Nobody warned me about this part.
They tell you about the diagnosis process. The medication trials. The IEP meetings. The meltdowns. They give you frameworks and strategies and podcasts and books.
Nobody tells you about the grief.
The quiet, relentless grief of parenting a child who is harder than you expected. Harder than other kids you know. Harder than anything the parenting books prepared you for. The grief of the version of parenthood you pictured — and the one you actually got.
I’m writing this for the parent who has never let themselves call it grief. Because you love your kid. Of course you love your kid. And because you love them, it feels wrong to mourn anything about this. Like naming the grief is a betrayal.
It isn’t. This is that post.

What the Grief Actually Feels Like
It doesn’t usually feel like crying. It feels like tired. A specific kind of tired that sleep doesn’t fix.
It feels like watching other families at a birthday party and noticing how easy it looks. Not perfect — just easy. Kids who follow basic instructions. Transitions that don’t detonate. Parents who look like they’re having fun instead of running triage.
It feels like the way you brace before every outing. Every school pickup. Every dinner. The low hum of “what’s it going to be today” that never fully goes quiet.
It feels like being angry at your kid in a moment and then hating yourself for it, because they didn’t choose this any more than you did.
It feels like telling a friend “it’s fine, we’re managing” because the real answer — the true, complete answer — is something you don’t know how to say out loud.
The Things Nobody Says Out Loud (But That Are True)
I’m going to say them. Because I think you might need to hear that someone else has thought them too.
“I love my child, and parenting them is genuinely hard in a way that affects my quality of life.” Both of these things are true. They are allowed to be true at the same time.
“Sometimes I fantasize about what it would be like to have a different kind of hard.” Not a different child. Just a different texture of difficult. One that responds to normal things. One that you could find in a book.
“I am exhausted in a way I can’t fully explain to people who haven’t lived it.” The specific exhaustion of constant hypervigilance. Of reading a room before you enter it. Of never fully relaxing because you don’t know when the next hard thing will start.
“I grieve the relationship I thought I would have with my child.” The easy Saturday mornings. The activities you imagined doing together. The version of them — and of you — that would have existed if their nervous system were wired differently.
These thoughts don’t make you a bad parent. They make you a human one. The parents who are doing the hardest jobs often feel the most guilt for feeling the hardest things.

This Is Grief. It Deserves to Be Called That.
We call it stress. We call it burnout. We say we’re “struggling” or “having a hard season.” What we don’t usually say is: I am grieving.
But that’s what it is. Grief for the parenting experience you expected. Grief for your child’s pain — because watching them struggle, watching the world not fit them, is its own kind of heartbreak. Grief for the version of yourself that existed before you were this tired. Grief for the things you’ve had to cancel, decline, give up, because the bandwidth just isn’t there.
Grief is allowed here. Grief doesn’t mean you’re not grateful. Grief doesn’t mean you’re not trying. Grief doesn’t mean you love your child any less. It means you’re being honest about the weight of what you’re carrying.
What Doesn’t Help (And What Actually Might)
What doesn’t help: being told it could be worse. Being told to focus on the good. Being told your child is a gift or a teacher or proof of your strength. Maybe all of that is true. It still doesn’t touch the grief. It just tells you to put it away.
What sometimes helps:
- Saying it out loud to one person who won’t flinch. A friend, a therapist, a partner, an online community of parents in the same situation. Grief needs a witness.
- Letting yourself have the feeling without trying to fix it. You don’t need to reframe it immediately. You don’t need to find the silver lining in the same breath. You’re allowed to just feel it for a minute.
- Separating your love for your child from your grief about the circumstances. These are not the same thing, and keeping them tangled makes both harder to hold.
- Finding out you’re not the only one. There is something quietly transforming about reading someone else’s exact thought and realizing you weren’t alone in it. That’s part of why I’m writing this.
- Remembering that your child’s nervous system is not your fault. You didn’t cause the ADHD. You didn’t cause the PDA profile. You didn’t cause the way their brain is wired. You showed up anyway — and you keep showing up — and that matters.
You Are Allowed to Grieve and Still Be a Good Parent
The grief and the love live in the same place. They always have.
The hardest parenting is done by people who grieve what their child is going through and keep showing up anyway. Who absorb the meltdowns and the school calls and the things that didn’t work and get back up and try something else.
You are one of those parents. The fact that it’s hard doesn’t mean you’re failing. The fact that you feel the weight of it doesn’t mean you’re not cut out for it. The fact that you grieve doesn’t mean you don’t love them.
It just means you’re human. And you’re doing one of the hardest things a human can do.
That’s enough. You’re enough.
If you’re in the thick of it, these might help too: What Is PDA Parenting? A Guide for ADHD Moms, I’ve Tried Every ADHD Solution — Here’s What I’m Trying Next, and Scripts for Every Hard Moment with a PDA Child.