I was trying to help my daughter with homework the other day and ran into a weird situation. We got the point where I was saying things like, “write a 5”, then “draw a line”, then I’d hold her hand and try to write out the answer with her hand, but the more I would try to do for her, the less she was able to do. To the point where she was unable to EVEN HOLD THE PENCIL as I was holding her hand.
The whole time, she was saying, “It’s too hard!” I know it’s not hard for her though: she’s good at math and her teacher says she does this fine in class. Is she being a stubborn, defiant kid or is this her signal that my demand has triggered an anxiety/shutdown response? I’ve been reading about PDA in kids and, while I don’t believe she has full blown autism/PDA, the solution might be the same: remove the feeling of a direct demand.
I. Shifting the “Too Hard” Narrative (Disguising the Demand)
Instead of focusing on compliance, focus on play, choice, and problem-solving.
| Strategy | Goal | Script/Example |
| The “Challenge Game” | Replaces demand with a self-chosen challenge (Dopamine boost for ADHD). | “I bet you can’t get those done in ONE minute!” (Daughter did it in 30 seconds!) OR: “I bet I can tidy up all the red items before you can get all the things off the coffee table! Ready, set, go!” |
| The “Micro-Mission” | Breaks the task into an extremely small, finite, and manageable step to combat overwhelm. | “We’re not doing the whole page; we’re just going to do the first two sentences. Ready for the mission?” OR: “You’re not doing the laundry. You are only going to carry the red clothes to the machine.” |
| Contained Choices | Gives a feeling of control, reducing the demand-avoidance anxiety. | “Would you like to do the easy problems first to warm up, or get the hardest ones out of the way so you can relax?” OR: “Do you want to write your sentences with a blue pen or a pencil?” |
| Narration (Sports Commentator) | Describes what is happening (your actions, the object’s actions) instead of giving a direct instruction. | Instead of: “Start writing the first sentence now.” Try: “She reaches for the pencil. Can our player asnwer the question before we go to commercial?” |
II. Using the Timer to Define Work, Not Avoidance
The timer should be a tool for structuring the work, not scheduling a break.
- The Focus Blast System: Make the timer represent the commitment to the task. Say, “We are going to do a 15-minute Focus Blast on the math, and then you get a 5-minute movement break, no matter what.”
- Visual Timers: Use a visual timer (like an hourglass or a Time Timer with a colored disk). This externalizes the passing of time, which is helpful for ADHD.
- Praise the Effort: The goal of the timer is to focus for the set time, not to finish the work. Praise the persistence: “Wow, your body stayed right here and your pencil kept moving for that whole 15 minutes! That was a fantastic Focus Blast!”
- Movement Break Reset: Immediately pivot after the timer rings to a zero-screen movement break (like running around the dining table, jumping jacks, or 10 wall pushes). This helps discharge nervous energy and prevents the avoidance from setting in.
III. Communicating Your Emotional Limits (The “Empty Tank”)
It is crucial to set boundaries to protect your sanity without making your child responsible for your stress. This is about communicating your capacity.
- The Energy Tank Analogy: Use a simple, non-blaming metaphor. “Sweetheart, I hear you’re feeling so frustrated and that is a real feeling. Right now, Dad’s energy tank is almost empty from taking care of everyone. I can give you a hug and a validation (‘I see you’re struggling’), but I cannot sit here and wrestle with these big feelings with you right now.”
- Validate, Then Disengage: Provide physical proximity (connection) but emotional distance (not engagement). (Give a quick hug or a hand on the shoulder) “I know you hate this homework/chore. I get it. It’s frustrating. I’m right here in the kitchen/laundry room, but I need quiet to focus on this chore for now.”
- The “Dad Reset” Micro-Break: When you feel your own emotional surge, you must stop and take a break. Put your hand up gently and say, “Hold on, sweetie. Dad needs a 60-second reset. I’ll be right back.” Physically leave the room for 60 seconds and take 5 deep breaths. This models healthy regulation.
IV. The Cozy Corner/Worry Spot
This is a non-punishment space for self-regulation, not a time-out or reward.
- The Rule: It is a tool for her to choose when overwhelmed.“When the feelings get too big, and the work feels too hard, you can choose to go to your Worry Spot. You can stay there until you feel ready for a Micro-Mission (that one small step).”
- Key Items: Include sensory/calming tools:
- Low Sensory: Soft, warm lighting (fairy lights, small dim lamp).
- Pressure: A weighted blanket or lap pad.
- Tactile: A basket with fidgets, silly putty, or a calming glitter jar.
- No Screens: Avoid electronics with screens, as they are stimulating and turn the corner into a reward instead of a regulation space.
And remember: you aren’t just helping get this task done this time: you are helping to model emotional stability and boundaries which will help your kids across the rest of their lives.
