Soft parenting — a broad umbrella term for approaches that emphasise emotional validation, reduced punishment, and child-led learning over strict discipline and external authority — has become increasingly influential in contemporary parenting discourse. The underlying instincts are good: a genuine desire to raise children who feel seen, who have strong emotional vocabulary, who don’t carry the wounds of punitive parenting into adulthood.
But a growing body of developmental psychology research and a chorus of concerned practitioners are raising a question worth taking seriously: is soft parenting building resilience in children, or is it inadvertently creating the conditions for fragility?
What Soft Parenting Is — and What It Isn’t
It’s worth being precise about terms, because “soft parenting” is used to describe a wide spectrum of approaches. At its best, it describes parenting that is warm, attuned, emotionally responsive, and that holds children accountable through natural consequences and collaborative problem-solving rather than punishment or shame. This kind of parenting has strong empirical support — it is associated with secure attachment, emotional regulation, and positive developmental outcomes.
At its most problematic, “soft parenting” can slide into permissiveness: the avoidance of any limit that might cause the child distress, the immediate resolution of all discomfort, the removal of all friction from the child’s experience in the name of emotional safety. This version, while well-intentioned, may not be serving children’s long-term wellbeing as effectively as it aims to.
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The Resilience Question: What the Research Actually Shows
Resilience — the capacity to adapt, recover, and grow in response to adversity — is not a trait that children are born with or without. It is built through experience. Specifically, it is built through repeated encounters with difficulty that are challenging enough to require effort but manageable enough not to be overwhelming. Developmental psychologists call this “good stress” or “tolerable stress” — the kind that, when navigated with appropriate parental support, actually strengthens the child’s capacity to handle future challenge.
The concern with more permissive forms of soft parenting is that they may inadvertently eliminate too much of this good stress. When a parent rushes to resolve every conflict, complete every frustrating task, eliminate every disappointment before the child has had time to struggle with it, they may be depriving the child of the very experiences through which resilience is built. The child learns, implicitly, that discomfort is a signal to be rescued from rather than a challenge to be worked through.
Signs That Soft Parenting May Not Be Building Resilience
Every child is different, and no parenting approach produces uniform outcomes. But there are patterns worth watching for that may suggest the balance has shifted from healthy responsiveness toward counterproductive over-protection.
A child who has significant difficulty tolerating frustration — who escalates quickly when things don’t go their way, who is unable to persist with challenging tasks, who requires parental intervention for problems they are developmentally capable of solving — may be showing the effects of insufficient exposure to managed struggle. Similarly, a child who appears anxious in new situations, who relies heavily on parental mediation in peer conflicts, or who has significant difficulty with transitions and disappointment may be indicating that their experience of difficulty has consistently been resolved from the outside rather than worked through from within.
The Balance: Warmth With Appropriate Challenge
The developmental evidence points toward a parenting approach that combines emotional warmth, attunement, and genuine responsiveness with appropriate challenge, age-calibrated expectations, and a willingness to let children experience and work through manageable difficulty. This is sometimes called “authoritative” parenting (as distinct from “authoritarian”) — and it has the strongest empirical support of any parenting style for long-term wellbeing outcomes.
Practically, this looks like: validating a child’s feelings about a difficult situation while supporting them to navigate it rather than rescuing them from it. Letting them experience age-appropriate consequences of their choices. Resisting the urge to immediately solve problems they are capable of working through. Holding age-appropriate expectations for behaviour, contribution, and accountability — not because comfort is unimportant but because the capacity to tolerate discomfort is itself a crucial developmental outcome.
For parents navigating the balance between emotional availability and appropriate boundaries, the broader question of understanding your individual child’s temperament and needs is central — because the right calibration genuinely varies from child to child.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is gentle parenting the same as soft parenting?
Not exactly, though the terms overlap. Gentle parenting — associated with practitioners like Sarah Ockwell-Smith — emphasises empathy, respect, and understanding alongside appropriate boundaries and expectations. At its best, it is not permissive — it holds children accountable while doing so in ways that preserve relationship and dignity. The concern about “soft parenting” is usually directed at the more permissive end of the spectrum, where the avoidance of child distress becomes the primary organising principle.
How do I raise a resilient child without being harsh?
The research is clear that harshness — punitive discipline, shame, emotional unavailability — does not build resilience. It builds anxiety, hypervigilance, and suppressed emotional expression. What does build resilience is a combination of secure emotional attachment and age-appropriate exposure to challenge. Children who know they are loved and supported are better equipped to tolerate difficulty — because they have a secure base to return to when the difficulty is hard. The goal is not to make children tougher by withdrawing warmth. It is to make them more capable by letting them practice, with your support, navigating the inevitable difficulties of being alive.
Understanding how the challenges of early parenting shape long-term patterns can also offer useful perspective on how parenting approaches develop and why they can be difficult to adjust once established.
Sources & further reading: American Academy of Pediatrics: Parenting Styles | Psychology Today: Permissive vs. Authoritative Parenting | NCBI: Parenting Style and Child Resilience Research.
Jack Rylie is a writer and mental health advocate who has spent the past decade exploring resilience, identity, and emotional rebuilding — both as a writer and as someone who has navigated significant personal upheaval. After a career change in his early 30s that coincided with the end of a long-term relationship, Jack spent two years in psychotherapy and became deeply interested in how men process loss, change, and vulnerability in a culture that rarely creates space for it. He holds a Post-Graduate Certificate in Psychology of Mental Health and has contributed to mental health awareness campaigns with several UK-based organisations. His writing draws on clinical research, personal experience, and a long-held belief that honest male vulnerability is not a weakness — it is the foundation of genuine resilience.







