The PDA Parenting Podcast

What Has Fear Convinced You Is Your Job? (And Why You're So Exhausted)

30 min · 13. Juni 2026
Episode What Has Fear Convinced You Is Your Job? (And Why You're So Exhausted) Cover

Beschreibung

Many parents of PDA, autistic, and other neurodivergent children find themselves exhausted, overwhelmed, and constantly worried about their child's future. But what if fear has quietly convinced you that you're responsible for things no parent can actually control? In this episode, I explore the difference between helping and carrying, why uncertainty is so difficult for our brains, and how fear can expand our parenting "job description" until we're carrying the weight of our child's emotions, choices, and outcomes. We'll discuss: • What fear has convinced you is your job • The difference between supporting and owning your child's struggles • Why PDA parenting feels so exhausting • The Serenity Prayer and learning what we can and cannot control • A simple question that can transform how you approach challenges: "Whose problem is this?" • How to stay deeply connected to your child without losing yourself in the process If you've ever felt responsible for making sure your child is okay, this episode is for you. Registration is now open!!  Learn more about Amy's PDA Parent Coaching Program at amykcoach.com/parentcourse.

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Episode What If PDA Isn't A Behavior Problem? Cover

What If PDA Isn't A Behavior Problem?

What if PDA isn't a behavior problem at all? In this episode, Amy explores a powerful shift in perspective that can change how parents understand PDA. Instead of viewing avoidance, refusal, aggression, or meltdowns as the problem, what if these behaviors are actually signals from a nervous system working hard to stay safe? Drawing on the work of Robyn Gobbel, Mona Delahooke, Bruce Perry, and emerging PDA research, Amy discusses the connection between autonomy, anxiety, nervous system states, and protective behaviors. She explains why traditional behavior-focused approaches often fall short and offers a compassionate framework for understanding what may be happening beneath the surface. If you've ever wondered why your child can desperately want something one moment and refuse it the next, this episode will help you see those struggles through a new lens - one rooted in connection, curiosity, and nervous system safety. In this episode you'll learn: • Why PDA may be better understood as a nervous system difference rather than a behavior problem • The difference between connection states and protection states • How autonomy and safety are deeply connected • Why avoidance may be information rather than defiance • Questions to ask when behavior escalates • How shifting your perspective can reduce conflict and increase understanding  Want support implementing these strategies in your own family? Amy's small-group, 4-month coaching program helps parents understand PDA through a nervous-system lens while receiving personalized coaching, education, and community support.  Enrollment is currently open with limited spots available! Learn more at www.amykcoach.com/parentcourse [https://amykcoach.com/parentcourse].

Gestern17 min
Episode What Has Fear Convinced You Is Your Job? (And Why You're So Exhausted) Cover

What Has Fear Convinced You Is Your Job? (And Why You're So Exhausted)

Many parents of PDA, autistic, and other neurodivergent children find themselves exhausted, overwhelmed, and constantly worried about their child's future. But what if fear has quietly convinced you that you're responsible for things no parent can actually control? In this episode, I explore the difference between helping and carrying, why uncertainty is so difficult for our brains, and how fear can expand our parenting "job description" until we're carrying the weight of our child's emotions, choices, and outcomes. We'll discuss: • What fear has convinced you is your job • The difference between supporting and owning your child's struggles • Why PDA parenting feels so exhausting • The Serenity Prayer and learning what we can and cannot control • A simple question that can transform how you approach challenges: "Whose problem is this?" • How to stay deeply connected to your child without losing yourself in the process If you've ever felt responsible for making sure your child is okay, this episode is for you. Registration is now open!!  Learn more about Amy's PDA Parent Coaching Program at amykcoach.com/parentcourse.

13. Juni 202630 min
Episode When Boundaries Break Down: Parenting PDA Kids Through Unpredictability, Nervous System Safety & Letting Go of Control Cover

When Boundaries Break Down: Parenting PDA Kids Through Unpredictability, Nervous System Safety & Letting Go of Control

After a break for health and recovery, Amy returns with a powerful conversation on boundaries, unpredictability, and nervous system regulation. If you’ve ever felt like you’re on an emotional rollercoaster - hopeful one moment and overwhelmed the next - this episode will help you understand why unpredictability feels so destabilizing and how to stay steady through it. Amy explores the connection between control, codependency patterns, and parenting, and reframes boundaries as internal anchors that help you stay regulated without losing connection to your child. You’ll walk away with a new perspective on capacity vs. consistency, letting go of control, and becoming a grounded, safe presence your child can return to. If you’re wanting support in actually applying this work in your real life, I’d love to invite you into my 4-month small group coaching program. The summer cohort begins in June, and we start by working through Raising Kids With Big, Baffling Behaviors - guided by Amy and thoughtfully adapted for PDA families. From there, we continue together with small group coaching, where you’ll get ongoing support as you practice staying regulated, holding boundaries, and navigating the real-life challenges that come up in your family. This space is designed to help you move from understanding the concepts to truly living them - with guidance, community, and compassion along the way. Click here to find all the details and join the summer cohort: 4-Month Coaching Program [https://amykcoach.com/parentcourse] Amy references insights similar to those taught by Dr. Brad Reedy and frameworks like Al-Anon, alongside the work of Robyn Gobbel.

5. Mai 202618 min
Episode PDA, Food Preoccupation, and Weight Gain: Nervous System Parenting for Neurodivergent Kids Cover

PDA, Food Preoccupation, and Weight Gain: Nervous System Parenting for Neurodivergent Kids

If you’re parenting a PDA child or teen and food feels scary right now, this episode is for you. Many PDA kids experience food preoccupation, binge-like eating, weight changes, or rigid food preferences - often as a response to stress, loss of autonomy, or nervous system overload. In this episode, we explore food and eating through a nervous-system-informed, non-diet-culture lens, so you can respond with clarity instead of fear. You’ll learn: * Why binge-like eating and food rigidity are coping strategies, not character flaws * How restriction, pressure, and “fixing” increase threat for PDA nervous systems * Why felt safety must come before behavior change * How dopamine, sensory regulation, and stress relief intersect with eating * The subtle ways diet culture fuels parental panic, even when we think we’ve rejected it This episode is especially supportive for parents familiar with nervous system parenting and concepts from Raising Kids with Big, Baffling Behaviors: A Course for Parents by Robyn Gobbel (the base of my now-open PDA parent program!) but who feel activated, scared, or stuck when food and weight concerns arise. You don’t have to solve this today. Regulation, curiosity, and compassion matter much more than control or perfection. Scope & Safety Note This episode discusses eating patterns that can emerge as nervous system responses to stress and demand, particularly in PDA children and teens. This conversation is not intended to diagnose or rule out eating disorders and is not a substitute for medical, nutritional, or mental health care. Some children do experience eating disorders and require individualized, professional support. If you have concerns about your child’s physical safety, growth, or medical risk, please seek appropriate professional care alongside listening. Resources Mentioned * Ellyn Satter Institute  [https://www.ellynsatterinstitute.org/]– Feeding relationships & division of responsibility * Katja Rowell, MD [https://www.thefeedingdoctor.com/] – Child feeding & body trust * SOS Feeding Therapy [https://sosapproachtofeeding.com/] – Nervous-system-informed feeding * STAR Institute [https://sensoryhealth.org/] – Feeding therapy & sensory integration Interested in deeper support?  Enrollment is opening next week for my 4-month nervous-system-informed program for parents of PDA children and teens. This is for parents who want practical guidance, regulation support, and low-demand strategies - without pressure or “fixing” their child. The core of this program is Raising Kids With Big, Baffling Behaviors: A Course for Parents (created by Robyn Gobbel and adapted for PDA by Amy Kotha). You can learn more and see if it feels like a fit by clicking HERE [https://amykcoach.com/parentcourse].

29. Jan. 202618 min
Episode Why Traditional Parenting Programs Don’t Work for PDA Families - and What I Do Instead Cover

Why Traditional Parenting Programs Don’t Work for PDA Families - and What I Do Instead

Traditional parenting programs often don’t work for PDA families - not because parents aren’t trying hard enough, but because the structure itself creates pressure. In this episode, I share why I stopped offering a weekly parenting class and what flexible, PDA-informed support can look like instead. What if the problem isn’t you - or your child - but the structure of the support you’ve been offered? In this episode, I’m sharing why I stopped offering a traditional weekly parenting class for PDA families - and what I created instead. After listening closely to PDA parents, it became clear that rigid schedules, fixed weekly meetings, and pressure to “keep up” often make support inaccessible - even when parents deeply want help. Here, I talk about: * Why traditional parenting programs often don’t work for PDA families * How nervous system safety impacts a parent’s ability to access support * Why flexibility and autonomy matter just as much for parents as they do for kids * How I redesigned my parent education and coaching program to fit real life * What it means to look at the environment - not the child or parent - when something isn’t working The educational foundation of this work is the Raising Kids with Big, Baffling Behaviors: A Course for Parents by Robyn Gobbel, which I offer under license and integrate through a PDA-informed lens with coaching support. This program is offered on a rolling enrollment basis, with space for up to 12 families at a time. When the program is full, families are invited to join a waitlist until an opening becomes available. Whether or not this program is the right fit for you, my hope is that this episode offers reassurance, permission, and a reminder that needing a different structure doesn’t mean you’re doing anything wrong. To learn more or check current availability, visit my website: www.amykcoach.com/parentcourse

9. Jan. 20268 min