Sensory Behavior in Neurodivergent Children: Why It’s Not Defiance
Sensory behavior in neurodivergent children is often mistaken for defiance or misbehavior β but they’re not the same thing. Here’s how to tell the difference and what actually helps.
Why Discipline Doesn’t Work for Neurodivergent Kids (And What Truly Does)
Reducing friction for neurodivergent kids works better than consequences or discipline. Here’s how removing obstacles instead of adding pressure changes everything about your daily battles.
Executive Function in Neurodivergent Children: 6 Things That Actually Help
Executive function in neurodivergent children explains so much of what looks like laziness or defiance. If your child struggles to start tasks, shift gears, or regulate emotions β here’s what’s really going on and what actually helps.
Reducing Friction for Neurodivergent Kids: Why Daily Tasks Feel So Hard
If morning routines, schoolwork, and everyday tasks feel harder than they should, the problem usually isn’t attitude. It’s friction. Here’s what that means and how to reduce it.
Why Regulation Before Learning Needs to come First for Neurodivergent Kids
When school falls apart β tears, shutdowns, refusals β the problem usually isn’t effort or motivation. It’s regulation. Here’s what that looks like in our home and what we do instead.
Why Parenting Neurodivergent Kids Feels So Hard
Parenting neurodivergent kids is harder β and there’s a real reason why. It’s not you, and it’s not your child. Here’s what’s actually going on and what helps instead.