Evolving Minds Therapy

Evolving Minds Therapy Registered Counsellor, Play-Based Therapist and Early Childhood Specialist

06/06/2026

Kids can absolutely bend the facts and try to slide around a straight answer to get out of trouble. But instead of just getting angry at the manipulation, we have to look at why they feel the need to use it in the first place.

If we pull back the layers on that behavior, the core truth is very simple: people usually feel the need to protect themselves only when they feel threatened.

A child doesn't start orchestrating a lie because they choose to disrespect the relationship. They do it because they are running a silent, desperate risk assessment. They look at our faces, they remember the last time a boundary was crossed, and they try to calculate if our internal climate can actually handle their mess.

If past slip-ups have turned the house into a battleground or brought on a cold shoulder, a lie becomes their survival strategy — an attempt to keep their world from falling apart.

It is incredibly heavy to stand in a room knowing a child is hiding something from you. The gut-level instinct is to crack down hard to protect our authority. But real authority doesn’t need to fight a child for the truth. It focuses on proving that the relationship can handle the reality.

When we do the work of keeping our own composure — letting their confessions land without pulling back our warmth or escalating the tension — the need for the shield disappears.

By holding the room steady when things go wrong, we give them the unshakeable knowledge that honesty will not break us. They learn that truth is safe, because they have seen that our relationship can handle their messiest moments. ❤️

06/06/2026

❤️

02/06/2026

So many of the behaviors you see in practice don’t fit neatly into one box.

What gets labeled as ADHD, autism, or trauma often reflects a shared nervous system reality—especially when sensory processing is involved. This overlap can make clinical discernment challenging, particularly when “checking out,” explosive reactions, or hyperarousal may serve very different functions depending on context and history.

This is where a nervous system–first lens becomes essential. In trauma therapy training at academy of therapy wisdom, the emphasis is on slowing down, observing patterns, and asking a different kind of question—not “What is this?” but “What does this behavior do for the nervous system?”

The visual invites us to hold both neurodivergence and trauma with care, without collapsing one into the other. It’s a reminder that affirmation, stabilization, and sensory awareness often need to come before interpretation.

At Academy of Therapy Wisdom, this kind of nuanced, embodied understanding is central to how we think about clinical practice and continuing education.

If this framework resonates with you, comment “SYSTEM” below and we’ll share a link to Linda Thai’s FREE webinar: Bottom-Up Strategies for Trauma Stabilization: A Phase-Oriented Approach.

Curious how others are navigating this overlap in their work.

26/05/2026

Polyvagal Institute is not just another place to learn about Polyvagal Theory—we are its founding home. Our co-founders include Dr. Stephen Porges, PhD, who developed the theory, and Deb Dana, LCSW, who brought it into clinical practice, ensuring our work is grounded in the original science and its real-world application.

What that means for our community of global learners:
• Direct access to source-based knowledge
• The most accurate, up-to-date education on Polyvagal Theory and the vagus nerve
• Educational offerings shaped by the theory’s originators and leading practitioners
• A global network committed to integrity, depth, and ongoing discovery

As interest in the nervous system and vagus nerve continues to expand, we remain dedicated to offering education that is not only accessible—but precise, nuanced, and deeply informed.

This is where the work began—and where it continues to evolve.
Come explore our courses, trainings and events at polyvagal.org

26/05/2026
22/05/2026

You’re appreciated 🥰

10/05/2026

Imagine you're planning to make lasagna for supper, or something similarly complicated. You go to the store and buy all the ingredients, take the meat out of the freezer, and then you go to work.

But then work didn't go the way you expected. You were short-staffed, you spent all day on your feet, a coworker was rude to you, and you didn't have time to eat your lunch. When you get home, you're exhausted and starving. You now can't imagine spending an hour making lasagna and then cleaning up afterward. So.. you ACCOMMODATE yourself and order a pizza.

You didn't forget how to make lasagna. You still have all the ingredients for lasagna. You can make lasagna tomorrow. You might even technically WANT to make lasagna. You just don't have the capacity for it right now.

But you aren't lazy for not making lasagna. Nobody tells you that you are being manipulative or that you just need more discipline because you decided to order pizza. Adults extend themselves grace for exactly this kind of capacity shift all the time.

People's abilities don't have one steady baseline. They shift and change constantly, on multiple overlapping timescales, and the pattern is different for everyone.

This is called fluctuating capacity.

For some people, fluctuating capacity means they might handle a complex task one day and then struggle with basic self-care the next, or move between different levels of functioning within the same day, the same hour, even the same conversation.

Within a single day, capacity rises and falls based on accumulated demands, sensory input, food, hydration, transitions, and how much masking or effort someone has already done.

Day to day, sleep quality, what happened the day before, whether they are feeling well, where they are in their cycle, if applicable, and lingering effects from a big event can all change what is available.

Capacity depends on factors like sleep, sensory load, accumulated demands, illness, hormonal cycles, emotional state, environment, and how much the person has already had to mask or push through that day.

In kids, fluctuating capacity often looks like a child who can do something one moment and genuinely cannot do that same thing a short time later. The skill hasn't disappeared, but their access to it has.

A child who had a great Monday can be wiped out on Tuesday from the cost of that good day.

For kids, this could show up in various ways

✱ A kid who can write a full paragraph on Monday stares at a blank page on Wednesday and cannot get a single sentence out.

✱ A child who normally tolerates the tag in their shirt but then suddenly cannot bear it. Sensory thresholds can shift with capacity.

✱ A child who sometimes handles self-care tasks like brushing teeth, getting dressed, putting on shoes, but other times doesn't

✱ Language can also come and go. A kid who chats freely in the morning might give one-word answers by afternoon

These are all situations that involve the same kid, same skill, but different available capacity. Just like in the lasagna analogy.

When capacity fluctuates, you might notice skills requiring executive function, planning, sequencing, starting tasks, switching activities, are often times the first to go. Or, you might see emotional regulation drops, like crying or becoming frustrated more easily/quickly.

When adults don't recognize what's going on, this might feel confusing or frustrating. They might think the child is being lazy, or manipulative, or attention-seeking, or maybe it's a regression, or a behavior problem, or they're simply choosing not to what you want or expect.

But, it's none of those things.

They're still just a child doing the best they can with what they have in the moment, but in this moment, their nervous system has less to give, so skills are going offline.

We can't treat kids' best moments as their baseline. That is actually the ceiling, and the ceiling moves.

08/05/2026

Private equity companies are turning autism treatment into a multi-billion dollar industry, sold as behavior management. Many providers (myself included) believe that autism is not a behavior to manage, but a neurodivergent brain that should be appreciated, accommodated, and nurtured.

03/05/2026

Telling a child to calm down without ever showing them how is a little like handing someone a math problem without ever teaching them numbers.

The expectation is there but the tools are not.

Emotional regulation is not something children are born knowing how to do.

It develops slowly, over years, through repeated experiences of being co-regulated by a safe and steady adult first.

They literally borrow your calm until they build their own.

So when your child cannot pull themselves together in a hard moment, that is not defiance and it is not a character flaw.

That is a skill still under construction in a brain that is still very much developing.

The demand to calm down has never actually taught a child to calm down.

What teaches them is watching you stay regulated when things get hard, feeling your presence when they’re overwhelmed, and slowly internalizing over time what that steadiness feels like so they can eventually access it on their own.

You are not just managing behavior in those moments.

You are building the foundation for how they will handle hard emotions for the rest of their life. ❤️

Credit:

03/05/2026

Feeling overwhelmed and feeling completely drained aren’t the same thing, but we often treat them like they are.
Stress usually comes from too much. It can feel like pressure, urgency, and having more on your plate than you can handle. Burnout is different. It’s what happens when that stress goes on for too long. It can feel like exhaustion, numbness, and having nothing left to give.
Understanding the difference matters, because they don’t need the same kind of care.
This month’s Love Notes focuses on stress and burnout, and how to recognize what you might be experiencing.
Read more and sign up here: https://bit.ly/4g0CwVT

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