Arshad Warsi has a way of saying what many parents think but rarely admit aloud. Speaking in a podcast with Raj Shamani, the actor pointed to a truth about parenting that feels uncomfortable precisely because it is so common. Adults often love the idea of children more easily than they love children who begin to disagree, question, or push back. That is where the real test begins. As long as a child is quiet, agreeable and easy to manage, parenting can feel simple. But the moment that child develops an opinion, a spine, and a mind of their own, the relationship changes. Warsi’s remark cuts through the usual soft language around parenting and lands somewhere sharper: sometimes, what parents call correction is actually control. And sometimes, the child is not refusing guidance at all, they are simply resisting power. That discomfort is exactly what makes his words resonate with so many people online. Scroll down to read more…
The line that hit a nerve
Warsi’s point was direct: “We like our children as long as they have no opinion. The moment they have a brain and an opinion, we start hating them.” He was not speaking about hatred in a literal sense. He was describing the emotional shift many families go through when obedience begins to disappear. A child who once complied now questions. A child who once nodded now challenges. And for many parents, that challenge feels personal.
Correction or control?
He went further, saying that in those moments, “aap usko nahi correct kar rahe ho, aap apna power dikhane ki koshish kar rahe ho as a parent.” In other words, the issue is not always the child’s behaviour. Sometimes it is the parents’ need to be right. That is a hard sentence to sit with, because it forces a pause. Are we actually guiding a child, or are we trying to win?

This is where many parents slip without realising it. They begin with concern but end with authority. The conversation shifts from “What is best for you?” to “Why are you not listening to me?” And once that happens, the child is no longer being raised through understanding. They are being managed through hierarchy.
What children really need
Warsi also touched on a thought many adults rarely entertain: “Shayad aapki baat galat hai… maybe the kid is right.” That single idea can change the entire atmosphere of a home. It does not mean children should run everything. It means their perspective deserves room. A child who disagrees is not automatically disrespectful. Sometimes they are observant. Sometimes they are emotionally honest in ways adults are not. That is what makes this truth so uncomfortable. It asks parents to make space for humility. To admit that love is not the same as control. To accept that a child’s growing mind is not a threat to authority but evidence that parenting is working.
Why his words matter

What Warsi is really talking about is respect. Not the blind kind demanded from above, but the earned kind that grows when children are allowed to think, speak and differ without being crushed for it. His reflection reminds us that parenting is not about producing obedience on command. It is about raising human beings who can eventually stand on their own. And that begins the moment a parent is willing to ask a difficult question: am I guiding my child or just protecting my ego?

