It was a Tuesday morning, maybe 10 AM, and I was wearing a pair of black yoga pants that definitely had spit-up crusted on the left thigh from three days prior. I was physically army-crawling through one of those enclosed plastic playground tunnels behind my 14-month-old son, Leo. My lukewarm dark roast coffee was sloshing out of the travel mug and pooling on my knee, but I couldn't stop because I was completely convinced that if I didn't stay exactly four inches behind him, he was going to get stuck, forget how to crawl forward, and perish in the plastic tube. My husband was standing on the woodchips holding our diaper bag like it was a live explosive, and he just sighed and yelled, "Sarah, just let him figure it out on his own!"

I wanted to throw my coffee at his head.

But the terrible, annoying truth was that he was right. I was suffocating Leo, and I was absolutely suffocating myself. I was a certified, card-carrying helicopter mom who sterilized pacifiers if they touched the couch cushions. It was exhausting. And that's exactly where I was mentally when my sister-in-law handed me a copy of Sara Zaske's book about the German approach to raising kids, and my whole chaotic parenting world tilted on its axis.

What the hell is a German baby anyway

When I tell people I adopted the "Achtung Baby" philosophy for my second kid, Maya, my husband immediately assumes I'm talking about the U2 achtung baby album he insists on playing on vinyl every single Sunday morning while aggressively whisking pancake batter. And my 15-year-old nephew literally asked me if I was referencing that weird invisible baby character from his anime shows—something about achtung baby jojo? I don't know, teenagers speak a different language. But no, I'm talking about the actual German art of raising self-reliant, resilient kids.

The whole premise is that we're absolutely ruining our kids—and our own nervous systems—by trying to prevent every single risk. The German way is all about letting them experience the world, bumps and bruises included. They call it managing risk instead of avoiding it. I guess you could call it raising a g baby, just letting them exist in the actual environment instead of a bubble-wrapped padded room.

I read this book while nursing Maya at 3 AM in the dark, and it felt like someone was giving me permission to just... stop. Stop hovering. Stop sanitizing the grass. Stop treating my child like a fragile piece of spun glass that would shatter if the wind blew.

Embracing the dirt and the elements

One of the biggest takeaways for me was the German obsession with getting outside every single day, no matter what the sky is doing. They have this saying that there's no bad weather, just bad clothing. With Leo, if it was drizzling or below 50 degrees, we stayed inside and I slowly lost my mind watching the same three episodes of a cartoon over and over. With Maya, I just threw her into the elements.

I remember taking her to the dog park when she was about nine months old. She was wearing this rust-colored Organic Cotton Baby Bodysuit that I absolutely love, mostly because it has these envelope shoulders that make it so easy to pull down over her body when she has a blowout, which she did constantly. Anyway, I set her down on the grass, turned to grab my water bottle, and when I looked back, she had face-planted straight into a puddle of wet, freezing mud.

Old me would have screamed, scooped her up, and rushed her to a warm bath while sobbing. New me? I just watched her. She sputtered, wiped mud across her forehead, and then started laughing and slapping the puddle. I just let her. It was wildly liberating.

And honestly, that organic cotton bodysuit is a godsend because her skin is so sensitive and prone to eczema flare-ups, but the lack of harsh dyes and synthetic crap in it means I can just toss it in the wash on cold and it survives whatever swamp creature activities she gets into. It actually gets softer every time I wash it, which is baffling but great. I must have bought like six of them because it's the only thing that stretches enough for her chunky little thighs without losing its shape.

The medical rules that completely flipped between my two kids

The really crazy part about relaxing my parenting style was realizing that actual pediatric advice was relaxing, too. The rules changed so drastically between Leo being born and Maya being born that I thought our doctor, Dr. Miller, was messing with me.

The medical rules that completely flipped between my two kids — Why I Swapped Helicopter Parenting for the Achtung Baby Metho

Take peanuts, for example. Oh god, the peanut panic. With Leo, the rule was absolutely no highly allergenic foods before age one, or maybe it was age two? I don't even remember, I just know I treated a jar of peanut butter like it was radioactive waste. I wouldn't even eat a peanut butter cup in the same room as him. But by the time Maya was sitting up, Dr. Miller casually told me to just shove peanut butter in her face at six months. I guess there was this massive science thing called the LEAP trial, and Dr. Miller was explaining something about immune responses and early exposure, which I kind of tuned out because I was trying to scrape mashed banana off my jeans with a baby wipe. But the gist was that keeping kids in a sterile, allergen-free bubble was actually causing the allergies. You have to expose them to the stuff to build the tolerance.

It was like the ultimate validation of the German parenting method. Let them experience the scary thing so their bodies—and their brains—know how to handle it.

Also, you really only need to bathe them like two or three times a week because otherwise their delicate skin just dries out and they turn into scaly little lizards, anyway, the point is, doing less is actually better for them.

Sleep rules were another huge shift. We were so obsessed with swaddling Leo into a rigid little baby burrito, but then the guidelines updated and Dr. Miller was like, "Yeah, you really need to stop swaddling the second they even think about rolling over, so like two months max." I panicked. How the hell was Maya supposed to sleep without being strapped down? But we just put her on her back on a flat crib mattress, left her alone, and guess what? She figured it out. She sucked her thumb and self-soothed because I wasn't jumping out of bed at every single sigh and grunt.

Navigating the teething apocalypse

Of course, letting them figure things out doesn't mean you just abandon them to suffer. Teething is still a nightmare from hell. When Maya got her first bottom teeth, she was a wreck. Drooling through three bibs an hour, chewing on the wooden coffee table leg like a beaver.

I ended up buying the Panda Teether from Kianao. Honestly? It's fine. It's a teether. It didn't magically cure her fussiness or make her sleep through the night, and the first time I handed it to her she looked at it, gnawed on the panda's ear for about twenty minutes, and then aggressively threw it at our cat. But it's made of 100% food-grade silicone, which means I don't have to stress about her swallowing weird phthalates or plastics, and the absolute best part is that I can just throw it in the dishwasher. When you're running on four hours of sleep, dishwasher-safe is basically a love language. It does the job, it's easy for her to hold, and it's cute. Just don't expect miracles when there's a literal tooth cutting through your baby's gums.

Lowering the bar so I didn't lose my mind

The hardest part of this whole transition wasn't letting Maya eat a little dirt or letting her struggle to climb the playground stairs without me holding her hips. The hardest part was ignoring the other moms.

Lowering the bar so I didn't lose my mind — Why I Swapped Helicopter Parenting for the Achtung Baby Method

We have this terrible culture of performative parenting right now. If your baby isn't playing with twelve different sensory bins and listening to classical music while wearing a color-coordinated beige outfit, you feel like you're failing. But the German concept of "toy-free time" is so real. They literally take toys away from kids to force them to use their imagination with sticks and pinecones.

I tried to implement this early on. Before Maya could run around the woods, when she was still a little blob on the floor, we completely ditched the noisy, flashing, battery-operated plastic junk that we had for Leo. Instead, we used a simple Wooden Baby Gym. It has a natural wood frame and these quiet little hanging shapes. No sirens, no robotic voices singing the ABCs in a weirdly threatening tone. Just quiet, natural materials. It was so much less overstimulating for her, and honestly, way less overstimulating for my postpartum brain. She would just lie there, quietly batting at the little wooden rings, figuring out cause and effect on her own terms.

That's what this is really all about. Being a "good enough" parent. I don't need to entertain her 24/7. I just need to create a safe baseline, throw her outside as much as possible, and trust that she's wired for survival.

If you're drowning in the mental load of trying to keep everything perfect, you really should check out some simple organic baby clothes and gear that just let babies be babies without all the toxic fuss.

You just have to trust them (and yourself)

I'm not a perfect parent. Last week I let Maya eat a French fry off the floor of my minivan because I didn't have the energy to fight her for it. But my anxiety is about ten thousand times lower than it was when I was army-crawling through that plastic tube with Leo.

They're so much more capable than we give them credit for. They bounce when they fall. They build immunity when they get dirty. They learn how to assess danger when we stop constantly screaming "be careful!" and instead ask them, "do you feel safe up there?"

You just have to take a breath, sip your coffee—even if it's cold—and let them figure out how to get through the world. And if they get mud all over their cute organic cotton clothes, well, that's what washing machines are for.

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The messy FAQ about German parenting and my anxiety

Is the Achtung Baby method basically just ignoring your kids?

Oh god, no. It's not neglect. You don't just leave a baby in the woods and wish them luck. It's about stepping back. You're still right there on the park bench watching them, but you're letting them try to climb the ladder on their own before you immediately boost their butt up. It takes way more self-control to stay quiet than it does to hover, trust me.

Did you really just let the umbilical cord stump sit there?

Yeah, and it's the grossest thing ever. With my first kid I was constantly trying to dab it with alcohol, but Dr. Miller told me they don't do that anymore because it honestly kills the good bacteria that helps the cord dry out. So you just leave the crusty alien stump alone and give them sponge baths until it falls off into their onesie. I hate it, but it works.

How do I stop swaddling if my baby literally won't sleep without it?

I wish I had a magic answer for this, but honestly, it just sucks for about three nights. Once they start rolling, the swaddle is a huge hazard because they could get stuck facedown. We just had to go cold turkey to a sleep sack. Maya cried, I cried, my husband hid in the guest room, but by night four she found her thumb and she was totally fine.

What if my baby has an allergic reaction when I introduce peanuts?

That was my biggest fear! My doctor basically said to do it at home, early in the day (not right before bed), and just start with a tiny smear of watered-down peanut butter on the inside of their lip. Don't do it for the first time in a restaurant or anything. Most babies are fine, but if you're really terrified, you can literally just do it in the parking lot of your doctor's office. I know moms who have done that.

Does toy-free time mean I've to throw away all the plastic toys?

Look, if you try to take away the giant plastic light-up fire truck my mother-in-law bought Leo, there will be a riot in my living room. I don't throw them away, I just rotate them out heavily and hide them in the closet. But for Maya, starting from scratch, I really tried to just buy open-ended wooden things or let her play with tupperware. You don't have to be a purist, just try to aim for less noise and more imagination when you can.