PDA Parenting
Supporting an Autistic child or teen with a PDA profile can feel isolating when everyday demands lead to distress, resistance, or shutdown. PDA, often understood as a persistent drive for autonomy or more traditionally as pathological demand avoidance, reflects a nervous system response to pressure and a need for safety, not defiance. As an Autistic, ADHD and PDA parent raising a multi-neurodivergent family, including children with PDA profiles, this space is shaped by lived experience alongside a deep understanding of Autistic development. Here, you will find neuroaffirmative guidance on PDA parenting, including low demand approaches, emotional regulation, and practical ways to reduce everyday pressure while supporting your child’s autonomy, wellbeing, and sense of safety.
Alongside supporting your child, this space also recognises the experience of parenting a child with a PDA profile. PDA parenting can challenge expectations, shift identity, and require a different way of thinking about connection, autonomy, and support. Here, you will find guidance that acknowledges the emotional and practical realities for parents, offering approaches that are sustainable, compassionate, and grounded in both lived experience and neuroaffirmative practice.
PDA School Support
Support Autistic children with a PDA profile in school using neuroaffirmative, low-demand approaches. Learn how to reduce pressure, support regulation, and navigate school avoidance and masking.
PDA Resources & Supports
Explore PDA parenting resources, visual supports, and practical tools for Autistic children with a persistent drive for autonomy. Find guidance to support regulation, reduce demand, and strengthen connection. All resources have been developed by Amanda McGuinness PDA & Autism Specialist.
PDA Parenting Strategies
Explore neuroaffirmative PDA ( Pathological Demand Avoidance / Persistent Drive for Autonomy) parenting strategies that support Autistic children with a persistent drive for autonomy. Learn how to reduce demand, support regulation, and build connection in everyday life. With Amanda McGuinness
Pathological Demand Avoidance
Explore comprehensive, neuroaffirmative resources on PDA Pathological Demand Avoidance (persistent drive for autonomy), including how PDA presents in Autistic children, the impact of demand and pressure, and supportive approaches for home, school, and everyday life. This section includes practical strategies, regulation-focused guidance, and lived experience insights to help you understand PDA and support autonomy, wellbeing, and connection.
PDA Parenting in Real Life
A neuroaffirmative Pathological Demand Avoidance parenting blog by Amanda McGuinness sharing her real-life reflections on raising Autistic children with a persistent drive for autonomy. Explore lived experiences of demand avoidance, regulation, school challenges, and family life, alongside insight that supports