Addiction And The Long Game With Mom Of A Teen With Pathological Demand Avoidance | Ep. 153 episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 10, 2026 · 45 MIN

Addiction And The Long Game With Mom Of A Teen With Pathological Demand Avoidance | Ep. 153

from At Peace Parents Podcast

Ivy is a mom celebrating her almost 17-year-old son's GED . The years before this moment included school refusal, police contact, CPS involvement, inpatient treatment, and substance use. Things are calmer now, but the household is still walking on eggshells and Ivy is still trying to figure out what comes next.In this episode, Casey and Ivy talk through what addiction looks like through a nervous system and PDA lens, why the home Ivy has created is doing more than it feels like it is, and what the timeline for recovery actually looks like for a teen who has spent years in cumulative activation.This is one of the few episodes that goes into older teen territory, including the hard questions parents in this situation are living with but rarely see addressed.Key Takeaways Understanding Addiction Through a Nervous System Lens | 00:16:08 Casey explains how she understands addiction in the context of PDA: as a consistent attempt to get out of a physically uncomfortable state of nervous system activation. She describes the addictive swing between mobilization and immobilization and how substances, risky friendships, and dangerous behavior can all function as attempts to regulate a nervous system that has no other reliable pathway to felt safety. She references the work of Jan Winhall, who uses polyvagal theory to understand addiction through a felt sense lens. Why the Home Ivy Has Built Is Working | 00:20:39 Ivy describes her son returning home more frequently, self-grounding after hard nights, and spending time in his room in silence rather than staying away. Casey reframes this as evidence that Ivy has created an alternative to the addictive swing: a place where he can actually return to regulation. She names the trade-off clearly. The cost to Ivy is high. The benefit to her son is real, even when it does not feel like progress. The Timeline for Recovery in Older Teens | 00:34:18 Casey walks through why recovery takes longer for teens who have spent years in cumulative nervous system activation. She describes the process of building a window of tolerance from near zero, and explains why attempting therapy, job applications, or direct conversations before that window is established tends to close it back down. She suggests focusing the next six months to a year on deepening felt safety and waiting for him to initiate, rather than trying to move him forward before his nervous system is ready. What Useful Support Actually Looks Like at This Stage | 00:36:22 Casey describes what therapeutic connection can look like for a PDA teen who will not engage with formal therapy: a barista who does not judge him, someone who plays the same video game, a person on Reddit who sees him as he is. She makes the case that the modality matters less than the quality of the relationship, and that paradoxically, the only moment of real influence comes when a parent has fully released the goal of changing the child's behavior. Counting the Wins When Everything Still Feels Hard | 00:40:47 Toward the end of the conversation, Ivy names what is actually happening on this trip: her son is choosing to be with the family, getting in the ocean, teaching himself to fish on the local shore. Casey reflects that from that place of connection, the long-term trajectory can shift. The episode closes with Casey acknowledging how much Ivy has carried and naming the progress that is already there, even when it is hard to see.Relevant Resources Burnout — Free class with context for understanding the cumulative nervous system activation Casey describes in this episodeUnderstanding PDA — Free class with deeper background on the nervous system disability framework and what drives demand avoidanceParadigm Shift Program — Our signature program where the low-demand approach Ivy is practicing is taught in full

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Mar 10, 2026

NOW PLAYING

Addiction And The Long Game With Mom Of A Teen With Pathological Demand Avoidance | Ep. 153

0:00 45:29

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

French Your Way Jessica: Native French teacher founder of French Your Way Boost your French listening skills and test your comprehension with this one of a kind series of podcasts. Get the chance to listen to a real conversation between native speakers talking at normal speed AND customise your learning experience through carefully designed sets of questions (2 levels of difficulty) available for download at www.frenchvoicespodcast.com. All interviews also come with the transcript. French teacher Jessica interviews native speakers of French from around the world who share a bit of their life and passion. Where else would you meet in one same place a French yoga teacher based in Melbourne, a soap manufacturer from Provence, or a couple cycling around the world? That Hoarder: Overcome Compulsive Hoarding That Hoarder Hoarding disorder is stigmatised and people who hoard feel vast amounts of shame. This podcast began life as an audio diary, an anonymous outlet for somebody with this weird condition. That Hoarder speaks about her experiences living with compulsive hoarding, she interviews therapists, academics, researchers, children of hoarders, professional organisers and influencers, and she shares insight and tips for others with the problem. Listened to by people who hoard as well as those who love them and those who work with them, Overcome Compulsive Hoarding with That Hoarder aims to shatter the stigma, share the truth and speak openly and honestly to improve lives. The Small Business Startup School – Business Notes | Financial Literacy | Retail Psychology – For Professionals & Entrepreneurs The Small Business Startup School Inc. Starting or buying a small business? While personal circumstances may vary, business patterns remain timeless. On The Small Business Startup School, we explore strategies, insights, and practical solutions to help entrepreneurs confidently navigate their journey.Hosted by Ola Williams—a retail entrepreneur, fintech founder, and financial coach with over two decades of experience—this podcast marries financial awareness and retail psychology with optimism to deliver actionable takeaways.Join us to learn, grow, and connect as we uncover the keys to business success.Let’s continue to learn together and be encouraged to keep on connecting! DIOSA. Carolina Sanper This podcast is a sacred space created by Carolina Sanper where you connect with your inner wisdom and embody your magnetic feminine power.It is the realization that the mystical realm is where you plant the seeds of your desired reality.It is a portal to your true essence: awareness, presence, and receiving with ease. Welcome home, DIOSA. 🖤

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of At Peace Parents Podcast?

This episode is 45 minutes long.

When was this At Peace Parents Podcast episode published?

This episode was published on March 10, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Ivy is a mom celebrating her almost 17-year-old son's GED . The years before this moment included school refusal, police contact, CPS involvement, inpatient treatment, and substance use. Things are calmer now, but the household is still walking on...

Can I download this At Peace Parents Podcast episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!