Here's the first thing to do if you notice your kid starting to copy your worst behaviors
That is to say, I fear that my poor hypothetical child will get stuck with all my worst qualities and I won't be able to do anything about it.
I recently asked Carl Pickhardt - a psychologist who's published multiple books about parenting, including, most recently, "Surviving Your Child's Adolescence" - about this potential scenario and he said, yes, parents have come to him with this complaint about their kids.
But when they do, he tries immediately to reframe the situation - to steer the focus away from the kid and their frustrating behaviors to the parent and how they are with the kid.
For example: Does the kid get upset easily, just like you do? Stop stressing about fixing the kid's crying jags and take a look at your emotional outbursts when your kid is around. The key here, Pickhardt told me, is that you're focusing on the area you can control: your behavior.
Experiment with changing your example as a parent, Pickhardt said, and see if that makes a difference in your kid's attitude: "Is it possible that if you change some of your own behavior, you might encourage a different kind of response in your child?"
This sounds like simple advice, but Pickhardt said it can be hard for parents to implement - mainly because it's challenging for them to understand that they can't control their kid per se. Parenting gets easier once you understand that your time and energy is better spent trying to regulate your own behavior.
Pickhardt gave another practical tip: Draw direct attention to the similarities between you and your kid. He shared a script for doing just that:
"Sharing can be very helpful for the kid," Pickhardt said. "Kids are very grateful for that."
All this to say: Your kid might, or might not, wind up struggling with the same issues you do. It's the way life works. But you can help them take a different path - if not by directly manipulating their behavior, then by offering them a better example.