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1-1-2 Inspire: Parenting a child who doesn’t fit the script

Edition #20

Hi there, I’m Aarti, Founder and Lead Counsellor at Incontact. Welcome to the 20th edition of 1-1-2 Inspire. There’s a quiet kind of parenting you don’t see in picture books or PTA meetings. The kind that doesn’t come with easy praise, proud report cards, or Instagrammable milestones. The kind that doesn’t follow the script—but writes its own, every single day.

This edition of 1-1-2 Inspire is for those parents. The ones raising children who are spirited, sensitive, strong-willed, or simply different. It’s not always visible—but it’s deeply real.

1 Story—When parenting doesn’t look like progress

In therapy, I meet many parents who feel like they’re constantly adjusting, constantly learning, and continually falling short of society’s definition of “good parenting.”

These are not neglectful or disengaged parents. They are among the most intentional I’ve ever seen.

They read the books. They seek support. They stay up late planning routines that might help the next morning go a little smoother. They swallow their own shame when a meltdown happens in public. They apologize when they lose their temper, then try again with more gentleness. They hold their child through sensory overwhelm, emotional floods, or explosive resistance.

And still, they feel judged—by strangers, by teachers, sometimes even by family.

Because their child doesn’t follow rules effortlessly.

Because sticker charts don’t work.

Because their love doesn’t produce “results” that are easy to quantify.

The truth is: raising a child who doesn’t fit the script demands an entirely different kind of parenting. Not just responsive—but adaptive. Not just patient—but deeply self-aware.

It forces parents to let go of their ego. To surrender control. To redefine what success, growth, and connection really look like.

Often, these parents must face the grief of unmet expectations. They must confront their own childhood scripts, their fantasies of how family life would unfold, and their fears of being judged. They must let go of their beliefs, their expectations, their parenting style… daily!

They must rise each day to meet their child as they are—not as they imagined them to be.

That’s not a failure. That’s radical love.

A love that corrects without crushing.

That holds boundaries without breaking the spirit.

That celebrates tiny moments of connection more than conventional milestones.

It’s not visible on report cards. But it’s visible in the resilience of the bond, the creativity of the strategies, and the sheer depth of daily effort.

And yet, this parenting is rarely validated.

So let’s name it now:

  • It’s valid if your child isn’t “easy” but is deeply loved.

  • It’s valid if you’re rethinking every parenting instinct you inherited.

  • It’s valid if your days don’t look picture-perfect—but you’re still showing up with tenderness and grit.

This isn’t a detour from real parenting.

This is real parenting.

1 Takeaway—Love isn’t always gentle, but it is always faithful

Parenting a differently-wired child is not about “fixing” them. It’s about building a relationship that works for both of you.

It requires courage—not just to support your child, but to stand firm in your own truth when others don’t understand. It’s easy to celebrate results. But what deserves even more honour is effort without applause.

If you are a parent doing that work quietly, consistently, and with love—you are not invisible here. You are deeply seen.

2 Tools to support your parenting

…especially when it’s hard to measure:

Redefine progress in emotional language, not performance

Replace questions like “Did she behave today?” with:

  • Was she able to regulate even for a few moments?

  • Did we repair the connection after a rupture?

  • Did I stay grounded while holding her distress?

These are the real markers of growth.

Create a validation journal

At the end of each week, jot down 2–3 moments where:

  • You responded with care under pressure.

  • Your child expressed something with clarity or vulnerability.

  • You handled a moment differently than you might have before.

This builds your own emotional record—so your self-worth doesn’t depend on external validation.

Not every child fits the script. And not every parent gets applause. But the love, effort, and insight it takes to keep showing up for a child who challenges the norm—that’s some of the most intelligent, intentional parenting I know.

If that’s you, take a moment to recognize the quiet work you do every day. It matters. You matter. And you’re not alone. ❤️

Warm wishes,

Aarti

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