You’re doing everything you can and it still feels like it’s not enough.

Parenting a neurodivergent child comes with invisible challenges that most people don’t understand.

You’ve read the books. You’ve tried the strategies. You’ve asked for help. And still, your child is struggling.

You find yourself wondering if you’re missing something. If there’s one right answer you haven’t found yet. Or worse, if this is just how it’s always going to be.

You’re not imagining it. This is harder than it is for other parents.

Parenting a neurodivergent child often requires more scaffolding, more emotional energy, and more trial-and-error than you ever expected, and to make things more complicated, traditional parenting strategies often fall short.

Real progress starts with understanding.

You don’t need more advice.  You need a better framework. One that helps you understand your child’s brain and behavior so you can try new strategies in a way that’s informed, flexible, and grounded in what actually works for neurodivergent kids.



I’ve helped many parents, just like you, shift from confusion and discouragement into a place of calm, not because they finally “got it right,” but because they began to understand their child more deeply.

Fewer meltdowns, shutdowns, and power struggles
A calmer, more connected home life
More confidence trying what might work (and letting go of what doesn’t)

This is a safe space to say, “This is hard.”

Parenting a neurodivergent child presents challenges that traditional advice simply doesn’t account for. It’s not because you’re inconsistent or not trying hard enough.  It’s that most parenting strategies were designed for neurotypical children, and when they don’t work, it’s easy to feel like you’re doing something wrong.

I’m a child psychiatrist and I’m also a parent of a neurodivergent child.  I understand the complexity firsthand. The endless search for the right providers. The frustration of sitting through evaluations that result in multiple, conflicting diagnoses but no meaningful direction. The emotional toll of fielding constant calls from school without a clear sense of what will actually help.

These are not uncommon experiences. I’ve seen many families navigate the same confusing maze, often feeling isolated and defeated.

I’ve also seen what happens when you finally understand your child’s brain from a neurodivergent perspective. When behaviors that once seemed defiant or baffling begin to make sense. When you can stop trying to fix your child and start supporting them in ways that are actually effective.

The work I do with parents is about making that shift. I help you make sense of what’s happening, and give you the tools to respond with insight, compassion, and confidence.

You don’t need to do more.  You need to do more of what works for your kid.

I started this work because parents need support too, not just their kids.

When you’re raising a neurodivergent child, the usual parenting advice often misses the mark. You’re offered strategies that work well for neurotypical kids but fall flat or even backfire with yours. You cycle through referrals, conflicting diagnoses, and treatment plans that don’t seem to make much difference.  All the while, you’re the one holding it all together.

You’re exhausted, uncertain, and wondering why nothing is helping in the way you hoped.

I’ve been there, and I’ve worked with so many parents who feel the same way: overwhelmed, isolated, and silently wondering, Why is this so hard? Why doesn’t anyone seem to get it?

That’s why I began coaching parents, not just to help them better understand their kids, but to support them in the process. 

Things start to shift when you can talk with someone who understands your child’s differences and can help you look through a neurodivergent lens to figure out what’s really going on. From there, we work together to uncover what might help: not one-size-fits-all solutions, but practical strategies that actually make things easier at home.

You don’t need to have all the answers. You just need the right support, the right perspective, and the right place to begin.

Parenting a neurodivergent child is complex

And there’s no one-size-fits-all solution.

Things start to shift when you begin to understand your child’s nervous system differences, what’s driving their behavior, and which strategies are more likely to support their growth and regulation.

Step One
Understand your child’s brain.

We start by exploring how neurodivergence affects the way your child thinks, feels, and reacts. Once you understand what’s really driving their behavior, things start to make a lot more sense and feel a little less personal.

Step two
Shift your expectations and approach.

Next, we look at the tools you’re using and how they align with your child’s needs. We uncover where traditional advice may be falling short and begin building realistic, compassionate strategies that work with – not against – your child’s brain.

Step three
Try things out and adjust as you go.

This is a process of experimentation, not perfection. You’ll try new approaches, notice what works, and adapt from there. Along the way, you’ll feel more grounded and less overwhelmed and you’ll start to see meaningful shifts in your relationship with your child.

No parent should have to do this alone.

Parents of neurodivergent kids are often doing more and getting less support. You’re trying everything you can think of, and still feeling like nothing is working the way it should.

I believe that when parents truly understand their child’s brain, everything changes. The guilt softens, the pressure lifts, and you finally have space to build strategies that feel possible and that actually help.

You don’t have to figure this out on your own.

Let’s work together.