Parenting
Used as illustration. PHOTO: Unsplash

Parenting does not come with a manual, but it does come with a million opinions. Some days, it feels like you are doing everything wrong – too soft, too firm, not enough of this, too much of that. But when you pause and look into your child’s eyes, when you see that little spark of love, mischief, and curiosity all rolled into one, you remember what matters most: connection.

In today’s world, raising kind, confident, and respectful children is not about controlling their behaviour – it is about walking alongside them, showing them what care and consideration feel like in real moments.

Gentle parenting is not about being permissive. It is about leading with calm authority and making space for emotions, while still holding firm to values and limits.

At Dibber, we believe that children grow through relationships, through experience, and through knowing they are deeply accepted.

Children are always watching their parents, and see and learn from how they respond in different situations. Photo: Pexels.com

Children explore boundaries not to challenge us, but to make sense of the world. They do not need to be corrected – they need to be supported. A child who cries when they do not get their turn, or grabs a toy in frustration, is not misbehaving – they are still learning. When we respond with calm, get down on their level, and say, “I see it’s hard to wait. Let’s try together,” we are not fixing a problem – we are guiding them through a moment of growth.

And they are always watching. They see how we respond when someone cuts us off in traffic, how we greet the person at the till, how we treat our own parents.

They learn more from how we speak in frustration than from any lesson we teach in calm. That is why respect begins with us. Not in what we say, but in what we show, especially when things do not go as planned.

Children who are treated with respect begin to understand what it feels like to matter. When they feel heard and considered, they start to do the same for others. They share not because we told them to, but because they care. They say “sorry” not because they were forced to, but because they understand that someone else was hurt. And that kind of growth does not come from punishment. It comes from experience, and from being guided with warmth and trust.

Boundaries do not need to come with fear

Boundaries still matter. In fact, they are essential. But boundaries do not need to come with fear. They can come with clarity, kindness, and consistency. “I won’t let you hit. I’m here to help.” “You really want that toy, but we’re learning to wait.” When children hear these words often, in a calm tone, they begin to internalise self-regulation – not because someone made them, but because someone helped them.

Every day at Dibber, we see this approach in motion. A young child who once struggled to greet a friend now smiles first. A preschooler who cried during transitions now helps the younger ones feel safe. This does not happen through rules or rewards. It happens because they have experienced what it means to belong.

Kelly Eyre, quality and pedagogy lead at Dibber International Preschools. Photo: Supplied

When we let children choose between two healthy snacks, or decide which book to read at bedtime, they are not just making choices, they are learning their opinion counts. These moments may seem small, but they are powerful. They teach children to trust their voice. And when something feels off, they will know they are allowed to speak up, even if an adult is the one who made them uncomfortable.

We do not need to have all the answers. We just need to be present, consistent, and kind. When we hold our children through the messy moments with love, and guide them gently through challenge, we raise more than well-behaved children. We raise thoughtful, empathetic, and self-aware individuals. And those are the kinds of children who grow into the adults this world truly needs.

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