ADHD Women's Wellbeing Podcast

Peaceful Parenting for PDA Kids: Compassionate Strategies That Help Them Thrive

Jan 29, 2026
Casey Ehrlich, researcher, coach, and founder of At Peace Parents who grew up parenting two PDA kids. She reframes PDA as a pervasive drive for autonomy. Short takes cover why typical parenting backfires, nervous system reactions behind avoidance, four observable PDA traits, how PDA shows across the lifespan, and compassionate strategies to reduce conflict and support regulation.
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INSIGHT

Autonomy Drives Extreme Avoidance

  • PDA is better framed as a pervasive drive for autonomy where the drive subconsciously overrides basic needs like eating or hygiene.
  • Casey Ehrlich explains this drive can disable access to basic needs when nervous system stress accumulates.
ADVICE

Check The Root Cause First

  • Do assess root causes before assuming avoidance is willful; sensory or executive issues look similar to PDA but have different triggers.
  • Try to notice if the child complies for things they want but resists when authority or obligation is perceived.
INSIGHT

Cumulative Stress Explains Sudden Escalations

  • PDA reactions accumulate over weeks or months so a sudden escalation often reflects cumulative stress rather than a new condition.
  • Equalizing, masking and need for undivided attention are key observable PDA patterns leading to escalations.
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