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In episode 200 of Autism Mom Coach, Lisa Candera shares the biggest mistake many autism parents make: putting all their energy into preventing meltdowns instead of preparing for them.
She explains that meltdowns are a form of nervous system dysregulation, often driven by autism-related challenges like sensory overload, communication difficulties, low frustration tolerance, impulsivity, and executive functioning struggles. Because of this, meltdowns can still happen—even when you’ve done “all the right things.”
Lisa breaks down the difference between meltdowns and tantrums, emphasizing that meltdowns are not something kids can simply turn on and off.
She also shares a relatable example of a child melting down over a peanut butter substitution after a day filled with unexpected changes—highlighting how small moments are often the tipping point, not the root cause.
Her key shift: let go of the belief that meltdowns shouldn’t happen. Instead, focus on being prepared to handle them, using the mindset:
“I can handle this, even if I don’t want to.”
Timestamps:
00:00 – Episode 200 Intro
00:23 – Lisa’s Story
01:53 – Why Meltdowns Are Misread
03:23 – Meltdown vs. Tantrum
03:40 – Autism and Dysregulation
04:43 – Why Prevention Fails
05:35 – Peanut Butter Case Study
07:43 – The Real Mistake
08:52 – Shift to Preparation
09:54 – Mindset and Recovery
11:34 – Free Training Offer
12:20 – Wrap Up
By Lisa Candera4.9
6262 ratings
In episode 200 of Autism Mom Coach, Lisa Candera shares the biggest mistake many autism parents make: putting all their energy into preventing meltdowns instead of preparing for them.
She explains that meltdowns are a form of nervous system dysregulation, often driven by autism-related challenges like sensory overload, communication difficulties, low frustration tolerance, impulsivity, and executive functioning struggles. Because of this, meltdowns can still happen—even when you’ve done “all the right things.”
Lisa breaks down the difference between meltdowns and tantrums, emphasizing that meltdowns are not something kids can simply turn on and off.
She also shares a relatable example of a child melting down over a peanut butter substitution after a day filled with unexpected changes—highlighting how small moments are often the tipping point, not the root cause.
Her key shift: let go of the belief that meltdowns shouldn’t happen. Instead, focus on being prepared to handle them, using the mindset:
“I can handle this, even if I don’t want to.”
Timestamps:
00:00 – Episode 200 Intro
00:23 – Lisa’s Story
01:53 – Why Meltdowns Are Misread
03:23 – Meltdown vs. Tantrum
03:40 – Autism and Dysregulation
04:43 – Why Prevention Fails
05:35 – Peanut Butter Case Study
07:43 – The Real Mistake
08:52 – Shift to Preparation
09:54 – Mindset and Recovery
11:34 – Free Training Offer
12:20 – Wrap Up

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