TLDR: Ram Dass examines parenthood and childhood not merely as biological or social roles but as incarnational assignments with deep spiritual significance. He suggests that the parent-child relationship exists within a larger framework of soul development, where both parents and children serve as mirrors and teachers for one another's spiritual evolution. Rather than viewing parenting as a burden or duty, this perspective invites practitioners to see these relationships as opportunities to practice presence, love, and the dissolution of ego attachments that dharma practice requires.
How Do Parent and Child Roles Serve Spiritual Practice?
Ram Dass approaches parenthood and childhood as sacred stations within the larger journey of incarnation. From his perspective—rooted in both Eastern philosophy and his own decades of contemplative practice—these roles are not accidents of biology but meaningful assignments that support the soul's evolution. The parent-child dynamic, then, becomes a laboratory for spiritual transformation rather than simply a practical arrangement for raising offspring.
In this frame, parenting is not fundamentally about control, instruction, or even protection in the conventional sense. Instead, it is an opportunity to practice unconditional presence and love in the midst of profound vulnerability. Children naturally test boundaries, demand attention, and trigger the unresolved wounds and desires in their parents. This collision of needs—the parent's need to be right, respected, or in control, and the child's need for autonomy, attention, and unconditional acceptance—becomes a crucible for ego work. When a parent can meet these moments with awareness rather than reactivity, parenting becomes a daily meditation.
Similarly, childhood is not merely a preparatory phase to adulthood. Ram Dass suggests that children arrive with their own spiritual tasks and lessons. A child may be here to teach a parent about surrender, forgiveness, or the limits of planning. The parent who approaches their child with genuine curiosity about who this being is—rather than who they should become—honors the child's own incarnational purpose.
What Does Honoring Parenthood Mean Beyond Obligation?
Ram Dass frequently emphasizes that honoring parents (a theme central to the fuller episode from which this clip is drawn) means understanding them as souls attempting to navigate their own karma and awakening, not as flawless protectors or authorities. This reframing extends in both directions: honoring one's parents AND honoring one's role as a parent means seeing through the performance of the role to the Being underneath.
Many people approach parenting as a checklist: provide food, education, discipline, opportunity. While these are not irrelevant, they miss the essential invitation. Ram Dass's teaching invites parents to ask: Am I present with this child right now, or am I operating from my conditioning? Can I respond to what my child actually needs rather than what I think they should need? Can I allow my child to be disappointed, frustrated, or even upset—and stay present with that—rather than rushing to fix it?
This is not permissiveness. Rather, it is the difference between parenting from fear (my child must be safe, successful, unblemished) and parenting from love (my child is a being unfolding their own journey, and my role is to witness, support, and model presence). The second approach allows the parent to hold boundaries, to say no, to teach—but from a place of clarity rather than reactivity.
How Does Incarnational Purpose Reframe the Parent-Child Bond?
The concept of incarnation—that a soul chooses or is assigned a particular life circumstance—runs through Ram Dass's teaching. If one accepts (even experimentally) that both parent and child are here by design, not accident, the relationship transforms. The difficult parent becomes a teacher. The challenging child becomes a mirror. The ordinary moments of connection become opportunities for presence and awakening.
This does not mean passivity or acceptance of genuine harm. Spiritual maturity includes the ability to set boundaries, to grieve losses, to acknowledge real pain in family systems. But it means doing so while holding the understanding that the other person—parent or child—is also on a journey, making choices from their level of consciousness, carrying their own unhealed wounds and fears.
When a parent can extend this compassion to themselves as well, parenting becomes less about proving something and more about being with what is. A parent who loses patience, who fails to show up perfectly, who makes mistakes can acknowledge these with humility and return to presence in the next moment. That willingness to fall and return is itself the teaching the child receives.
What Spiritual Practices Support These Roles?
Ram Dass's teachings on parenthood are not abstract philosophy but are grounded in contemplative practice. Several disciplines support the embodiment of this perspective:
- Meditation: A regular practice of sitting creates the gap between trigger and response that allows a parent to choose presence rather than habit.
- Loving-kindness practice: Deliberately cultivating compassion toward oneself, one's child, and one's parents softens the edges of resentment and perfectionism.
- Self-inquiry: When a parent feels triggered, asking Who is being threatened here? What belief is activated? reveals the ego's story rather than the child's reality.
- Service: Viewing parenting itself as an act of service—not to the child's achievement but to their unfolding—aligns the role with spiritual intention.
These are not supplemental activities but the foundation that allows the parent-child role to become a genuine path of awakening rather than merely a source of stress and obligation.
How Can Adults Reconcile With Their Own Parents Through This Lens?
Ram Dass's emphasis on honoring parents (the broader theme of the episode this clip comes from) suggests that understanding your parent's incarnational journey—their own wounds, their level of consciousness, their capacity to love at the time—is not about excusing harm but about achieving freedom from reactive grievance. When you can see your parent as a being doing their best from their level of understanding, forgiveness becomes possible. And forgiveness, in this framework, is not something you do for the parent but for yourself—to free yourself from the contraction of blame.
This is challenging work. It does not require that you resume contact with someone who harmed you, but it does require a shift in the story you tell about what happened. Rather than My parent failed me and that is why I am broken, the reframe might be My parent was operating from their own fear and conditioning; I am responsible for my own healing now. That shift moves the locus of power from the past back to the present moment.
Where to Go From Here
To deepen this understanding, listen to the full episode "Honoring Parents and Incarnation" (Episode 291 of Here and Now with Ram Dass) available on the Be Here Now Network. If you are a parent, consider the question: What would change in how you meet your child if you held the belief that this child is here for their own spiritual reasons, not primarily to fulfill your hopes or repair your wounds? If you are an adult child, explore: What would it mean to honor your parent as a being on their own journey, while taking responsibility for your own healing?
Begin or deepen a daily meditation practice, even five minutes, as the foundation for responding rather than reacting within these roles. And consider loving-kindness practice directed toward yourself, your children or parents, and all beings attempting to navigate incarnation with presence and love.



