It’s not accurate to say a child “doesn’t value” their mother as a rule. In most cases, children do love and depend on their mother deeply, but they may not always show it in a way that feels meaningful to adults.
When it looks like a child doesn’t value their mother, there are usually other reasons behind it:
1. Emotional immaturity
Children and teenagers often don’t fully understand gratitude, sacrifice, or long-term care. Their brains are still developing, especially the parts related to empathy and perspective.
2. Taking care for granted
If a mother consistently provides food, comfort, and support, a child may start to see it as “normal” rather than something valuable. This is common in close family relationships.
3. Seeking independence
As children grow, especially in teenage years, they naturally try to separate from parents. This can look like distance, irritation, or rebellion—but it’s part of developing identity, not lack of love.
4. Communication gaps
Sometimes children feel misunderstood or unheard, so they emotionally withdraw. The bond is still there, but it’s not being expressed openly.
5. Influence of environment
Friends, social media, or stress at school can affect behavior. A child may act cold at home while dealing with outside pressure.
6. Unresolved conflict
Frequent criticism, strictness, or emotional distance in the home can make a child defensive, even if they still care deeply.
Important truth
Most children don’t “not value” their mother—they just don’t express appreciation in adult ways. The feeling of love and dependence is usually still there, even if behavior doesn’t show it clearly.
If you want, you can tell me your situation more specifically, and I can help you understand what might be going on and how to improve the relationship.