DS is 8, it's been a long time since I've thought of myself as having any kind of "style" 
I probably have some kind of philosophy, but the parenting style thing... it just doesn't "keep up" as they get older.
When he was 9 months I definitely would have described myself as an attachment parent or gentle parent.
If I could go back and start again I'd like the wisdom that there are really no parenting "styles", there are a series of decisions about how you approach different problems or challenges, but to be open minded - just because someone advocates something I wouldn't like to do, such as sleep training for example, does not make their opinion null and void, not even on sleep. I wish I'd understood that people doing things differently to me didn't make them the enemy, and that their advice might be helpful, even if it was based on a premise I didn't agree with.
I also have been surprised as time has passed by how much grey area there is between parenting styles. I used to think that if someone did things differently to me it meant that they were the total opposite, operated on different principles, etc. Websites really don't help with this perception! Any websites/books aimed at "gentle parents" seem to peddle this myth that "the mainstream" is all thinking children are manipulative and naughty and must be trained into submission and that reward/punishment is all that works whereas most people don't think that way at all and use a range of techniques to get their children to behave with reward/punishment being the edges or a shortcut rather than the core. And any websites/books with a more firm approach seem to pander to the myth that "gentle parents" are just wishy washy nonsense peddlers with no backbone and out of control kids, which again, just isn't true, as most people who follow gentle parenting ideas still have boundaries. The "camps" are far closer together than it appears when your kids are little, and the most valuable thing I've learned is to listen to advice you disagree with and evaluate it rather than dismissing initially out of hand.
Sorry... bit long! But hopefully interesting.