‘Gentle Parenting’ Regret: Mum’s Painful Realisation Goes Viral

gentle parenting mum

A mother went viral after admitting 10 years of “gentle parenting” backfired, leaving her kids anxious and withdrawn—prompting her shift to structured, high-warmth authoritative parenting.

An American mother went viral last month when she admitted on social media that 10 years of “gentle parenting” had backfired, leaving her children anxious, entitled and withdrawn.

Jaclyn Williams, a mother of two, shared an Instagram post in early November that quickly attracted millions of views and was featured in stories by The New York Post and The Daily Mail.

Her post began: “I did gentle parenting for years,” before she clarified what she meant by the term: “I validated every emotion, processed feelings extensively, explained every boundary, compromised on things, avoided harsh punishments.”

“I thought I was doing it right,” Jaclyn added.

However, as her children grew older, the results became harder to ignore.

She described one of her children as becoming “anxious about everything — even choosing a snack — insecure in their abilities, entitled, and emotionally dysregulated.”

The other, she said, “became a people-pleaser, suppressed their real feelings, absorbed everyone’s emotions, and became withdrawn.”

‘I Had Slipped Into Permissive Parenting’

“The realisation devastated me,” she admitted. “I cried a lot. I had tried SO hard to do everything right… to do things different from what I had growing up.”

Jaclyn explained that the drift happened gradually and without intent.

“I wasn’t actually doing gentle parenting,” she wrote. “I had slipped into permissive parenting without realising it.”

“The things I thought were ‘gentle’ — validating for 20 minutes, explaining too many boundaries, compromising too much — actually became over-processing, making everything negotiable, and having no real limits.”

After recognising the problem, Jaclyn says she made a decisive shift towards what’s often called “authoritative parenting” — a style that blends high emotional warmth with clear expectations, boundaries, and consistent consequences.

She described it simply as “high warmth, high structure”.

Instead of endless negotiation, boundaries became firm. Instead of prolonged emotional processing, conversations became shorter and clearer. Discipline returned, but in measured and consistent ways.

Jaclyn says the impact surprised her.

“It wasn’t overnight,” she wrote. “But soon I saw less anxiety over decisions, more confidence trying new things, less negotiating and entitlement, and better regulation.”

The Four Parenting Styles

As a father of two young children, I have to say I agree with Jaclyn. More than that, I’m thankful to be starting my parenting journey at the place she ended up, rather than investing a decade of effort in a method I’ll regret.

Psychologists have long used a simple four-style framework to describe how parents tend to relate to their children. First outlined by developmental researcher Diana Baumrind in the 1960s and refined over the decades, it remains the most widely accepted model in child development:

  1. Authoritative – high warmth, high structure
  2. Authoritarian – low warmth, high structure
  3. Permissive – high warmth, low structure
  4. Uninvolved (or neglectful) – low warmth, low structure

Under this framework, authoritative parenting — the approach Jaclyn says she shifted toward — consistently produces the strongest long-term outcomes in large bodies of research. Children raised with both emotional support and firm boundaries tend to show better emotional regulation, greater confidence, stronger resilience, and healthier social skills.

By contrast, permissive parenting — which Jaclyn believes she unintentionally adopted — often leads to the very struggles she described: anxiety, poor self-control, entitlement, and difficulty coping with limits. Warmth without structure, psychologists warn, can leave children feeling emotionally supported but fundamentally unsafe.

Perhaps these insights help explain some of the fractures now showing up in homes, classrooms and playgrounds.

How about you? Have your views on discipline changed since becoming a parent? How do you personally balance warmth with clear boundaries? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

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Image courtesy of Unsplash.

Kurt Mahlburg is Canberra Declaration's Research and Features Editor. He hosts his own blog at Cross + Culture and is also a contributor at the Spectator Australia, MercatorNet, Caldron Pool and The Good Sauce. Kurt is also a published author. His book Cross and Culture: Can Jesus Save the West? provides a rigorous analysis of the modern malaise in Western society and how Jesus provides the answer to the challenges before us.

Kurt has a particular interest in speaking the truths of Jesus into the public square in a way that makes sense to a secular culture and that gives Christians courage to do the same. Kurt has also studied architecture, has lived for two years in remote South-East Asia, and among his other interests are philosophy, history, surf, the outdoors, and travel. He is married to Angie.

Kurt Mahlburg is Canberra Declaration's Research and Features Editor. He hosts his own blog at Cross + Culture and is also a contributor at the Spectator Australia, MercatorNet, Caldron Pool and The Good Sauce. Kurt is also a published author. His book Cross and Culture: Can Jesus Save the West? provides a rigorous analysis of the modern malaise in Western society and how Jesus provides the answer to the challenges before us.

Kurt has a particular interest in speaking the truths of Jesus into the public square in a way that makes sense to a secular culture and that gives Christians courage to do the same. Kurt has also studied architecture, has lived for two years in remote South-East Asia, and among his other interests are philosophy, history, surf, the outdoors, and travel. He is married to Angie.

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