Gentle parenting has an image problem. Somewhere between the Instagram infographics and the TikTok scripts, the message got distorted. What started as an evidence-based approach to raising emotionally intelligent children became, in popular culture, a caricature of a parent negotiating with a three-year-old about whether they “feel ready” to leave the park.
That is not gentle parenting. That is permissive parenting wearing a gentle parenting costume. And the difference is everything.
What Gentle Parenting Actually Is
Gentle parenting, as originally described by researchers and practitioners like Dr Laura Markham, Dr Dan Siegel, and Sarah Ockwell-Smith, rests on four pillars: empathy, respect, understanding, and boundaries.
Read that last one again. Boundaries.
Gentle parenting does not mean no boundaries. It means holding boundaries with warmth instead of fear. It means the limit is firm, but the delivery is kind. It means your child is allowed to feel angry about the boundary, but the boundary does not move because of the anger.
What Permissive Parenting Looks Like
Permissive parenting avoids conflict. The parent is warm and loving but struggles to set or enforce limits. The child has high levels of freedom and low levels of structure.
Signs you may have drifted into permissive territory:
- You frequently change your mind after saying no because your child gets upset
- You negotiate boundaries that should not be negotiable (safety, kindness, basic routines)
- You feel anxious about your child being angry at you
- You explain your reasoning at length to a child who is not developmentally ready to process it
- You prioritise your child’s happiness in the moment over their long-term wellbeing
- You say things like “we don’t do that in this family” but there are no actual consequences when they do
Why Children Need Boundaries
Children do not experience a lack of boundaries as freedom. They experience it as anxiety. A child without clear limits is a child who does not know where the edges are, and that is terrifying for a developing brain.
Dr Dan Siegel describes boundaries as “the riverbanks that keep the water flowing.” Without banks, the river floods. The water goes everywhere and nowhere. The child becomes dysregulated, oppositional, and paradoxically more demanding — because they are desperately searching for the limit that tells them someone is in charge.
The Middle Path: Warm and Firm
The sweet spot is what researchers call “authoritative parenting” — high warmth AND high structure. This is what genuine gentle parenting looks like in practice:
Empathy first, boundary second: “I can see you really want to stay at the park. It is hard to leave when you are having fun. AND it is time to go. We are leaving in two minutes.”
Feelings are valid, behaviour has limits: “You are allowed to be angry that I said no. You are not allowed to hit. Both of those things are true at the same time.”
Connection before correction: Get down to their level. Make eye contact. Touch their shoulder. THEN deliver the boundary. A connected child is a cooperative child.
Follow through without drama: If you said it, do it. Calmly. Without lectures, without “I told you so”, without anger. Just the natural consequence, delivered with love.
Our Boundary Toolkit was built on this exact principle — warm and firm, clear and kind. It includes 30+ word-for-word scripts for the moments when your brain goes blank and you default to either shouting or caving.
Gentle parenting is not about being soft. It is about being strong enough to hold the boundary AND the child’s feelings at the same time. That is the hardest thing in parenting. And it is worth it.
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