Parent Readiness For Letting Go

✦ A Responsibility Handover Checklist

Is Your Teen Ready to Take the Lead — and Are You Ready to Let Them?

Managing a health condition is a skill — one your teen is learning, and one you’re learning to hand over. This reflective checklist helps you pause, look honestly at where things stand, and find your next small, confident step forward.

It’s not a test. There are no right answers. It’s an honest look at the journey you and your teen are on together.

  • For each statement, choose: Not yet, Sometimes, or Consistently.

Also available: Teen Self-Assessment Checklist (link coming soon)

ℹ️ You can complete this checklist interactively right here on this page, or print it out and fill it in on paper — whichever works best for you. Your answers stay private and are not sent anywhere.

Section 1 — Parent Mindset and Communication

How I am thinking, showing up, and relating

I am aware of my own emotions about letting go and actively manage them.

I avoid transferring my worries onto my teen.

I accept that mistakes and setbacks are part of learning.

I tolerate uncertainty without stepping in immediately.

I see my role more as a coach than a manager.

I can step back in temporarily if needed and step out again when appropriate.

When I feel overwhelmed, I reach out for support from trusted people like friends or healthcare professionals.

I support my teen in participating in normal social life and activities.

We communicate openly and respectfully.

I listen before giving advice.

I discuss risks calmly without fear-based messaging.

I increasingly allow my teen to lead decisions.

I can accept safe decisions that differ from my own preferences.

Reflection

Section 2 — Readiness Reflection

Is this the right pace right now?

I have a realistic understanding of what my teen can manage right now.

I know which skills still need strengthening before full independence.

I adjust responsibility at a pace that fits my teen.

Reflection

Section 3 — Practical Responsibility Handover

3A. Education and Preparation

I am informed about my teen’s condition.

My teen has a solid understanding of their health condition — including their diagnosis, treatment plan, risks, and what to do in acute or emergency situations.

My teen knows how to access reliable information.

We are actively preparing for transition to adult care, working together with our medical team.

3B. During Medical Appointments

My teen speaks first during medical visits.

My teen explains symptoms, medications, and medical history independently.

3C. Daily Disease Management Tasks

For these items, choose the level of responsibility that fits best right now.

Task Parent responsible Shared responsibility Teen fully responsible Not applicable
Taking medication independently
Preparing medication
Packing medication and therapy tools for travel
Requesting medication refills at the pharmacy
Managing daily care tasks (for example inhaling, breath work, blood sugar checks, diet)

Your Transition Snapshot

Based on your answers above, find the stage below that best reflects where you are right now.

Early Stage

This is where many of us begin. You are still carrying most of the responsibility, and that makes sense. Awareness is growing. Small shared steps are enough for now.

Building Stage

Responsibility is beginning to shift. There may be moments of tension, uncertainty, or trial and error. That is part of the process. You are gradually creating space while still staying closely involved.

Advancing Stage

Your teen is taking meaningful ownership. You are moving more into a supportive role. There may still be moments where you step back in, but overall the balance is shifting.

Transition Ready

Your teen manages most responsibilities independently. You are there as trusted backup and support. This stage reflects trust, preparation, and a lot of work already done.

Optional Reflection

If you want this to submit responses somewhere (email, Google Sheet, CRM), tell me what system you use and I can adjust the form action and fields.

WordPress Cookie Plugin by Real Cookie Banner