Suzanne Dion Enneagram Teacher, Author, Coach
Suzanne Dion

When Strength Overrides Presence: A Type 8 Parent’s Subtle Misattunement

Type 8 parents are often strong, protective, and fiercely devoted to those they love. They want their children to be resilient, capable, and able to stand confidently in the world. Their presence can feel grounding and powerful, offering children a sense of safety that comes from knowing someone is willing to step forward, take charge, and protect what matters.

Yet beneath these considerable strengths lies a more subtle challenge to attunement—one rooted in the Type 8 cognitive-emotional habit.

At the heart of Type 8 is a deep orientation toward strength, self-reliance, and maintaining a sense of control over one’s environment. Attention naturally moves toward action, problem-solving, and protecting against vulnerability. This pattern developed as an adaptive response to life, helping the Eight avoid experiences of powerlessness, dependence, or being hurt by others.

In parenting, this can sometimes create a form of **unintentional misattunement**. The parent may become so focused on helping the child be strong that they overlook the child’s need to simply be vulnerable. Emotional experiences such as fear, uncertainty, sadness, or hesitation may be unconsciously interpreted as obstacles to overcome rather than inner experiences that need understanding and companionship.

The Eight parent may quickly move toward solutions, encouragement, or action. They may challenge the child to “push through,” “stand up for yourself,” or “be strong.” While these responses are often well-intentioned, the child may not feel fully met in the emotional reality they are experiencing.

As a result, the child may begin to internalize a subtle message:

“My strength is welcome, but my vulnerability is harder to bring forward.”

Some children respond by becoming more self-reliant than they need to be. Others may hide their softer feelings, fearing they will be dismissed, overwhelmed, or quickly redirected toward action. The child learns that protection is available, but emotional tenderness may feel less accessible.

This is the paradox of Type 8 parenting: the very drive to protect can sometimes overshadow the quieter work of emotional attunement.

Yet Type 8 parents possess an extraordinary capacity for growth in this area. When they learn to stay present with vulnerability—their own and their child’s—without immediately moving to fix, strengthen, or mobilize, something profound becomes possible. The child discovers that they do not have to choose between strength and tenderness.

NURTURING THE PAUSE TO BECOME MORE ATTUNED
The invitation for Type 8 parents is not to become less strong. It is to allow strength to make room for receptivity.

  • Pause by taking a deep, conscious breath, before acting.
  • Listen patiently for words and feelings before ‘solving’.
  • Acknowledge what the child has expressed before initiating

Recognize that courage is not only found in facing the world, but also in remaining present to a child’s most tender emotions and need for comfort.

By nurturing a pause within, 8s become able to offer one of the greatest gifts a child can receive: You do not have to be strong all the time to belong here. Every part of you is welcome with me. Your feelings and needs matter and are a guide to what to do next. I can be with all of you, allowing you to be with all of you too.


Presence Practices for Type 8 Parents

1. Pause Before the Pep Talk
When your child is struggling, resist the urge to immediately encourage, coach, fix, or strengthen them. Before offering advice, simply ask: “Tell me more about what that’s like for you.” Stay with their experience for a few moments before moving toward action. Practice: Spend at least one minute listening before offering solutions.

2. Notice the Impulse to Make It Better
Type 8 parents often express love through action. When a child is upset, there may be an immediate urge to make the problem go away.
The next time your child is distressed, silently ask yourself: “Does my child need strength right now, or do they need understanding?” Remember:  Often they need understanding first.

3. Validate Before You Empower
Empowerment is a gift of Type 8 parenting. But empowerment lands best after a child feels understood. Try this sequence:

  • Reflect what you hear.
  • Validate the feeling.
  • Then offer support or guidance.

Possible Communications: “That sounds really disappointing.” “I can see why you’re upset.” “Let’s think together about what you want to do next.”

4. Stay One Moment Longer
Many Type 8 parents are comfortable with intensity but less comfortable with lingering vulnerability. When your child expresses sadness, fear, embarrassment, or insecurity: Stay one moment longer than you normally would. Note: Allow the feeling to exist without changing it.

5. Ask Curiosity-Based Questions
Rather than moving toward action, practice moving toward curiosity. Try asking:

  • What feels hardest about this?
  • What are you feeling right now?
  • What do you need from me?
  • What worries you most?
  • What would help you feel supported?

Remember: Curiosity deepens connection.

6. Let Tenderness Be Strong
Many 8s learned that strength meant being resilient, decisive, and capable. Experiment with a broader definition: Strength includes the ability to remain present with vulnerability. When your child is hurting, remind yourself: “I don’t have to make this better immediately. I can simply stay with them.”

7. Notice What Happens in Your Body
When vulnerability enters the room, many 8s feel an impulse to mobilize.
Practice noticing:

  • tightening in the chest
  • leaning forward
  • preparing a solution
  • interrupting
  • becoming more directive

Practice: When you notice activation, take one slow breath and return to listening.

Reflection Questions for Type 8 Parents
At the end of the day, ask yourself:

  • Did I spend more time understanding my child or strengthening my child?
  • Where did I rush toward action?
  • Where did I remain present with vulnerability?
  • What feeling did my child most need me to understand today?
  • How might I make a little more room for tenderness tomorrow?

A Closing Reminder

Your child does not only need your strength. They need your willingness to sit beside them before asking them to rise. When strength and tenderness work together, children learn that they can be both resilient and vulnerable—and fully loved in both states.