Gentle parenting emerged as a corrective, a more conscious, emotionally attuned alternative to the older parenting styles many of today’s parents were raised with. The intention was sound. However, for
a growing number of parents, its execution has quietly become a source of exhaustion in itself.
The problem is not the philosophy itself, but what happens when a parenting approach built on empathy and emotional attunement is filtered through a culture of perfectionism and social media performance. “Gentle parenting, as it is increasingly practised, has developed an unofficial standard, one that expects parents to be perpetually regulated, endlessly patient, and emotionally available on demand. That standard was never realistic, and the gap between it and actual human capacity is why burnout happens,” says Dr Chandni Tugnait, MD (A.M), psychotherapist, life alchemist, coach and healer, founder and director, Gateway of Healing.
When empathy becomes a performance
The pressure to respond to every emotional moment with the “textbook” gentle parenting approach, validating feelings, staying calm, never raising one’s voice, places an enormous cognitive and emotional demand on parents who are themselves tired, stressed, and imperfectly human.
“A parent who loses their temper and then spends the next hour dealing with guilt and attempting repair is not failing at gentle parenting. They are experiencing the cost of holding themselves to an impossible standard against the reality of daily life with children,” adds Dr Tugnait.
What gets lost in the pressure
Parenting driven by anxiety about doing it “correctly” is not the same as parenting driven by genuine connection. Children need present, honest, and reasonably regulated parents, not perfectly scripted ones.
“The gentlest thing a parent can offer is not a flawless emotional response, but a real relationship, which by definition includes rupture, repair, and the occasional raised voice,” believes Dr Tugnait.
Gentle parenting burnout is not a sign that the parent has failed the philosophy, but rather a sign that the philosophy, somewhere in translation, forgot to account for the parent too.














