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How to Enforce Family Rules Without Losing Connection
One of the most common concerns we hear from families is this: "If I hold the boundary, won't it damage my relationship with my child?" It's a fair question. No one wants their child to feel disconnected, shut down, or misunderstood. And when a child pushes back hard against a boundary, it can feel like the relationship is on the line. But what we often see in practice is the opposite of what parents fear. Clear, consistent enforcement of family rules without losing connectio
19 minutes ago4 min read


Family Boundaries and House Rules That Actually Work
Most families don't struggle because they don't have rules. They struggle because the rules don't hold. On paper, the expectations are there. Bedtime exists. Screen time has limits. There's an idea of how people should talk to each other and move through the day. But in practice, those expectations shift depending on the mood, the day, or how much energy anyone has left to enforce them. And kids notice that quickly. When family boundaries and house rules aren't consistent, th
1 day ago5 min read


Seeing the Siblings Too
Brigid here. Last week, we shared a blog from the Precision team about supporting siblings and family relationships. I wanted to follow up with my own story. I am the older sister of an autistic brother. I sat in the waiting rooms of therapy offices. I was there for the moments that happen in so many of your homes. The long days. The hard behaviors. The intensity. The love. The exhaustion. I experienced that too. And for a long time, I did not have language for what that mean
May 212 min read


Supporting Siblings and Family Relationships
When One Child Needs More When one child needs extra support, the whole family feels it. Siblings notice the attention, the schedule changes, the hard moments, and the triumphs. They may not always have the words for what they are experiencing, but they are very aware that family life looks a little different. Supporting siblings does not mean creating perfect balance. It means creating understanding, connection, and space for everyone’s experience. Siblings Can Hold Many Fee
May 122 min read


How to Evaluate ABA Therapy: What to Look For, and What to Question
Acceptance goes beyond awareness. It means valuing differences, listening to autistic voices, and making choices that prioritize quality of life, autonomy, and dignity. When families are considering services like ABA, that lens matters. The goal is not to change who a child is, but to support them in navigating their world in ways that are meaningful to them. And just as important, it means being thoughtful and informed about the supports you choose. As you read this blog, th
Apr 284 min read


Encouraging Positive Behavior Without Turning Everything Into a Lesson
The Quiet Pressure to Maximize Every Moment There is a quiet pressure many parents feel to turn every moment into a learning opportunity. We notice a mistake and want to correct it. We see a skill emerging and want to shape it. We spot a chance for growth and feel responsible for making the most of it. That impulse usually comes from care. From wanting to help our kids succeed. From knowing what they are capable of and wanting to support them in getting there. We love them. W
Mar 93 min read


How to Track Family Progress with Ease (And Why Celebrating Wins Matters)
Let's talk about something most of us are terrible at: noticing when things are going well. We're really good at noticing when things go wrong. When the morning is rough, we remember it all day. When our kid has a meltdown, it sticks with us. When we miss a goal or skip a routine, we feel it. But when things go smoothly? When our kid handles frustration better than they used to? When we make it through the week doing the thing we said we'd do? We barely notice. It just become
Jan 277 min read


How to Build Small Consistent Routines That Support Your Family Goals
Let's talk about the gap between knowing what you want to do and actually doing it consistently. You know you want to read with your kids more. You know bedtime would go smoother with a consistent routine. You know family dinner would be nice if you could pull it off regularly. But knowing what you want and making it happen are two very different things. This is where small consistent routines come in. Not the color-coded, requires-military-precision kind of routines. The rea
Jan 206 min read


How to Set Achievable Family Goals That Fit Your Real Life
Let me guess: you've set family goals before. Maybe you wanted to eat dinner together more often, or get the kids to bed on time, or have smoother screen time transitions, or just feel more connected as a family. And let me guess again: those goals probably lasted a few weeks, maybe a month if you were really motivated, before they quietly faded into the chaos of regular life. It's not your fault. And it's not because your family is uniquely difficult or you're not trying ha
Jan 166 min read


How to Reflect on Your Family's Year Without the Pressure (Wins Count Too)
Let's start with something that might feel a bit uncomfortable: looking back at last year without immediately jumping to what you should have done differently. I know, I know. When most of us think about the past year, we default to the lowlight reel. The times we lost our temper. The goals we didn't hit. The routines that fell apart by March. The moments we felt like we were failing at this whole parenting thing. But what if we flipped the script? What if, instead of catalog
Jan 85 min read


Reflecting on the Year and Setting Gentle Intentions for Neurodivergent Families
Rethinking New Year's Resolutions Here's what happens every January: everyone sets big ambitious goals. Lose weight. Exercise daily. Be more patient. Achieve more. Transform completely. And for families with neurodivergent children , those resolutions often include things like: get my child to do X, fix Y behavior, master Z skill. Then by February, you're behind on the goals. Feeling like you've failed. Beating yourself up for not doing enough. Setting intentions for neurodi
Dec 23, 20255 min read


Supporting Social Connection During the Holidays for Neurodivergent Children (Without the Performance Pressure)
The Social Performance Trap Let's talk about what happens at most holiday gatherings. Your child walks in and immediately gets swarmed. "Give grandma a hug!" "Say thank you for the present!" "Go play with your cousins!" "Tell everyone about school!" "Why are you being so quiet?" And when your child doesn't respond the way adults expect—when they don't make eye contact, or they walk away, or they need space—suddenly you're getting looks. Comments about manners. Suggestions abo
Dec 16, 20256 min read


Managing Sensory Overload During the Holidays: A Survival Guide for Neurodivergent Families
The Sensory Reality of December Nobody talks about this part. Everyone focuses on magic and joy. But for families with sensory-sensitive kids, the holidays are an endurance test. Think about what December actually involves: Visual: Flashing lights everywhere. Bright colors. Screens playing holiday content on loop. New decorations change familiar spaces. Auditory: Holiday music constantly. Crowds. Loud gatherings. Excited voices. Tactile: Itchy sweaters. Tags on new gifts.
Dec 11, 20254 min read


How to Create Predictable Holiday Routines Without Losing the Fun
The Holiday Routine Paradox Let me guess: you've been told that kids with autism need routine. You've also been told that the holidays are supposed to be magical, spontaneous, full of surprises. Here's what I've learned: it can actually be both. But it requires rethinking what we mean by routine and letting go of what the holidays are "supposed" to look like. Predictable holiday routines aren't about controlling every moment. They're about creating enough structure that your
Dec 4, 20254 min read


Emotional Needs in Positive Parenting: Understanding Challenging Behavior
Understanding Emotional Needs in Positive Parenting Your child throws their plate across the table. Or refuses to get dressed for the third morning in a row. Or hits their sibling over a toy. Your first instinct? Address the behavior. Stop the throwing. Enforce consequences. Make it clear that's not acceptable. But here's what positive parenting asks you to do first: look underneath the behavior to the emotion driving it. Because that plate didn't fly across the table because
Nov 25, 20256 min read


Parent Self-Regulation in Positive Parenting: Why Your Calm Matters
The Thing Nobody Tells You Here's what most parenting advice skips over: your child's nervous system is constantly scanning yours for safety signals. This isn't conscious. They're not thinking "is mom stressed right now? Is dad upset?" Their body is reading your body - your tone, your breathing, your muscle tension, the energy you're putting out. When you're dysregulated, your child picks up on that. Even if you're using all the right words and doing all the right things, the
Nov 18, 20255 min read


Emotional Support in Positive Parenting: What Your ABA Child Really Needs
The Day I Stopped Trying to Fix Everything I remember the exact moment I realized I was doing emotional support all wrong. My child was having a complete meltdown over something that seemed small to me - a slight change in the afternoon routine. I was doing all the "right" things: offering solutions, suggesting coping strategies, reminding them of their tools. And it was making everything worse. My child didn't need me to fix it. They needed me to just be there while they fel
Nov 12, 20255 min read


Positive Parenting for ABA Families: Why Connection Comes First
You're Already Doing More Than You Realize Let me guess - you've read the parenting books. You've sat through the parent training sessions. You're implementing strategies at home and trying to stay consistent with what the therapists are doing. And some days, you still feel like you're getting it all wrong. If that sounds familiar, take a breath. You're not failing. You're navigating something that's genuinely complex. Positive parenting for ABA families isn't about being per
Nov 5, 20254 min read


Parent Involvement in ABA Therapy – Bringing It All Together
Over the past few weeks, we’ve explored how parent involvement in ABA therapy plays a key role in building skills, boosting confidence, and strengthening the connection between home and therapy. From understanding ABA basics to supporting generalization and managing behavior, one theme has remained constant: when parents are engaged, children grow faster and feel more supported. As we close this series, let’s focus on the “big picture” — how to weave ABA into real life in sus
Sep 23, 20253 min read


Parent Involvement in ABA Therapy: Building Strong Communication With Your Team
Parent involvement in ABA therapy is more than practicing strategies at home — it’s also about working closely with your child’s therapy team. When parents and providers communicate effectively, therapy becomes more consistent, personalized, and impactful. In this blog, we’ll explore why communication matters, how to build strong partnerships, and what strategies parents can use to stay connected. Why Communication Matters in Parent Involvement with ABA Team Open communicatio
Sep 16, 20252 min read
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