🌿 What Gentle Parenting Actually Looks Like Day to Day
Gentle parenting is one of the most talked-about parenting approaches right now.
Across articles and social media, it’s often described as calm, patient, and connected — focusing on understanding children rather than controlling behaviour.
But when you look at real-life parenting experiences, many parents describe something a little different:
🌿not a perfect approach — but something that unfolds day by day.
Our experience is gentle parenting is something we draw upon.
We like to think were gentle not perfect parents.
This doesn’t mean we can’t lose our sh_t like every other parent or our children run riot over us.
💬 What Gentle Parenting Looks Like in Real Life
For many parents, gentle parenting doesn’t feel like a fixed method.
Instead, it can look like:
🌿trying to stay patient after a long day
🌿repeating the same boundary more than once
🌿feeling unsure in the moment
🌿managing your own emotions alongside your child’s
Some days feel calm and steady.
Other days feel loud, rushed, or unpredictable.
In everyday life, it often becomes less about following an approach, and more about:
🌿moving through each moment as it comes.
I think of gentle parenting like my grandparents parenting. My grandparents were older grandparents. There lives were calmer and they had more time. Time to explain and connect, and not just shout orders. When i think about gentle parenting i think about my grandparents. Parenting with kindness and compassion. Of course there were plenty of times when noisy children smashed their peaceful afternoons and they shower their sterner side and where more abrupt but gentle parenting doesn’t mean a loss of guidelines or order.
🧠 Balancing Calm Intentions with Real Life
Parents often describe holding two things at once:
🌿wanting to respond calmly and thoughtfully
🌿while also dealing with time, energy, and everyday pressures
That might mean:
🌿staying patient in one moment, then feeling overwhelmed in the next
🌿reflecting afterwards on how things went
🌿adjusting as you go
For many, gentle parenting becomes something fluid — not something fixed.
For us this is parenting, reacting to situations and changing how we do things. If my son comes back from school having had a terrible day we give him space and time, we let him explain at his speed and when he’s ready. He knows we won’t shout or get angry (as much as we sometimes want to) but will listen. We try not to jump to solutions and understand his perspective even when he’s in the wrong.
Gentle parenting is sometimes about what you don’t do.
⏱️ When Real Life Gets Busy
In day-to-day parenting, life doesn’t pause.
There are:
🌿school runs
🌿work commitments
🌿multiple children at different stages
🌿tiredness and lack of sleep
In these moments, things don’t always feel calm or considered.
Parents often describe it as:
🌿doing what feels possible in that moment.
We watch social media and videos where gentle parenting is mocked as letting children do what they want. I can understand why some people find it easy to mock and sometimes without understanding gentle parenting can be misunderstood. We have 3 children and our lives are busy.
We have deadlines and jobs like other parents and sometimes we can’t listen and understand, sometimes we’ve just got do it but gentle parenting for us is explaining getting the child to try to understand.
If were going on holiday we allow extra time, explain what will happen and why we need t catch the plane, and that the plane won’t wait. Sometimes we just need to go but its also understanding our children need explanation and assurance. Us panicking in a busy airport isn’t going to help them deal with their anxiety.
💭 The Thoughts That Come With It
Alongside everything else, there’s often an ongoing internal dialogue:
🌿“Did I handle that how I wanted to?”
🌿“Would I do that differently next time?”
🌿“Am I getting this right?”
For many, this reflection becomes part of everyday parenting — something that naturally comes and goes.
Learning and accepting you won’t get everything right.
Not being too hard on yourself.
Gentle parenting is a family thing. For us its about understanding.
This includes yourself and your family.
Understanding you don’t get everything right.
Being honest with your children.
Sharing your mistakes with your children really helps them feel valued.
When you get it wrong you learn and move on. This is a great lesson for your children.
As they grow they can even tell you its ok.
🌱 Finding What Feels Right for Your Family
Over time, many parents move away from trying to follow a specific approach and instead:
🌿notice what fits their family
🌿adjust based on their child
🌿learn through experience
What works one day might change the next.
What works for one family may look completely different for another.
I would never tell another parent what to do. CosyChats is all about sharing experience but not from a expert or position of authority. Every family is different, what works for us one day may not work the next so how can we tell you what to do. What we can do is share our experience. Share how we adapt and learn. How we make mistakes and move on.
💬 Real Conversations Between Parents
At CosyChats, conversations around gentle parenting aren’t about:
🌿advice
🌿techniques
🌿or getting things “right”
They’re simply about:
sharing what it’s been like.
🌿The calm moments.
🌿The challenging ones.
🌿And everything in between.
🧭 Final Thoughts on Gentle Parenting
Gentle parenting in real life often looks less like a defined method — and more like a series of everyday moments, reflections, and experiences.
🌿Not perfect.
🌿Not fixed.
🌿Just part of parenting as it unfolds.
Its not about giving up control and living in a mad house. Its about working out what works for you. Not following a rigid regime and rule book. Understanding and building a real connection and bond with your children. Not using fear as a short term stick.
Gentle parenting works for us more than it fails us. Its not perfect and we do adjust our approach to the situation. Do we get it all right, no but it works for us. It helps us understand our children and hopefully bring them up in a house where respect and compassion exists and we can all find a way to live with each other in some kind of harmony.
🔗 Continue the Conversation
Explore more real-life parenting conversations on CosyChats or connect with another parent to share experiences.