• How Nonverbal Autistic Children Communicate (AAC, Echolalia, and Language Development)
    Apr 10 2026

    In this episode, pediatric psychologist Dr. Mark Bowers explores the inner world of nonverbal autistic children and the communication systems many parents and educators overlook.

    Many parents quietly ask difficult questions:

    • Will my autistic child ever talk?
    • Do nonverbal autistic children understand language?
    • How can I connect with my child if they don’t speak?

    Modern neuroscience and developmental psychology tell a very different story than the assumptions many families encounter.

    In this conversation, we explore how autistic communication actually develops, including:

    • why speech and intelligence are not the same thing
    • how echolalia and scripting can be meaningful communication
    • what gestalt language processing looks like in autistic children
    • how AAC devices and alternative communication systems support language growth
    • the many ways nonverbal autistic children communicate without speech

    You’ll also learn practical strategies parents can use today:

    • recognizing early communication signals
    • responding to scripting and echolalia
    • using language mapping and expansion techniques
    • supporting communication through AAC and gesture

    Most importantly, this episode reframes how we see nonverbal autism.

    When we stop asking “How do we make a child talk?” and start asking “How does this child communicate?”, a completely different picture emerges.

    Because many nonverbal autistic children understand far more than the world realizes.

    And when parents learn how to recognize their child’s communication signals, connection can grow long before spoken language appears.

    If you’re parenting a nonverbal autistic child, supporting a neurodivergent student, or trying to better understand autism and communication development, this episode offers science-based insight, compassion, and practical guidance.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    38 mins
  • Why Neurodivergent Kids Fight Bedtime: Anxiety, Night Wakings & Self-Soothing Explained
    Apr 3 2026

    Bedtime shouldn’t feel like a nightly battle. But for many parents of ADHD and autistic children, it does.

    If your child fights sleep, wakes in the middle of the night, can’t self-soothe, needs you present, or seems wired at bedtime, this episode explains what’s really happening.

    Dr. Mark Bowers breaks down the neuroscience behind bedtime struggles in neurodivergent kids, including:

    • Why anxiety spikes at night
    • How sensory sensitivity affects sleep
    • Blood sugar dips and 1 AM wake-ups
    • When melatonin helps — and when it doesn’t
    • What “self-soothing” actually means neurologically
    • Co-sleeping without shame
    • How to reduce bedtime battles without increasing fear

    This is not about stricter routines or better behavior charts.

    It’s about nervous system regulation, attachment, metabolic stability, and developmental pacing.

    If you’re parenting a child with ADHD, autism, anxiety, or sensory sensitivities — and bedtime feels exhausting — this episode will give you science-based clarity and practical shifts you can start tonight.

    Because bedtime struggles are rarely about defiance.
    They’re about regulation.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    37 mins
  • Morning Routines That Actually Work for ADHD and Autistic Kids
    Mar 27 2026

    Morning routines with neurodivergent kids can feel impossible.

    If your child melts down over socks, refuses breakfast, freezes at the door, or panics about school, it’s usually not about behavior or discipline.

    It’s about nervous system load, sensory overwhelm, executive functioning, and transitions.

    In this episode, pediatric psychologist Dr. Mark Bowers explains why mornings are so hard for many ADHD and autistic children, and what actually helps families create morning routines that work in real life.

    You’ll learn:

    • why neurodivergent kids struggle with morning transitions
    • how executive functioning and sensory processing affect routines
    • why time warnings often fail with ADHD brains
    • how to handle common triggers like clothing battles, breakfast refusal, and leaving the house
    • strategies for school anxiety and school refusal in the morning
    • practical scripts parents can use during wake-up, dressing, and drop-off

    This episode also covers the hardest part of the day for many families: getting out the door and transitioning to school.

    We’ll talk about:

    • waking and nervous system regulation
    • sensory issues with clothing and hygiene
    • ADHD task initiation problems
    • morning anxiety and anticipatory dread
    • car, bus, and carpool stress
    • school drop-off meltdowns
    • supporting kids through school refusal and separation anxiety

    Most parenting advice assumes kids can simply “try harder” in the morning.

    But for neurodivergent kids, mornings often involve state changes, sensory load, and executive functioning challenges that make typical routines unrealistic.

    When parents understand what’s happening in the brain and nervous system, mornings become more predictable, more regulated, and far less combative.

    If mornings in your house feel chaotic, tense, or exhausting, this episode will help you build morning routines that actually work for ADHD and autistic kids.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    46 mins
  • Executive Function at Home: Why “Knowing Better” Doesn’t Mean “Doing Better”
    Mar 20 2026

    Your child knows what to do.

    So why can’t they just do it?

    If you’re parenting a child who forgets homework, melts down during transitions, procrastinates for hours, or shuts down when tasks feel overwhelming — this episode is for you.

    In this deep dive, Dr. Mark Bowers breaks down what executive function actually is and why daily family life becomes the battleground when these skills are fragile.

    You’ll learn:

    • Why reminders and warnings often backfire
    • Why consequences don’t reliably change executive behavior
    • The difference between defiance and neurological overload
    • What’s really happening during homework shutdown
    • Why mornings and bedtime unravel so fast
    • How to scaffold without shaming
    • Practical scripts you can use tonight

    Executive function is the brain’s management system — planning, working memory, inhibition, emotional regulation, task initiation, and flexibility. When those systems are underdeveloped or overloaded, behavior looks willful. But often, it’s neurological.

    This episode will help you shift from “Why won’t they?” to “Where are they getting stuck?”

    Because executive function struggles are performance problems — not knowledge problems.

    And when we understand the mechanism, we can respond with clarity instead of frustration.

    Small shifts. Repeated consistently.
    That’s how capacity grows.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    24 mins
  • PDA: When Demands Feel Like Threats — And Why the Internet Is Moving Faster Than the Science
    Mar 13 2026

    Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA) is everywhere online right now.

    Parents are exhausted. Kids are melting down. Social media says, “That’s PDA.”

    But what if the conversation is moving faster than the science?

    In this grounded, nuanced episode, Dr. Mark Bowers unpacks what’s actually happening when a child experiences a demand as a threat to their nervous system. We’ll talk about:

    • Why PDA is not a recognized DSM diagnosis in the U.S.
    • Why that does not mean the behaviors aren’t real
    • How social media amplification can distort prevalence
    • What anxiety, ADHD, trauma, and sensory processing can look like when misinterpreted as PDA
    • The risks of going fully low-demand long term
    • Why schools push back — and how to advocate effectively
    • How to rebuild tolerance without escalating meltdowns

    This is not a dismissive episode.
    It’s not reactive.
    And it’s not ideological.

    It’s careful.

    If you’ve felt relief in the PDA label — or confusion — or defensiveness — that makes sense. You’re trying to understand your child.

    This episode will help you separate narrative from neuroscience so you can reduce chaos, increase clarity, and respond with steady leadership.

    Because the goal isn’t eliminating demands.
    It’s building capacity to handle them.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    32 mins
  • The Hidden Mental Load Neurodivergent Kids Carry All Day (And Why Evenings Fall Apart)
    Mar 6 2026

    Why does your child “hold it together” all day at school — only to fall apart at home?

    Why do small things explode at 4:30 p.m.?

    Why do behavior charts stop working by evening?

    In this episode, Dr. Mark Bowers breaks down the hidden neurological and emotional load neurodivergent kids carry all day — and why fatigue explains more than defiance ever will.

    We explore:

    • The invisible executive functioning demands of a school day
    • How masking drains regulation capacity
    • Why containment leads to after-school meltdowns
    • The difference between fatigue and defiance
    • Why behavior charts track compliance, not capacity
    • How to build a predictable decompression ritual
    • When to pause expectations and when to hold boundaries
    • Scripts you can use tonight

    You’ll learn why inconsistency is often a sign of fluctuating capacity — not willful misbehavior — and how to restructure evenings around recovery instead of escalating compliance battles.

    If you’ve ever thought:

    “They were fine all day.”
    “Why does it only fall apart with me?”
    “Why can’t they just push through 20 more minutes?”

    This episode will give you a nervous system lens that makes those moments make sense.

    Because your child isn’t lazy.
    They aren’t manipulative.
    And they aren’t choosing chaos.

    They’re often depleted.

    Recovery first.
    Expectation second.

    When you shift that sequence, evenings change.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    35 mins
  • What I Wish Parents Knew at the Beginning: A Nervous System Lens on Neurodivergent Parenting
    Feb 27 2026

    If I could sit down with every parent at the very beginning of this journey, this is what I would say.

    Before the evaluations.
    Before the school meetings.
    Before the behavior charts.
    Before the late-night Googling.

    In this episode, Dr. Mark Bowers shares what he wishes parents understood from day one about raising neurodivergent children.

    We explore:

    • Why most “misbehavior” is actually nervous system protection
    • Why consequences often fail during meltdowns
    • The difference between red zone and yellow zone escalation
    • How co-regulation builds real independence
    • Why your own regulation matters more than you think
    • What to do during homework battles, bedtime resistance, and public meltdowns
    • How to repair after you lose your cool
    • The grief many parents carry but rarely name

    This episode reframes behavior through a science-based, nervous system lens — without shame, without blame, and without unrealistic expectations.

    If you’ve ever thought:

    “Why does nothing work?”
    “Am I reinforcing this?”
    “Other families make this look easier.”
    “I’m losing my patience.”

    You are not failing.

    You are parenting a different operating system.

    And when you sequence regulation before expectation, everything shifts.

    This episode is for parents who want practical tools, steady language to use in the moment, and a framework that actually matches their daily reality.

    Because behavior is communication.

    And learning this language changes families.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    33 mins
  • When Anxiety Makes Separation Feel Impossible: Helping Neurodivergent Kids Untangle Fear from Safety
    Feb 20 2026

    What happens when your child’s anxiety becomes so intense that being apart feels impossible?

    In this episode, Dr. Mark Bowers explores what’s really happening when neurodivergent children begin treating their parent as their primary safety source — not emotionally, but biologically. When separation feels dangerous. When school refusal starts. When co-sleeping stretches longer than expected. When your world quietly begins to shrink.

    We break down:

    • Why anxiety is a nervous system response, not manipulation
    • How accommodation slowly reinforces fear (even when it’s loving)
    • The difference between distress and danger
    • Why reassurance often backfires
    • How enmeshment forms without anyone meaning for it to
    • What gradual exposure actually looks like in real life
    • Practical scripts you can use tonight
    • How to unwind this pattern without breaking trust

    This conversation is especially for neurodivergent families navigating separation anxiety, school refusal, bedtime struggles, and chronic reassurance loops.

    If you’ve ever thought:

    “I think this is happening in our house.”
    “I don’t know how we got here.”
    “I’m afraid I’ve already messed this up.”

    You haven’t.

    This episode offers a steady, practical framework for helping your child build tolerance, confidence, and independence — without force, shame, or flooding their nervous system.

    Because the goal isn’t pushing kids away.

    It’s helping their nervous systems grow.

    Let Us Know What You Think!

    Support the show

    Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.

    The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.

    If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.

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    20 mins