Your Kid Was Never at Zero — with Jen Dryer, Pt. 2 | EP125 cover art

Your Kid Was Never at Zero — with Jen Dryer, Pt. 2 | EP125

Your Kid Was Never at Zero — with Jen Dryer, Pt. 2 | EP125

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Your neurodivergent child is never actually at zero. When they explode, they weren't fine five minutes before — they were already at 45. Parent coach Jen Dryer is back for Part 2, and this one goes deep: co-regulation, the sturdy platform model, performance inconsistency, and the Buddhist mantra a meditation teacher handed Jen that changed how she parents her autistic son on the hard days. If you caught Part 1, buckle up. If you didn't — go back. This conversation is a two-parter for a reason. WHAT'S INSIDE THIS EPISODE Why your child is never actually at zero — and what Jen's '30 is a good day' scale means for how you respond to meltdownsThe 'sturdy platform' model from author Mona Delahooke, and why your child's nervous system gets smaller under stress until one tiny feather knocks them off the edgePerformance inconsistency explained: why your kid tied their shoe yesterday but absolutely cannot do it today — and what not to say about itCo-regulation in action: why your neurodivergent child reads your nervous system like a human lie detector — and what that means for your own regulationThe Buddhist mantra Jen got at a meditation retreat that's become her go-to on the hardest parenting days: 'Just take care of what's in front of you'Where to find Raising Orchid Kids — their 8-week core course, teens support group, membership community, and June screen hygiene workshop WHY THIS MATTERS TO YOU You know that moment when everything was fine — dinner was fine, homework was fine, bath time was fine — and then something about the wrong cup or a slightly different routine detonated a 45-minute meltdown? You're not imagining it. And it's not manipulation. That explosion wasn't built in five seconds; it was built all day. Your child's nervous system was flickering under the surface like one of those fluorescent classroom bulbs the whole time — and you just happened to be standing nearby when the feather landed. Most parenting advice treats meltdowns like behavior problems to be managed. Jen and Natalie treat them like nervous system data. Once you understand performance inconsistency — that a kid can tie their shoe on Tuesday and have zero access to that skill on Wednesday — everything shifts. The frustration drains out. The compassion floods in. And you start responding instead of reacting. This episode also quietly hands you a permission slip to stop white-knuckling the future. Worrying about what your neurodivergent child's life looks like in 30 years? That's a lot to carry. Jen's mantra is your antidote. Take care of what's in front of you. Lice and all. KEY TAKEAWAYS '30 is a good day.' Neurodivergent kids walk around at 30–45% upregulated at baseline. They're not starting from zero — which means tiny triggers produce massive responses. Understanding their actual starting point changes how you help them.The sturdy platform shrinks under stress. When a nervous system is frazzled, the platform your child stands on gets smaller and smaller until they're balancing on the head of a pin. A feather — a flickering light, a changed plan, a wrong cup — is enough to knock them off. This is not a behavior problem. This is physics.Performance inconsistency is real, not an excuse. 'You did this yesterday' is one of the most dysregulating things you can say. Instead try: 'I see you're having a hard time with that today. That's okay — I'll help you now and we'll try again tomorrow.' That sentence alone can change the temperature of a whole afternoon.Your nervous system is contagious. Neurodivergent kids are expert BS detectors — they feel your stress before you've said a word. Co-regulation starts with your own regulation. Five minutes a day of actual calm is not self-indulgence. It's infrastructure.'Just take care of what's in front of you.' Jen got this from a Buddhist meditation teacher when she was drowning in fear about her son's future. It works on lice days, on meltdown days, on 'I have no idea how we're going to get through this' days. Steal it freely. ABOUT JEN DRYER Jen Dryer is a parent coach and educational consultant with over 25 years of experience supporting families and teachers of neurodivergent children across New York, DC, and Massachusetts. She co-founded Raising Orchid Kids in 2020 with speech therapist Gabrielle Nicolai, offering classes, workshops, support groups, and one-on-one coaching for parents of neurodivergent kids. Jen is a Brown University and Columbia Teachers College graduate, a yoga instructor since 2006, and the mom of two teenage sons — the younger of whom is autistic and has ADHD and OCD. Connect with Jen: Website: raisingorchidkids.com Instagram: @raising_orchid_kids Facebook: Raising Orchid Kids: Parents of Neurodivergent Kids and Teens Resources mentioned: Raising Orchid Kids 8-week core course (launches June — asynchronous): raisingorchidkids.com Raising Orchid Kids teens support group (meets twice monthly): raisingorchidkids.com ...
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