Episode

The Emotional Side of ADHD and Neurodivergence No One Talks About | Emotional Dysregulation | E406

Podcast
Dysregulated Kids: Science-Backed Parenting Help for Behavior, Anxiety, ADHD and More
Published
May 11, 2026
Duration seconds
1313
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://drroseann.com/podcast/
Audio
https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/83a25995-ac75-414d-a8f6-3d312b1daa1b.mp3
JSON
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Markdown
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Summary

The emotional side of ADHD and neurodivergence often shows up as shame, not behavior. Constant correction can quietly erode confidence and motivation. Dr. Roseann Capanna-Hodge, expert in Regulation First Parenting™, helps parents calm the brain and rebuild emotional resilience. Feeling like your child is constantly being corrected—and it’s wearing them down? You’re not alone. The emotional side of ADHD and neurodivergence often goes unseen, but it deeply impacts confidence, motivation, and behavior. In this episode, you’ll learn how constant correction shapes your child’s brain—and what actually helps. Why does my child with ADHD feel like they’re always doing something wrong? When kids hear corrections all day— “sit still,” “focus,” “try harder” —it starts to shape how they see themselves. The brain builds identity through feedback. And when that feedback is mostly negative, kids begin to believe: “I’m the problem.” “I can’t get it right.” “Why even try?” Over time, this becomes more than frustration —it turns into shame. Imagine your child forgetting homework again. You remind them (again), but what they hear is: “I always mess up.” Repeated correction creates a negative self-story Confidence drops, even if effort is there Kids may shut down, act out, or avoid tasks entirely This is the hidden emotional weight of neurodivergence—and it matters more than you think. How does constant correction affect motivation and behavior in neurodivergent kids? Here’s the truth: It’s not bad behavior—it’s a dysregulated brain trying to cope. When kids expect failure, something called learned helplessness kicks in. The brain says, “Why bother?” You might notice: Avoidance (they stop trying) Anxiety (fear of making mistakes) Defensiveness or backtalk (protecting themselves from more…