Creative parenting for neurodivergent learners
When the Rule Book Doesn’t Fit
Creative parenting for neurodivergent learners often begins with a quiet realisation:
The rule book doesn’t fit.
You can —
- Follow the charts
- Implement the consequences
- Stay consistent, firm, structured.
And still, the child in front of you remains overwhelmed, reactive, or shut down.
In Part 2 of my Creative Parenting series, I explore what happens when we stop trying to make neurodivergent children conform to systems that were never designed for their nervous systems.
👉 You can watch Part 2 here:
When Traditional Strategies Escalate Instead of Soothe
Many conventional parenting approaches assume:
- Behaviour is primarily choice-based
- Consequences build responsibility
- Compliance equals learning
For neurodivergent learners, behaviour is often a nervous system signal.
Escalation may be overwhelm.
Avoidance may be cognitive fatigue.
Defiance may be a stress response.
When we interpret regulation struggles as wilful behaviour, we inadvertently increase the load on an already taxed system.
Creative parenting for neurodivergent learners asks a different question:
What does this nervous system need in order to feel safe?
Regulation Before Expectation
In both my childhood experience and my professional work, the most effective shifts happen when we prioritise:
- Safety before compliance
- Regulation before instruction
- Connection before correction
This does not remove boundaries.
It reframes them.
Structure still matters.
Expectations still matter.
But they are delivered in ways that reduce threat rather than amplify it.
Rewriting the Rule Book
When the rule book doesn’t fit, we have options:
- Try to force the child to fit it, OR
- Question the rule book itself.
Creative parenting for neurodivergent learners often requires the courage to choose the second.
This might look like:
- Adjusting workload during dysregulated periods
- Building sensory breaks into study time
- Redefining “success” in ways that honour capacity
- Reducing sibling conflict through proactive systems
- Observing patterns instead of reacting to incidents
Over time, this approach builds something far more sustainable than compliance.
It builds trust.
A Broader Invitation
This reflection extends beyond parenting.
Many neurodivergent adults carry internalised versions of rule books that never fit them either.
If this resonates for you, I’ve created something new inspired by this very theme — When the Rule Book Doesn’t Fit.
It’s for parents, educators, and neurodivergent adults who are ready to question inherited templates and create more regulation-informed systems.
Creative parenting for neurodivergent learners is not about lowering standards.
It is about aligning expectations with how nervous systems actually function.
Sometimes the most supportive thing we can do is pause long enough to ask:
Is this a behaviour problem — or a regulation signal?

