One of the most common questions I hear when people talk about gentle parenting is this: “Isn’t that just letting kids do whatever they want?”
Short answer? No.
Longer, more honest answer: gentle parenting and permissive parenting often look similar from the outside — especially during hard moments — but they are built on very different foundations.
And if you’ve ever worried that being calm, empathetic, or emotionally responsive means you’re being “too soft,” this post is for you.
Why Gentle Parenting Gets Confused With Permissive Parenting
To begin with, much of the confusion comes from what gentle parenting looks like on the surface.
From the outside, gentle parenting can look quiet.
You might see:
- A parent sitting with a crying child instead of shutting it down
- A boundary held without yelling
- A meltdown that isn’t immediately “fixed”
To someone watching, that can feel like inaction.
But what’s happening internally — emotionally and neurologically — is anything but passive.
What Permissive Parenting Actually Is
To clarify the difference, it helps to understand what permissive parenting truly involves.
Permissive parenting is rooted in avoiding discomfort — both the child’s and the parent’s.
It often looks like:
- Few or inconsistent boundaries
- Giving in to stop a meltdown
- Saying yes when you mean no
- Avoiding limits because they feel hard
The intention is usually loving.
But over time, permissive parenting can leave children feeling unanchored — unsure where the edges are, and unsure who’s holding them.
What Gentle Parenting Is (And Why It’s Different)
In contrast, gentle parenting is rooted in leadership, not avoidance.
Gentle parenting is not about avoiding boundaries.
It’s about how boundaries are held.
Gentle parenting prioritizes:
- Emotional safety
- Clear, consistent limits
- Co-regulation before correction
- Respect for both the child and the parent
You can validate feelings and say no.
You can stay calm and stay firm.
You can be kind without being permissive.
A Real-Life Example
A child wants a second snack right before dinner.
Permissive response:
“Okay, fine — just this once.” (Even though you know it’ll impact dinner.)
Gentle response:
“I hear you’re hungry. Dinner is coming soon, and the answer is no. I’m here while you’re upset.”
Same situation. Same big feelings.
Completely different leadership.
Why Gentle Parenting Can Feel Harder
As a result, gentle parenting often feels more demanding for adults.
Gentle parenting asks more of the adult.
It requires:
- Emotional regulation
- Tolerance for discomfort
- Consistency, even when it’s exhausting
- Repair when things don’t go perfectly
Especially when parenting twins, this emotional load is doubled — two nervous systems, two reactions, two needs happening at once.
That doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong.
It means you’re doing real work.
Boundaries Are What Make Gentle Parenting Feel Safe
Ultimately, boundaries are the foundation that makes gentle parenting effective.
Children don’t need parents who never say no.
They need parents who:
- Hold limits calmly
- Stay present during big emotions
- Don’t disappear when feelings get loud
Boundaries aren’t punishment.
They’re structure.
And structure is what allows kids to feel secure enough to grow.
If You’ve Been Afraid You’re “Too Soft”
You’re not failing because your child still has meltdowns.
You’re not permissive because you choose connection over control.
And you’re not weak for holding boundaries without force.
Gentle parenting isn’t about raising quiet children.
It’s about raising emotionally supported ones.
And that work is anything but passive.
If you’ve ever felt unsure where you land between gentle and permissive parenting, you’re not alone.
Parenting isn’t about fitting into a label — it’s about showing up with intention, consistency, and care.
One steady day at a time.
