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Exit lines that aren't abandonment

Leaving the room in a fury teaches them your love has a breaking point. Leaving with a script teaches them regulation is something adults do too.

Instead of"I can't DEAL with this right now!"

Try"My body needs a minute. I'm getting water. I'm coming back."

Instead ofStorming out silently

Try"I'm going to breathe in the kitchen. Two minutes. Then I'm all yours."

Instead ofPushing through until you snap

Try(To your partner, if you have one:) "Tag. I need out." Agree on this word in advance, no questions asked when it's used.

"I'm coming back" is the part that matters. Say when, keep it short, and actually come back. The exit becomes safe when the return is reliable.

Things to say to yourself, mid-storm

Not affirmations. Course corrections that actually work when you're flooded:

  • "This is a nervous system, not a negotiation." You can't lose an argument that isn't one.
  • "They're having a hard time, not giving me a hard time." Old line, still the fastest reframe there is.
  • "My calm is the intervention." Nothing you say right now matters more than how you're standing.
  • "I don't have to solve this in the next ten minutes." Almost nothing has to happen right now, including the bath, the homework, the leaving.
  • "Lower the bar." Whatever the plan was, tonight it can be smaller.

After you yell: repair

You will yell sometimes. Every parent in our group has. The rupture isn't what damages the relationship—the missing repair is. And a real repair is one of the most powerful things a PDA child can witness, because it's an adult taking responsibility without being forced to.

Instead of"I'm sorry I yelled, but you have to understand how frustrating…"

Try"I got loud. That wasn't yours to carry. I'm sorry."

Instead of"If you'd just listened, I wouldn't have yelled."

Try"My patience ran out. That's my job to manage, not yours."

Instead ofPretending it didn't happen because the guilt is unbearable

Try"Rough moment earlier. We're okay. I love you." (Even through a closed door. Even if they don't answer.)

No "but." A "but" deletes the apology. And don't demand forgiveness on your schedule—the repair counts even if they take it in silently and respond three hours later by showing you a video game.

Running a low-demand day for yourself

You lower demands for your child on the hard days. You're allowed the same. A parent low-demand day looks like:

  • Cereal for dinner. Screens beyond the usual. The lowest-effort version of everything.
  • Cancel the optional thing. Whatever it is, it's optional.
  • Say less. Silence isn't neglect—on empty days it's the safest thing in the house.
  • One text to someone who gets it. Not for solutions. Just so it isn't only you in there.
The bar for a successful day with a dysregulated PDA child is: everyone safe, relationship intact. Some days that's the whole list, and hitting it is a real win.

When it's every day

If you're starting every morning already empty—rage that scares you, numbness, dreading your own child—that's caregiver burnout, and it's common in PDA families precisely because the usual supports (babysitters, grandparents, respite programs) often can't handle our kids. It is not a character flaw. It's an exposure problem.

Two things help more than any script: your own therapist (not the child's—yours), and other parents who don't need the backstory explained. That second one is why our meetup exists. Second Saturday, every month. Come empty. That's allowed.