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Quotes

Hold On to Your Kids

6 memorable lines from Hold On to Your Kids by Gordon Neufeld, Gabor Maté, each with the idea behind it.

“Children do not stop needing attachment when they get older. They simply become more vulnerable to attaching in the wrong direction.”

Neufeld and Mate's core warning: adolescence does not erase dependence. If adults do not remain the orienting attachment, peers will happily take the role without having the maturity to carry it.

“Peer orientation is not friendship. It is when children start taking their cues, values, and sense of self from other children.”

The book is not anti-friendship. It is anti-peer-parenting. Children need friends, but they need adults to provide compass, context, unconditional invitation, and long-range values.

“You cannot effectively direct a child you have not first collected.”

Collecting means getting the eyes, warmth, smile, and emotional yes before instruction. The sequence matters because attachment makes guidance feel safe enough to receive.

“The goal is not to make children less dependent. It is to make sure they are dependent on the people mature enough to guide them.”

Healthy dependence is the bridge to real independence. Premature independence often means dependence has moved underground to peers, screens, status, or approval.

“Separation is not just physical distance. It is any break in the felt connection that leaves a child looking elsewhere for belonging.”

This is why rituals, goodbyes, reunions, and ordinary moments matter. They bridge separation and keep the parent-child bond alive between demands.

“The village did not disappear all at once. It was replaced by a peer world that is always on, always comparing, and rarely wise.”

The modern family is not failing because parents care too little. It is under structural pressure from school culture, devices, mobility, and the loss of adult-rich community.