Dysregulated Kids: Science-Backed Parenting Help for Behavior, Anxiety, ADHD and More

353: Why Dysregulated Kids Can’t Use Their Executive Function (and What to Do About It)


Listen Later

Parenting a child who melts down over homework or seemingly simple tasks can feel overwhelming and exhausting. You’re not imagining it—the frustration, tears, and chaos aren’t bad behavior. It’s a dysregulated brain struggling to access its control center.

In this episode, let me explain why dysregulated kids can’t use their executive function, what that means for daily life, and practical strategies to help your child regain focus, complete tasks, and strengthen their executive functioning skills.

Why does my child melt down after school?

Many parents notice that after a long day, their child becomes irritable or shuts down at homework time. This isn’t defiance—it’s a dysregulated brain that’s gone offline.

When stress builds, it hijacks the prefrontal cortex, the control center for planning, organization, and impulse control. Your child simply can’t access their executive functions or working memory until their nervous system settles.

What’s happening:

  • Stress or sensory overload disrupts brain functions.
  • Transitions and overstimulation lead to poor executive functioning—especially in kids with ADHD or anxiety.
  • Their brain shifts from learning to survival mode.

What helps:

  • Co-regulate first. Your calm presence signals safety.
  • Once calm, executive functioning skills like focus, planning, and task completion return.

Let’s calm the brain first—because that’s when real learning begins.

Download the Executive Functioning Toolkit — packed with science-backed strategies you can start using today to reduce stress and improve focus.

How can I help my child focus when they can’t control their emotions?

When emotions flood in, logic and problem-solving shut down. This is common in children with ADHD, learning disabilities, or high emotional sensitivity.

  • Regulate first: Deep breaths, movement, or sensory grounding can reset the brain.
  • Break tasks into small, manageable steps to avoid overwhelming a child with poor executive functioning.
  • Use internal self-talk modeling: Narrate your planning out loud to teach cognitive strategies like task initiation and sustained attention.

🗣️ “Once calm, your child’s executive functioning skills—like focus, organization, and problem solving—can finally do their job.” Dr. Roseann

When your child is dysregulated, it’s easy to feel helpless.

The Regulation Rescue Kit gives you the scripts and strategies you need to stay grounded and in control.

Become a Dysregulation Insider VIP at www.drroseann.com/newsletter and get your free kit today.

What are executive functioning skills, and why do they matter?

Executive functioning skills are the brain’s Job Manager: planning, prioritizing, organizing, controlling impulses, and problem-solving. Without them, even typically developing children can struggle.

  • Start with the end in mind: Visualizing outcomes improves planning and cognitive flexibility.
  • Teach one skill at a time, e.g., starting a task, organizing materials, or remembering steps.
  • Recognize that strengths and weaknesses vary: A child may excel at baseball stats or Legos but struggle with unexpected changes or school tasks.

How do I teach executive function to a dysregulated child?

The key is consistent, patient, and calm guidance. These are skills that can be taught without medication—even for kids with ADHD, autism spectrum disorder, or executive dysfunction.

  • Use clear routines and structured steps to build organizational skills and behavioral inhibition.
  • Introduce calm practices during low-stress activities like planning snacks, games, or chores.
  • Incorporate brain-boosting tools: magnesium, neurofeedback, PEMF therapy, sleep, nutrition, and movement to support brain development and self regulation.
  • Celebrate small wins to reinforce problem solving and flexible thinking.

When should I worry about poor executive functioning?

While some struggles are typical, watch for signs that dysregulation is interfering with multiple areas: school, social interactions, chores, or hobbies.

  • Repeated task failures and frustration cycles may indicate executive dysfunction.
  • Remember: It’s not bad parenting—it’s a brain that needs support.
  • Early intervention and teaching skills increases attention, impulse control, and critical thinking, reducing long-term mental health risks.

Every child’s journey is different. That’s why cookie-cutter solutions don’t work.

Take the free Solution Matcher Quiz and get a customized path to support your child’s emotional and behavioral needs—no guessing, no fluff.

Start today at www.drroseann.com/help

FAQs

How can I help my child focus after school?

Start with regulation before homework. Offer a snack, movement break, or quiet time. Once their nervous system calms, attention and motivation return. Calm brains learn best.

Why does my child melt down during homework?

After a long day, your child’s brain may be overloaded. Fatigue and stress shut down executive functioning—this isn’t defiance, it’s dysregulation. Help them reset with co-regulation and short breaks.

What are signs of poor executive functioning?

Forgetfulness, messy workspaces, procrastination, and difficulty starting tasks are all signs. These kids aren’t lazy—their brain needs regulation before it can organize and plan.

How can I teach my child planning skills?

Model it out loud: “First, I’ll write the list, then check it off.” Your child learns cognitive strategies by hearing your internal self-talk in real time.

What’s the best way to calm a dysregulated child?

Co-regulation is key. Your calm presence signals safety and helps your child’s brain come back online. Try deep breathing, gentle movement, or simply staying near and grounded.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Dysregulated Kids: Science-Backed Parenting Help for Behavior, Anxiety, ADHD and MoreBy Dr. Roseann Capanna Hodge

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

88 ratings


More shows like Dysregulated Kids: Science-Backed Parenting Help for Behavior, Anxiety, ADHD and More

View all
The Wellness Mama Podcast by Katie Wells

The Wellness Mama Podcast

3,966 Listeners

ADHD Experts Podcast by ADDitude

ADHD Experts Podcast

1,333 Listeners

Full-Tilt Parenting: Strategies, Insights, and Connection for Parents Raising Neurodivergent Children by Debbie Reber

Full-Tilt Parenting: Strategies, Insights, and Connection for Parents Raising Neurodivergent Children

971 Listeners

AT Parenting Survival | Raising Kids with OCD & Anxiety by Natasha Daniels: Child Therapist, Child Anxiety and Child OCD Expert

AT Parenting Survival | Raising Kids with OCD & Anxiety

1,222 Listeners

Beautifully Complex by Penny Williams

Beautifully Complex

353 Listeners

Calm Parenting Podcast by Kirk Martin

Calm Parenting Podcast

1,464 Listeners

I Have ADHD Podcast by Kristen Carder

I Have ADHD Podcast

2,887 Listeners

The 1000 Hours Outside Podcast by That Sounds Fun Network

The 1000 Hours Outside Podcast

2,125 Listeners

Raising Good Humans by Dear Media, Aliza Pressman

Raising Good Humans

1,912 Listeners

THE AUTISM ADHD PODCAST by Holly Blanc Moses

THE AUTISM ADHD PODCAST

639 Listeners

Good Inside with Dr. Becky by Dr. Becky Kennedy

Good Inside with Dr. Becky

4,520 Listeners

The Child Psych Podcast by Institute of Child Psychology

The Child Psych Podcast

89 Listeners

Shining With ADHD by The Childhood Collective by The Childhood Collective

Shining With ADHD by The Childhood Collective

135 Listeners

The ADHD Kids Can Thrive Podcast by Kate Brownfield

The ADHD Kids Can Thrive Podcast

28 Listeners

The ADHD Parenting Podcast by The ADHD Parenting Podcast

The ADHD Parenting Podcast

351 Listeners