logo
Millennials are mocked for gentle parenting. But have they been right all along?

Millennials are mocked for gentle parenting. But have they been right all along?

USA Today18-03-2025

Millennials are mocked for gentle parenting. But have they been right all along?
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Tips for flying with kids: Advice to make your family flight easier
Learn how to have stress-free air travel with tips for flying with kids.
It was one of those rare parenting wins that are few and far between.
Lauren Reed's two young daughters, who are 6 and 3 years old, were in the doorway of her kitchen talking out a dispute about blocks that minutes before had ended in yelling and tears.
'I noticed pretty clearly my older daughter was using the language we use every day,' said Reed, 38, from Richmond, Virginia. 'I was so excited about how well they were doing.'
The moment was so precious that Reed whipped out her phone to take a quick video and later shared it on TikTok. It quickly went viral, garnering over 9 million views, plus another 15 million on Instagram.
Gentle parenting is emotionally exhausting, Reed said, but these little wins carry her through the hard days.
'By the end of the day, we're definitely tired and feel like we've done a lot of parenting,' she said. 'You see moments like this and you're like, 'it is working.' They're kind and emotionally intelligent young people and it makes it all worth it.'
The parenting style popularized by Millennials has received criticism from older generations who argue parents are too permissive with their children. But child psychologists say they're seeing a shift in young children and their emotional intelligence that seems to suggest that gentle parenting might be working.
'As a generation, the younger kids are more insightful with mental health concerns, more specific with the emotional language they're using and communicate it effectively with others,' said Dr. Elizabeth Ortiz-Schwartz, service chief of the adolescent inpatient program at Silver Hill Hospital in Connecticut.
Commenters on Reed's video are flocking to it, vindicated: "THIS is gentle parenting. Not the misinformation people say it is where parents let their kids get away with everything," read one of the 16,500 comments on TikTok. "It teaches emotional regulation, communication skills and natural consequences." Another declared: "WE'RE DOING IT GUYS WE'RE HEALING GENERATIONS."
What is gentle parenting?
Gentle parenting is a parenting style that's rooted in understanding, empathy, respect and boundaries, said parenting expert Sarah Ockwell-Smith, who wrote the book that brought gentle parenting to mainstream: 'The Gentle Parenting Book,' which was first published in 2016.
'It's treating children in the way you wished you had been treated by parents and caregivers when you were a child,' she said.
While some may confuse it with permissive parenting, another parenting style that imposes few rules and discipline, Ockwell-Smith said gentle parenting is a 'kinder' version of authoritative parenting, characterized by a close, nurturing relationship between caregivers and their children.
Although Ockwell-Smith has used the term 'gentle parenting" for about 20 years, authoritative parenting has been around since the 1960s when developmental psychologist Diana Baumrind identified it as one of the four main styles of parenting: Authoritarian, permissive, authoritative and neglectful.
Authoritarian parenting, which is defined by strict rules and punishment, is 'still by far the main parenting style' practice in the U.S. and U.K., Ockwell-Smith said.
'We want to grow kids who don't need therapy, kids that have relationships that last as adults, with good mental health,' she said.
A 2024 study suggests that people who practice gentle parenting may not do it by the book.
Some caregivers who self-identify as gentle parents utilize techniques characteristic of authoritarian style parenting while others lean more permissive, said lead author Annie Pezalla, visiting assistant professor of psychology at Macalester College in Sant Paul, Minnesota.
'There's tons of diversity in this movement,' she said. But the gentle parenting ideology 'as a whole' represents an 'earnestness in parenting.'
Is gentle parenting working?
While there's no data that objectively determines if gentle parenting is working, anecdotal evidence suggests it might be.
Child development experts say there's been a noticeable change in young children. They're more empathetic, emotionally intelligent and able to communicate how they feel, said Dr. Stacy Doumas, a child psychiatrist at Hackensack Meridian Jersey Shore University Medical Center.
'A lot of children are much more able to discuss their feelings, their worries and concerns and have those open and honest conversations,' she said. 'They're able to do that in situations where they feel that they're going to be validated and have a good sounding board.'
Ockwell-Smith said parents shouldn't expect immediate results from gentle parenting. Gentle parenting is meant to create a lasting, strong bond between caregiver and child throughout their childhood, adolescence and adulthood, Ockwell-Smith said, which means gentle parents don't typically see the fruits of their labor "for a long time."
'Genius' laundry hack or 'child labor?' Why one video sparked a fierce debate.
'You're in it for the long haul," she said.
In the meantime, children of gentle parents still cry, throw tantrums, hit their siblings and backtalk because 'it's just what children do,' she said. The difference is that behaviors happen in a supportive environment where boundaries are held while children feel heard and validated.
In the 2024 study, researchers were surprised to find that many self-identifying gentle parents were gentle-parented themselves, which Pezalla said gives a glimpse of how gentle-parented kids may grow up.
These gentle parents boasted great relationships with their own parents and wanted to continue that with their children, she said.
What isn't working about gentle parenting?
While gentle parenting may be working for kids, it may be at the cost of parents' mental health. Child development experts said this parenting style can be time-intensive and emotionally exhausting.
'It takes a lot of emotional investment to really hear what your child's thoughts are and to give them choices within boundaries,' said Doumas, from Hackensack Meridian Jersey Shore University Medical Center.
Ockwell-Smith said gentle parenting may be more difficult and time-consuming on the front end, when children are little, but it pays off when they're grown and less time is required during their teenage years.
"Gentle parenting is more work and harder work in the early years," she said. "The time when I was reaping the rewards was during the teenage years... I have a really great relationship with my teenager because of the work I put in earlier."
Research shows parents are spending more time caring for their children. For mothers, the average time spent on childcare rose from 8.4 hours in 1985 to 11.8 hours in 2022. For fathers, weekly childcare hours rose from 2.6 to 6.6 in those years.
Sibling gifts for birthdays? Kylie Kelce 'vehemently against' new trend – and experts agree.
With increased demands on parents, former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy issued a public health warning last year that detailed the potential dangers of parenting. The surgeon general report found that two-fifths of parents say that on most days, 'they are so stressed they cannot function. Roughly half of parents called that stress 'completely overwhelming.'
But Ockwell-Smith argues gentle parenting isn't to blame. The added stress that parents feel is due to policy decisions regarding paid parental leave, childcare costs and early education.
'One universal truth is that parenting is exhausting and draining and difficult no matter how you do it,' Ockwell-Smith said. 'A major part of gentle parenting is focusing and starting with yourself, prioritizing your needs and taking care of yourself.'
Reed, from Richmond, Virginia, can relate. She attested one of the hardest things about gentle parenting is working through her own difficult emotions and identifying when she needs a break.
She's not perfect. Reed gets frustrated with her daughters but she's learned how to repair and reconnect with them after a tough day.
"It's really hard work but it's so worth it," Reed said. "Lay down the groundwork early so you can have the best relationship with them forever."
Adrianna Rodriguez can be reached at adrodriguez@usatoday.com.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Do Me A Favor And Stop Sending 'Happy Birthday!' Texts In The Group Chat
Do Me A Favor And Stop Sending 'Happy Birthday!' Texts In The Group Chat

Refinery29

time27 minutes ago

  • Refinery29

Do Me A Favor And Stop Sending 'Happy Birthday!' Texts In The Group Chat

Photographed by Ramona Jingru Wang. The past might be a foreign country but if you're an older millennial with a Yahoo email address and a drawer full of ankle socks, the present is no less baffling. Why are grown men trading punches over plushies? What in the name of god is the poop rule? Who's eating all the cottage cheese? Bewildering trends like these are hardly a modern phenomenon, I know, but in the age of TikTok they spread from one side of the world to the other before you can say 'Dubai chocolate'. Consequently, for those of us who dip in and out of social media instead of maintaining a constant online presence, logging into Instagram on a Sunday night can feel like climbing the Magic Faraway Tree and finding yourself in a strange new land. Still, crazes come and go and for the most part provoke nothing more than a chuckle or a raised eyebrow. So what if we lose the run of ourselves every now and then? Ultimately the clamor subsides, the dust settles and society rights itself again. Events rarely spin completely out of control because the majority of people, I like to think, know how to behave — online and off. And then a friend drops a message in the group chat. 'Happy Birthday Tash!' It is 7.01 a.m. and you are still in bed, rubbing sleep from your eyes. Within minutes, texts begin to arrive from the other members of the group. You can tell who's made an effort to personalise their message — or, perhaps, who is in a rush — by the presence of an extra exclamation mark here or an abbreviation there. 'Happy Birthday Tash!!!' 'Have a great day T x' 'HBD Tash!' The birthday girl, hopefully having a lie-in, is silent and now you are feeling the pressure to add a greeting to the chorus. The fact that there is a thoughtfully chosen card for Tash propped up on your dresser, to be handed over when you meet her later for a celebratory drink, is neither here nor there. Failure to participate in the birthday pile-on will be noted not just by Tash but by everyone else in the group. Dutifully, you tap out a message and head for the bathroom to brush your teeth. Friends coming together to wish another friend happy birthday. Harmless enough, right? Wrong. If you ask me, the person who sends that initial message is committing an egregious act of friendship hit-and-run. Think about it. DM a friend on their birthday and chances are you'll have to send at least one follow-up text when they inevitably ask how you are and what you've been up to. Share your well wishes in the group chat, however, and you sidestep the time-consuming business of engaging in further conversation — a particularly effective strategy if the friend in question is second-tier rather than BFF. Perhaps this is the cynic in me talking but I suspect, too, that the motivating factor for sharing birthday greetings in the group chat is less a desire to make your loved one feel special on their special day and more a compulsion to show off. There is a performative function to dropping a 'Happy Birthday!' text in a space where it can be seen by people other than the intended recipient. The fact that it unleashes, almost invariably, a flood of messages from other members of the group is confirmation for the original texter that they are somehow superior. That they have won the friendship race. (I'm not extrapolating here; check out these posts where proponents of such heinous behavior confess to relishing this very feeling.) It's the group chat equivalent of the juvenile mentality that was common in the early days of YouTube, when people — probably men, let's be honest — would scramble to be the first to comment on a clip, posting simply and quite pointlessly, 'first'. And what about the poor individual on the receiving end of this barrage of texts? Imagine waking up on your birthday, reaching for your phone and opening the group chat to find a stream of greetings all sent within minutes of each other. To my mind these aren't 'Happy Birthday!' messages. These are 'Gina's wished you Happy Birthday so now I'm wishing you Happy Birthday!' messages. Or 'Oh shit I forgot it was your birthday, good job Ellie reminded me. Happy Birthday!' messages. The overarching sentiment is not warm and heartfelt but guilt-stricken and insincere. For she's a jolly good fellow? Don't make me laugh. If you are lucky enough — or, depending on your perspective, unfortunate enough — to be part of a family group chat, there is a fun twist on this trend which involves adults who really should know better filming their kids singing 'Happy Birthday' to nanna or grandad or whoever and dropping the video in the chat. We know what you're doing, guys. Send the video directly to the recipient and pass up the opportunity to have the entire family coo over your little one's adorable lisp and idiosyncratic dance moves? Please. The trouble with this is that it creates a kind of one-upmanship, with each subsequent birthday kicking off a procession of pageant-like home movies in which grown-up siblings vie to outdo one another via the medium of their children's cuteness. I have a kid myself so I understand the drive to show them off but in doing so the person whose birthday it is — the reason for all this silliness, remember — gets forgotten altogether.

What Swift fan accounts should know about copyright after Barstool's 'Taylor Watch' canceled
What Swift fan accounts should know about copyright after Barstool's 'Taylor Watch' canceled

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

What Swift fan accounts should know about copyright after Barstool's 'Taylor Watch' canceled

What Swift fan accounts should know about copyright after Barstool's 'Taylor Watch' canceled The rumors may be terrible and cruel, but the ones about Barstool Sports' "Taylor Watch" podcast being canceled are true. The podcast with 115,000 fans on TikTok, 78,000 fans on Instagram and 16,000 subscribers on YouTube — geared toward discussing all things Taylor Swift — aired its final episode on June 4. What was supposed to have been a celebratory moment for Swift regaining control of her masters started on a melancholic note as hosts Kelly Keegs and Gia Mariano sang "Ave Maria." The two sat in their brown leather chairs to acknowledge the termination of a show they've cultivated for two-plus years. "'Taylor Watch' is canceled," Keegs said on the 150th episode, "because having a music related podcast or something that can toe the line with lawsuits in general where it comes to music rights, whatever, is just not feasible with Barstool Sports at this time." One underlying issue lies in copyrighted photos, videos and music being used on social media. Several posts potentially opened parent company Barstool Sports to lawsuits, and the podcasters had two options: to cancel "Taylor Watch" or be fired. "It was all just stupid mistakes on my part," Mariano said on the podcast through tears. "It was never intentional. We would never think that we could just get away with something." "Or even jeopardize the company," Keegs jumped in. "We love working here." Long live the Eras Tour with our enchanting book The one- to two-hour episodes crafted a corner in the Swiftie community where fans (and some haters) tuned in to hear the thoughts of Keegs and Mariano. " Gia and I went to Paris Night 2 together, and there were some people coming up to us and saying what they liked about the show," Keegs tells the USA TODAY Network of Swift's May 10, 2024, concert. "Then by the time we were in Miami — that was a totally different experience — I couldn't believe how many people were coming up to us who knew who we were." The two hosts offered unfiltered thoughts on Swift's music, business moves, concerts and news. They would post short snippets to social media. A couple included some paparazzi photos and sped-up music pulled from the internet. "It's what I looked forward to every week," Keegs says. Her favorite part was the voicemail segment when people called in to offer their thoughts. "We got a call from a mom excited about the 'Speak Now (Taylor's Version).' She gave birth to her son when the first version came out and now he's a teen. She made him listen to 'Never Grow Up.' It was a beautiful full circle moment." Copyright's gray area So where do the legal lines lie for copyright? It's a perfect question for David Herlihy, an intellectual property, new media and entertainment lawyer who also teaches at Northeastern University in Boston. Copyright is the subject of entire college courses, so keep in mind the following is heavily abbreviated. Herlihy also provides an asterisk: " None of these things are absolute, but there are basic policy contours of copyright." Let's start with images and videos that fan accounts share on social media. Herlihy says the copyright of photos of Swift taken in a public place are owned by the photographers and can be licensed to news outlets. However, the photographers can't make merch with the photos, "because that's a commercial exploitation of her likeness." What about fan accounts that repost photos and credit them, do they need permission? Some cases can be deemed fair-use, which means using copyrighted material doesn't need permission under "certain circumstances." This balances copyright holders' intellectual property rights with the public's need to access and use information. "You're using the photograph for news reporting, commentary or for conversation, and the law regards news, commentary and conversation as valuable," Herlihy says. "So depending upon the nature of the use, the rights of the copyright owner may actually yield to other socially beneficial purposes." What Taylor Swift's trademark applications say about potential business moves. However, Instagram has a clear policy that users cannot post content that violates someone else's intellectual property rights, including copyright. 'Taylor Watch' is not the first account within the past month to get flagged. In fact a few behemoth Swift fan accounts with six digits in followers were recently sent to Instagram purgatory and deactivated for similar infractions including @ and @tstourtips. Meta, Instagram's parent company, did not comment on the deactivations to the USA TODAY Network. The accounts, which are not officially affiliated with Swift, share news, theories on upcoming announcements and records broken by the superstar. They foster micro-communities of the global fandom. And they celebrate moments like Swift buying back her first six albums from Shamrock Capital. For Keegs and Mariano, "Taylor Watch" was their safe space to gab about the superstar. 'It's not like we aren't Taylor fans still,' Keegs said. She tried to find a bright side explaining, "If we want to be poetic about it, I suppose you can say our watch has ended because [Swift's] gotten all of her stuff back." Don't miss any Taylor Swift news; sign up for the free, weekly newsletter This Swift Beat. Follow Bryan West, the USA TODAY Network's Taylor Swift reporter, on Instagram, TikTok and X as @BryanWestTV.

I Scream, You Scream. They Don't Scream for Ice Cream.
I Scream, You Scream. They Don't Scream for Ice Cream.

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

I Scream, You Scream. They Don't Scream for Ice Cream.

The Museum of Ice Cream is a sugarcoated daydream — or nightmare, depending on your tastes. The location in SoHo opened in 2019, spawning out of a temporary pop-up three years earlier that reportedly had a 200,000-person wait-list. It's less of a museum than it is a made-for-Instagram selfie emporium. You won't find much on display to spark any philosophical thoughts — what is there to say about the ephemeral nature of ice cream, or how about its role as a symbol of pure hedonism? You will instead find a banana jungle, a spiral slide, unlimited scoops of Fruiti Cereal Swirl and Ess-a-Bagel ice cream sandwiches. 'Ready To Rediscover Your Inner Child?' the museum prominently asks on its website. But in the depths of the museum's sprinkle pool, a feud has been brewing. The inner child belongs to adults, and the Museum of Ice Cream wants to cater to them. Though 'pinktinis' and sprinkle shots are on the menu, the party ends early: the latest available tickets on weekends are for 8 p.m. For years, the museum has wanted to extend its hours and liquor sales. Last week, the New York State Liquor Authority denied the museum's latest proposal, which would have allowed the museum to serve alcohol until 10:30 p.m. daily and midnight during private events. The application also sought to extend liquor consumption to all three stories of its building; alcohol use is currently limited to the main floor. 'We are requesting nothing beyond what other similar SoHo establishments already have — whether it's ice cream shops with licenses to serve alcohol or museums that host occasional private events. We're simply aligning with longstanding practices in the neighborhood and industry,' said Kate Ambas, a representative for the museum, in an emailed statement. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store