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Elizabeth Heydary's avatar

I have a partner but 7 months out of the year he’s coaching HS soccer and doesn’t get home until nearly bedtime for our kids. We go to some of his games but it’s definitely not a weekly thing due to my kids’ own extracurriculars and not liking to be out late so they can get in bed by 8:30. our parents are local and they step in some but I’m mostly on my own for the 4-7:30/8 pm stretch of the day M-F from August-October and Feb-May. And after that much time alone, it’s harder for him to step in at night because we get into our routine which is hard but doable.

We have come to the realization that everyone in our family of 4 is some variant of ND and 4 people is a lot of people to keep emotionally regulated- I discovered my own ADHD during the pandemic when I couldn’t send my kids to school and I was constantly overstimulated and touched out.

The things that do work for me are: look at my kids’ eyes when they’re dysregulated- it jars me out of my triggered anger to see their eyes often look fearful and I realize they need my help to get back to regulated; sit in the dark with my back against their wall in their bunk bed while wrapping a child in a weighted blanket; putting a ice pack on my chest and dimming the lights in the kitchen; going outside in general. If my kids are being triggering in the car and I’m losing my shit, I do pull over if it’s safe to do so. I explain that my nervous system is panicking and I can’t drive when I feel that way. Depending on where we are, sometimes we get out and walk around more, if they’re only mildly dysregulated I can sometimes switch to some score music rather than music with lyrics. Pride and Prejudice soundtrack is one of my favorites that instantly calms me.

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Naomi Gottlieb-Miller's avatar

Love this. I am married but we’re a military family, so I soloparent frequently.

So much of this resonates with my experience.

I’ve always hated the “tap out” suggestion for several reasons, the first being what you said but also, there are just times I’m parenting alone when my husband is just at work or at the store and I get triggered/struggle and can’t tap out.

It’s speaking to communal parenting, not just being partnered. The idea that there is always someone nearby to lean on.

But that doesn’t currently exist in our family structures.

Which is a bit of a tragedy really.

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