What If Parenting Trends Are Hurting Your Parental Relationship More Than Helping?

What If Parenting Trends Are Hurting Your Parental Relationship More Than Helping?

I’ve spent a lot of time watching parenting trends rise and fall on Instagram and TikTok. Some parents proudly wave the banner of gentle parenting, while others claim f around and find out parenting is the only way to get kids to listen. The truth is, none of these labels really capture what healthy, evidence-based parenting looks like in practice.

In this episode of The Educated Parent Podcast, I wanted to step away from the noise and talk honestly about what actually helps our kids and our parental relationship thrive. Parenting today is incredibly complex. We’re raising children in a world of smartphones, information overload, and constant judgment. Even with the best intentions, it’s easy to feel like we’re failing. But what I’ve seen again and again, both in my own life and in my clinical work, is that clarity comes when we stop chasing labels and start focusing on principles that work.


When Parenting Becomes an Identity

I avoided this topic for a long time because parenting trends can feel personal. Many parents identify deeply with their chosen style, whether it’s f around and find out parenting or gentle parenting. But when we start to see these approaches as our identity, it can make it hard to adapt or even ask for help.

As a psychologist, I see so many parents doing their absolute best. They read the books, watch the reels, follow the experts, but still feel like something isn’t working. That’s where I remind them: true evidence-based parenting isn’t about perfection. It’s about understanding your child, building connection, and teaching kids boundaries that actually help them feel safe and loved.


The Research That Still Holds True

Back in the 1960s, psychologist Diana Baumrind introduced the concept of parenting styles, describing how warmth and control interact to shape our children’s development. Decades later, her model still explains so much of what we see in modern families.

The gold standard, what most evidence-based parenting approaches aim for, is called authoritative parenting. This means high warmth and connection, paired with clear expectations and limits. Children raised with this balance tend to develop stronger emotional regulation, better social skills, and healthier self-esteem. In other words, this is the framework that strengthens your parental relationship over time.


When Boundaries Disappear

Here’s what I’ve noticed: many well-meaning parents interpret gentle parenting as never saying no. They fear that setting limits or giving consequences might damage their child’s emotional security. But in reality, teaching kids boundaries is one of the most loving things we can do.

When kids know where the limits are, they feel safe. Without boundaries, they push harder and harder, testing where the line is, until someone finally reacts in frustration. That’s when relationships get strained, and both parent and child feel disconnected. This is often what we see when f around and find out parenting emerges as a backlash to permissiveness: parents swing from being overly gentle to overly harsh. Neither extreme works.


How Evidence-Based Parenting Brings Balance

True evidence-based parenting isn’t about reacting; it’s about responding intentionally. It means:

  • Staying connected even when you’re setting limits.

  • Teaching kids boundaries through consistency and empathy.

  • Understanding that discipline means teaching, not punishing.

  • Recognizing that your own emotion regulation shapes your child’s.

When we apply these principles, our parental relationship becomes more stable and less reactive. We stop swinging between extremes and start feeling confident in how we show up for our kids.


The Three Questions I Ask Myself

Whenever I feel lost as a parent, I return to three core questions:

  1. Am I being warm and emotionally attuned to my child?

  2. Am I teaching kids boundaries in a way that’s clear, fair, and consistent?

  3. Am I regulated enough to respond calmly and not react impulsively?

If I can answer yes to those, I know I’m practicing evidence-based parenting, no matter what the latest parenting trends say.


When You’re Struggling, You’re Not Alone

There’s no perfect parent, and every family’s dynamics are unique. If you’re feeling like your parental relationship is stretched thin or that parenting trends have left you confused, you’re not failing, you’re human. Sometimes, the best step forward is to get support that helps you reset and rebuild your confidence. That’s exactly why I created PCIT Experts and Thriving Child Center: to give parents access to real, research-based guidance that actually works.

Listen to the full episode of The Educated Parent Podcast to hear my full breakdown of f around and find out parenting, the role of warmth and control in evidence-based parenting, and practical ways of teaching kids boundaries that strengthen your parental relationship.

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