Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations podcast artwork

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Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations

Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings is a compassionate podcast for parents raising twice-exceptional (2e) children. Hosted by Dr. Karolina James, this show explores trauma-informed parenting, emotional regulation, and what it really means to support gifted, sensitive kids. Each episode offers insight, validation, and practical tools to help families move from survival to steadiness without shame or overwhelm. www.echonomorecoaching.org#twiceexceptional#2ekids#neurodivergentparenting#traumainformedparenting#giftedkids

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    Ep. 17: When Your Child Is Seen as “The Problem”

    When a child starts being labeled as difficult, defiant, ordisruptive, the impact goes far beyond behavior. In this episode, we talk aboutprotecting your child’s identity, reframing the narrative, and helping themknow they are not the problem.

  2. 19

    Ep. 16: IEPs, 504s, and Gifted Plans — In Plain English

    Confused by school supports and all the acronyms? This episodebreaks down IEPs, 504s, and gifted plans in simple, parent-friendly language soyou can better understand your options and advocate with confidence.

  3. 18

    Ep. 15: Navigating School With a Twice-Exceptional Child

    If school feels like the hardest part of parenting your 2e child,this episode is for you. We unpack why schools often misunderstandtwice-exceptional students and how to advocate with more clarity, strategy, andless burnout.

  4. 17

    Ep. 14: When Therapy Helps — and When It Doesn’t

    Not all therapy is the right fit for twice-exceptional kids. Inthis episode, we explore what actually helps, what red flags to watch for, andhow to know whether therapy is supporting your child or missing the mark.

  5. 16

    Ep. 13: Helping Your Child Name Feelings Without Overwhelming Them

    Why do emotional conversations sometimes make things worse? In thisepisode, we talk about how to help your child feel understood without addingpressure, and why connection and regulation need to come before deeperconversations.

  6. 15

    Episode 12: When Your 2e Child Follows the Wrong Kids

    Why would a sensitive, thoughtful child gravitate toward peers whoget them into trouble?In this episode, we talk about belonging, vulnerability, and thepowerful pull of peer acceptance for 2e kidsYou’ll learn:·       Whyconnection often outweighs behavior·       Howshame shuts down insight·       Howto guide social choices without damaging trustThis isn’t about bad character. It’s about a child learning wherethey fit—and how to help them choose wisely with confidence.

  7. 14

    Episode 11: Perfectionism, Shame, and Fear of Failure

    If your child avoids trying new things or melts down over mistakes,perfectionism may be at play.In this episode, we explore how gifted and 2e kids often tieidentity to performance—and how fear of failure becomes a protective strategy.You’ll learn:·       Whyperfectionism is fear wearing armor·       Howshame quietly fuels avoidance·       Languageshifts that build resilience instead of pressureYour child doesn’t need to be perfect to be worthy. Mistakes mustfeel safe before growth can happen.

  8. 13

    Episode 10: Emotional Outbursts at School

    Why does your child melt down at school—or only after they gethome?In this episode, we unpack why school environments are especiallydemanding for 2e kids. Constant regulation, masking, sensory input, andperformance expectations can exhaust sensitive nervous systems.You’ll learn:·       Whatschool meltdowns really signal·       Why“holding it together” all day leads to after-school collapse·       Howto support decompression without shamingBehavior is not defiance. It’s often accumulated stress looking forrelease.

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    Episode 9: Anxiety in Gifted and Twice-Exceptional Kids

    Why does your brilliant child worry so much?In this episode, we explore why anxiety is so common in gifted andtwice-exceptional (2e) kids. Advanced thinking paired with an immature nervoussystem can create big “what if” fears, perfectionism, and emotional overload.You’ll learn:·       Whyanxiety often looks like control, refusal, or physical complaints·       Howreassurance can sometimes make anxiety stronger·       Whatactually builds tolerance and resilience over timeAnxiety doesn’t mean something is wrong with your child. It meanstheir mind is powerful—and their nervous system needs support.

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    Episode 8: Helping a 2e Child Calm Their Body

    If you’ve ever said “Just calm down” and watched thingsescalate, this episode is for you.We’re talking about regulation, not obedience—why twice-exceptional (2e) kids need co-regulation before self-regulation, and how parents can support a nervoussystem that’s often overwhelmed.You’ll learn practical, parent-friendly tools that actuallyhelp—predictable routines, calmer transitions, body-based regulation, and creating safe spaces—along with realistic expectations for what progress reallylooks like.Your child isn’t broken.And you’re not failing.Regulation is a skill that takes time to learn.

  11. 10

    Episode 7: When Behavior Is Communication

    So many twice-exceptional (2e) kids are labeled for how they act instead of understood for what they’re experiencing.In this episode, we explore a simple but powerful reframe: behavior isn’t the problem—it’s the message.Meltdowns, shutdowns, and refusals aren’t manipulation; they’re signs of overload and nervous system stress.You’ll learn why logic and consequences don’t work when a child is dysregulated—and how responding with connection before correction helps children feel safe enough to learn and change.Your child’s behavior is telling a story.

  12. 9

    Episode 6: Grieving the Parenting Journey You Expected

    This episode is for parents who love their child deeply—and still feel a quiet sadness they rarely name.We’re talking about the kind of grief that shows up in schoolmeetings, birthday parties, and moments of comparison. Not because you wish your child were different—but because you didn’t expect parenting to require this much advocacy, vigilance, and emotional labor.This conversation makes space for both love and loss, andoffers gentle ways to honor that grief without guilt or self-judgment.If you needed permission to grieve, this episode offers it.

  13. 8

    Episode 5: The Myth of “If They’re Smart, They Should Be Fine”

    “They’re so smart—they’ll be fine.”Many parents of twice-exceptional (2e) kids hear this over andover. In this episode, we unpack why that belief is not only wrong, but harmful.Intelligence doesn’t protect children from anxiety, overwhelm, sensory stress, or executive functioning challenges. In fact, many gifted and 2e kids carry more internal pressure, not less.This conversation reframes what real support looks like—shifting the focus from performance and achievement to emotional safety, self-trust, and curiosity. Because your child doesn’t need to prove their worth. They need support that matches their wiring.

  14. 7

    Episode 4: Trauma, Stress, and the 2e Nervous System

     Many twice-exceptional children don’t just carry sensitivity—theycarry stress. In this tender episode, we explore how chronic stress and traumaaffect the 2e nervous system, why survival responses show up as behavior, andhow parents can support healing through safety, connection, and consistency.These aren’t character flaws. They’re protective responses—and they can softenwith the right support.www.echonomorecoaching.org

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    Episode 3: Big Feelings in Brilliant Kids

    If your child feels everything deeply—joy, disappointment,injustice, excitement—you’re not imagining it. In this episode, we exploreemotional intensity in gifted and twice-exceptional children, why theirfeelings run so big, and how parents can respond with validation instead ofshame. Big emotions aren’t flaws—they’re information.www.echonomorecoaching.org

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    Episode 2: Why Your Child Is So Smart—and Still Struggling

    “If my child is so smart… why is this so hard?”In this episode, we explore why intelligence doesn’t automaticallylead to emotional regulation, executive functioning, or ease in daily life. Ifyou’re raising a child who is bright, creative, and still struggling, you’renot imagining it—and you’re not failing.We gently unpack the neuroscience and emotional realities oftwice-exceptional (2e) children, and why being “smart” doesn’t mean things areeasy.www.echonomorecoaching.org

  17. 4

    Episode 1: What Does “Twice-Exceptional” Mean?

    An introduction to what it truly means to be twice-exceptional—and why giftedness and struggle often coexist.🔗 www.echonomorecoaching.org

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings is a compassionate podcast for parents raising twice-exceptional (2e) children. Hosted by Dr. Karolina James, this show explores trauma-informed parenting, emotional regulation, and what it really means to support gifted, sensitive kids. Each episode offers insight, validation, and practical tools to help families move from survival to steadiness without shame or overwhelm. www.echonomorecoaching.org#twiceexceptional#2ekids#neurodivergentparenting#traumainformedparenting#giftedkids

HOSTED BY

Dr. Karolina James

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations have?

Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations currently has 17 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations about?

Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings is a compassionate podcast for parents raising twice-exceptional (2e) children. Hosted by Dr. Karolina James, this show explores trauma-informed parenting, emotional regulation, and what it really means to support gifted, sensitive kids. Each episode offers...

How often does Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations release new episodes?

Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations has 17 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations?

You can listen to Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations?

Echo No More: Big Brains, Big Feelings: Trauma Informed Conversations is created and hosted by Dr. Karolina James.
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