When Parenting Feels Impossible: What to Do on Your Worst Days
Some days, parenting feels like trying to meditate inside a karaoke bar.
You’re overstimulated. The toddler is feral. The group chat is buzzing. Someone (usually an older relative) mutters, “Isang palo lang, tapos ‘yan.”
And suddenly you’re not just parenting — you’re defending your parenting.
If you’re a millennial or Gen Z parent trying to break cycles without losing your sanity, this one’s for you.
Here’s what to do when parenting feels impossible.

1. Shrink the Goal: Calm First, Gentle Later
On your worst days, don’t aim to be perfectly gentle.
Aim to be regulated.
If you feel yourself boiling:
- Pause.
- Breathe.
- Step into the bathroom if you need 60 seconds alone.
- Lower your voice instead of raising it.
Gentle parenting isn’t about never getting angry. It’s about not letting anger lead.
If all you manage is “I need a minute” instead of yelling? That’s a win.
2. Remember: Not Spanking or Yelling Doesn’t Mean Permissive
Most young parents burn out because everyone needles them for being “too soft.” They say, “They’ll understand you for spanking and yelling at them.”
Honestly, that’s a maybe. If we did yell at them for smashing the car, then that makes absolute sense. But if we’re going to yell at them for every little thing like breathing, their choice of color of a typical t-shirt, or even food choices, just because we’re just angry at someone else or they remind us about the quirks in our partners, then that’s where we draw the line. That’s where it isn’t worth it.
You can validate feelings and still hold the line.
“I know you’re upset. We’re still leaving.”
That’s gentle and firm.
When you feel exhausted, check this:
- Are you over-explaining?
- Are you negotiating every boundary?
- Are you afraid of being seen as strict?
Kids may need firm leadership, but they need one that makes sense. Logical and rational sense.
3. Have a “Low-Energy Discipline” Plan
Create simple scripts for chaotic days:
- “Toys away before dinner.”
- “You can cry. You can’t hit.”
- “We’ll talk when voices are calm.”
Short. Repeated. Predictable.
When you’re drained, long lectures are torture — for both of you.
Consistency reduces chaos. Chaos causes burnout.
4. When People Pressure You to Be Harsh
Unfortunately, this is very common among Filipinos. We often hear things like:
- “Napaka-soft mo.”
- “Walang disiplina ‘yan.”
- “Hindi kami ganyan noon.”
Sometimes, it makes us want to slap them with a sandok as their parents did. But we also know that it isn’t worth listening to their whining after. So, we try with more eloquent approaches:
- “We’re trying a different approach.”
- “It works for our family.”
- Smile. Change topic.
You’re raising your child—not trying to earn the approval of the jury.
5. Repair Is More Powerful Than Perfection
We snap for a lot of reasons. Some make sense, others not so much. If our snapping matches the issue they’ve caused, then that’s their boo-boo they need to fix. But if we’re snapping at them just because we think it’s our divine right as parents, or we got overstimulated, then that’s where we have to repair.
Why? Well, that’s because that’s how adults work: they own their boo-boos.
6. Cut the Social Media Noise
If your feed is full of perfectly worded parenting scripts and Montessori playrooms that look like Pinterest exploded, take a break.
A lot of those photos are probably curated. Parenting reels—how many takes before uploading? Again, reels and social media never show the full picture.
7. Take Care of the Adult in the Room
Burnout isn’t solved by better scripts.
It’s solved by:
- Sleep.
- Shared caregiving.
- Asking for help.
- Saying no to extra commitments.
- Protecting your own downtime.
You cannot regulate a child if our brains are not rested enough to figure out solutions.

Parenting Will Always Bring Out The Worst In Many
Parenting has a way of exposing the cracks — the impatience you thought you outgrew, the temper you swore you’d never inherit, the exhaustion that turns small defiance into big reactions. It presses on old wounds and unfinished healing. Of course it does. You’re leading a tiny, emotional human while managing your own inner child at the same time. That’s a lot for any nervous system.
But being triggered doesn’t make you a bad parent. It makes you a human one. The work is not to avoid ever seeing your worst parts. The work is to recognize them faster, soften sooner, and choose differently when you can. Parenting will surface what’s unpolished — and that’s uncomfortable — but it also gives you the daily chance to respond with more awareness than you were given. That is growth in real time. Not flawless. Not aesthetic. Just honest, humbling, and deeply transformative.
Frequently Asked Questions
Walk away or grab a pillow and scream into it. But if the kid deserves the yelling, go for it.
Yes, especially if what they did was incredibly life-threatening.
Set simple boundaries: “We don’t use physical discipline.” Repeat as needed. You don’t owe long explanations. Some even get snarky and go, “We’re not barbarians.”
Nope, in fact, it’s perfectly normal. Kids can be catastrophes and we didn’t even have to try.
Consult with a doctor. Sometimes, the source of these can be clinical.
More about parenting and wellness?
7 Gentle Ways to Nurture Kids’ Intuition for Wellness as Told by Dr. Sheree Bondoc
Healing vs Escaping: The Difference in Wellness
Sarah Salcedo: The Importance of Wellness in Parenting