This Hands-Off Parenting Trend Is Going Viral. Here’s What Experts Make Of It

Kylie Kelce recently shared on her podcast that she supports a specific style of parenting, and it’s raising some controversy.

The mum of four and wife of retired Philadelphia Eagles Super Bowl champ Jason Kelce explained she came across the term FAFO (“fuck around and find out”) on an Instagram post. “[It’s] the act of having your kids experience the natural consequences of their actions without getting too involved.”

It also happens to be a viral social media trend: there are now dozens of posts on MomTok singing the virtues of allowing your toddler to take a bite of a fiery hot chili pepper, all in the name of figuring things out for themselves.

Some of these mums claim they need to “out-feral their feral children” and one even shows her young son the door when he says he’s mad she won’t let him sleep in her bed (“You wanna go to someone else’s house? See ya!”). Despite the resulting tears and tantrums, the comments on these posts are generally celebratory (“Good job! Good for you! Yes, Mama!”).

I can relate to some of what these women are saying because I had that kid – the too-smart-for-her-own-good, fiercely independent middle schooler who told me she didn’t need to wear a hat in 20-degree weather. This usually resulted in me begging, pleading and threatening – then running after her, beanie in hand, until she grabbed it and furiously pulled it over her ears.

Today she’s 22, and little has changed. She has gone out in snowstorms in heels and insists that taking the subway at night is “perfectly safe.” I know, I know: she’s a full-grown adult living on her own and I need to hang up my helicopter mum cap and let her make her own mistakes.

Would I have been better off taking a more laissez-faire approach to parenting?

FAFO supporters believe that a child needs to confront consequences – even if they are uncomfortable or painful – to learn and grow.

Clinical psychologist Elina Telford agrees that it “supports the brain to learn, creating opportunities for resilience, independence and problem-solving.”

Still, to me and many other parents, it sounds scary, dangerous and a little mean. What about younger kids who can’t easily anticipate cause and effect? And what about outcomes that aren’t immediate? Do we really want our children to learn things the hard way and be subject to possible harm?

Experts say there are both pros and cons to this parenting style and aren’t surprised it’s trending.

FAFO parenting appears to have emerged from the clash between helicopter parenting and gentle parenting,” explained Sean O’Neill, an LA-based licensed marriage and family therapist. “While gentle parenting focuses on empathy and connection, it often falls short on personal responsibility and accountability. FAFO fills that gap by allowing children to take on more responsibility while teaching them self-reliance. ”

“If you give them the power to choose and then retract it, it may have a negative effect. Your discomfort may send your child the message that you actually think they are incapable, which is the opposite of the desired result.”

– Trisha Sanders, licensed clinical social worker

Children need to be able to go out in the world to explore for themselves but they also need a safe place to come back to when they get scared, overwhelmed or tired, added Trisha Sanders, a licensed clinical social worker and owner of Wholefamily Therapy and Wellness in New Jersey.

“A sense of competence is achieved when children can try things on their own, combined with caregivers giving grace when mistakes are made and help when it is requested. The downside can appear when there is a lack of appropriate caregiver support received by the child after they mess around and can’t quite figure it out.”

FAFO parenting can be tough on parents who tend to be anxious. “It can be hard to knowingly let something adverse happen to your child,” said kid empowerment coach Mark Papadas. “Many parents ‘shield’ their kids from any and all negative actions or consequences. But think back on your life. Which life lessons have had the biggest impact on you: What you learned from your own experience or something that someone told you?”

Ready to give FAFO parenting a try?

The best strategy is to ease into it. “Start on a small scale, giving simple options and enabling the child to encounter minimal consequences, like choosing not to wear a raincoat and subsequently getting wet,” O’Neill advised. “Parents need to explain risks and step back to let the child manage things.”

The idea is to do less, but not disconnect. Be clear in your expectations, communicate potential outcomes and let go when it’s safe. “FAFO can be a smart technique if it’s balanced with emotional availability and guidance,” said Eden Garcia-Balis, a Los Angeles-based licensed marriage and family therapist. “This parenting strategy is not about being completely hands-off, it’s about being strategically hands-off and allowing your child to slowly develop enough confidence and independence to take charge of their own actions and consequences.”

How much freedom you allow also depends on your child’s readiness to roam free — their age as well as their personal development. “This approach can be helpful with children from toddlers through teens,” Sanders insisted. “The differences will be largely about how much detail you provide about consequences of choices and what kinds of choices you allow your child to ‘fuck around’ with. The abstract thinking of long-term consequences may be lost on a little one. For older children and teens, you can use this approach for many decisions and you can empower them more and more as you both grow more confident with this process.”

Sanders also suggests not chickening out when you grant your child autonomy. “If you give them the power to choose and then retract it, it may have a negative effect. Your discomfort may send your child the message that you actually think they are incapable, which is the opposite of the desired result.”

In the end, for both parents and children, there is a learning curve to the FAFO technique.

“Hold on to the fact that learning does happen through trial and error and part of it is learning how to tolerate and navigate uncomfortable feelings,” Telford said. “With accurate information and a careful approach, you can feel free to explore FAFO, see if it fits with your identity as a parent and grow a sense of competence right along with your child.”

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Michelle Obama Reveals What ‘No One Tells You’ About Fertility Struggles

Michelle Obama continues to open up about her fertility journey and the hardships she faced along the way – despite thinking she had it all figured out.

“You imagine your life as you’re checking boxes,” the former first lady said during an appearance on The Diary of A CEO podcast released Wednesday.

“I’m waiting, I delayed having kids, I’ve found the love of my life, and now I’m gonna get pregnant,” Obama shared. “And no one tells you that there really is a biological clock – like, that’s not false.”

Obama spoke about listening to someone talk about women’s fertility recently, and her first thought was, “Why didn’t anybody tell me this? Why weren’t people talking about this?”

Obama said that by the time she and her husband, Barack, started really trying – “which worked perfectly for our careers and maturing and having everything set” – they began to run into roadblocks.

“While we’re waiting for our lives to be perfect, that biological clock is ticking,” she said of their experience.

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In this candid conversation, she joins Steven with her brother Craig Robinson, a former college basketball coach turned executive, to open up about everything from Trump’s inauguration to marriage challenges, grief, and rediscovering her purpose.\n\nTogether, they discuss:\n* How their parents instilled empathy, discipline, and resilience growing up amid racial tension.\n* Michelle’s journey through elite schools and corporate law, driven by a need to tick society’s boxes.\n* The evolution of Michelle and Barack’s relationship, from colleagues to lifelong partners.\n* Fertility struggles, parenting tips, and what it really takes to sustain a long-term marriage.\n* Navigating life in the White House, grief, personal boundaries, and rediscovering her true calling.\n\n00:00 Intro \n02:01 Michelle and Craig’s Childhood \n04:38 Values Learned from Their Parents \n08:35 Michelle Skipping Second Grade \n12:06 The Role of Race in Their Childhood \n15:09 What \"White Flight\" Means \n16:50 Coping with Racism \n20:45 Overcoming Being Underestimated \n26:23 Michelle’s Search for Identity \n30:10 Meeting Barack \n31:49 Introducing Barack to the Family \n33:38 Why Michelle Initially Rejected Barack \n37:18 Michelle’s Career Change: Pursuing Joy \n40:41 Relationship with Barack \n44:46 Couples Counseling with Barack \n49:23 Pregnancy Struggles \n56:16 Hardest Moments in Their Marriage \n57:20 Barack Obama Runs for Public Office \n01:03:18 What I Should Have Said to Barack \n01:07:00 Being the First Black First Lady and Facing Scrutiny \n01:15:06 Remembering Your Mother \n01:16:42 The Death of Your Mother \n01:18:25 Processing the Grief \n01:20:31 Not Attending Trump’s Inauguration \n\n100 CEOs: Ready to think like a CEO? 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“So you start trying and it’s not working, that’s when you go to the doctor,” she said. “And they tell you, ’Oh! You’re running out of eggs – this is normal. You’re gonna have trouble getting pregnant. And so try a little bit, and now it’s time for IVF, if you can afford it.”

Obama described the news as “just a shock to the system,” especially as someone who likes learning and knowledge.

She also disliked that the knowledge or information felt like “such a secret,” which is why Obama said she speaks openly about her fertility journey, including experiencing pregnancy loss, and doing in vitro fertilisation (IVF).

Obama first opened up about undergoing IVF and having a miscarriage in her powerful 2018 memoir, Becoming.

“I felt like I failed because I didn’t know how common miscarriages were because we don’t talk about them,” the author said in an interview on Good Morning America in 2018. “We sit in our own pain, thinking that somehow we’re broken.”

She also wrote about feeling alone during IVF, as her “sweet, attentive husband” was away at the state legislature.

She said his absence left her “largely on my own to manipulate my reproductive system into peak efficiency”.

Help and support:

  • Sands works to support anyone affected by the death of a baby.
  • Tommy’s fund research into miscarriage, stillbirth and premature birth, and provide pregnancy health information to parents.
  • Saying Goodbye offers support for anyone who has suffered the loss of a baby during pregnancy, at birth or in infancy.
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