Rehumanising Parenting

Welcome to Rehumanising Parenting

This is a space where I explore what it means to place humanity — rather than performance, compliance, or perfection — at the centre of parenting.

Here, I share stories from my own journey alongside the reflections, nervous system insights, and gentle unlearning that have supported both my family and the families I walk with.

Rehumanising Parenting is a response to models that reduce parenting to strategy. It recognises that parenting neurodivergent children, especially those navigating burnout, PDA, or chronic stress, cannot be separated from context, capacity, and relationship.

This work is neuro-affirming, low-demand, and grounded in nervous system safety. It honours adaptation rather than shaming it. It values connection over control. It understands behaviour as communication, not character.

Parenting a neurodivergent child or teen isn’t just about what we do. It reshapes who we are becoming, not only as parents, but as whole humans with needs, histories, grief, and longings of our own.

Reparenting ourselves.
Tending to our nervous systems.
Reclaiming identity beyond the role of “good parent.”
Questioning systems that never saw our children clearly.

You’ll find those threads woven throughout this blog.

I write from lived experience, as a parent, educator, and fellow human walking this path, not as a therapist or medical professional. My work is informed by research, by advocacy, and by the wisdom of the families I have the privilege to support.

If you’re looking for a place that prioritises relationship over rules and context over comparison, I hope this feels like a soft place to land.

And if something resonates, you’re welcome to linger, share, or simply carry it quietly with you.

We are not meant to do this alone.

T x

mother and daughter arguing

Navigating Conflict With Your Neurodivergent Teen

Neuro-Affirming Strategies for Parents of Neurodivergent Teens When bringing together and considering the perspectives and needs of everyone in our neurodivergent families there are bound to be conflicts. It is inevitable. Let’s face it, conflict is part of life especially when we are parenting teens and parenting neurodivergent teenagers can add complexity to this. It […] Read more…

The Valentins

Shifting The Paradigm Of Neurodiversity

Autism and ADHD are something that affects approximately 15-20% of the population. The increased diagnosis of Autism and ADHD in teens and adults highlights the need for there to be more conversations that facilitate the shifting of the paradigm on how we speak about, perceive and include neurodiversity. Meet The Valentins Our family is a […] Read more…

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