your child may be bragging

If your child is bragging, it may indicate that he or she has low self-esteem, lacks self-confidence or is immature. Therefore, bragging for your child helps them to feel better by making them larger and more inflated than they really are. Also, by enhancing their experiences and accomplishments, they pivot themselves onto a higher plane than their peers. For example, if your child has something more than his or her friend or something better than his or her friend and he or she feels insecure, then expanded achievements can make others appear less and elevate his or her own status.

Your child may be bragging to establish his position in the family and the outer world. For example, a middle child who feels lost in his parent's attention may brag to find a space in which to feel special. All children want to be accepted and loved, and sometimes bragging is their effort to accomplish feeling accepted and loved.

Your child may be bragging to feel important and gain attention. Because children don't have the social or coping skills that adults often do, bragging can become a technique they use to find and create friendships, Meanwhile, they are unaware that bragging can make others move away from them and even dislike them. Therefore, since bragging is an anti-social behavior, it can actually heighten your child's sensitivity towards insecurity and loneliness.

Your bragging child may be modeling or imitating mom or dad, brother or sister. We are social animals, and we learn through social modeling. Children often imitate what they see around them and what seems to work for others.

So what can you do if your child brags?

To curb bragging, it is important for parents to help develop a child's feelings of self-confidence and good self-esteem.

You can follow my Empathic Process. Discuss with your child, in a non-defensive and non-threatening way, how others feel about bragging and why it's not working for him.

Teach your child better social skills and cues. Practice and rehearse those social skills at home until they become second nature to your child. Through role modeling and creating new and healthier habits for social interactions, you will teach your child how to make friendships with both confidence and competence.

Help your child understand that others dislike bragging and avoid people that brag. You might ask how he feels when his friends brag, and what he thinks of friends that brag.

Teach your child that he or she is valued and loved unconditionally. In doing so, you will open the door for successful friendship experiences that will grow along with your child.

Remember to know your child and listen to your child. Then, you can offer praise when it is earned and love unconditionally.

Finally, be what you want to see. Your children will mimic your behavior. Don't brag yourself or you will find that you are sowing the seeds for this behavior within your own family.

By making sure your child knows how important and loved he is, he will not need to make himself larger in the eyes of others. Remember: Children are vulnerable; they need to be noticed and seen to feel that you are proud of them and that you appreciate and love them for who they are so that they don't have to brag to feel good about themselves or to feel as if they belong. This will help your child find his place within your family and his social circle.

Popular in the Community

Close

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE