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Decision Pause

Decision Pause

Written by: Dr. Leslie Jensen-Inman
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About this listen

The Decision Pause is a podcast about making real decisions under real constraints — especially when raising neurodivergent children. Parents of neurodivergent kids make hundreds of high-stakes decisions every day: Do we push or protect? Do we keep going or change course again? Is this helping — or costing too much? This podcast isn’t about giving advice or telling you what the “right” choice is. It’s about slowing urgency, naming hidden costs, and making space for decisions that don’t have easy answers. Each episode explores the realities of decision fatigue, capacity, regret, pressure, and change — with honesty, nuance, and deep respect for the complexity of neurodivergent family life. If you’re carrying the mental load, second-guessing yourself, or trying to decide without burning out, this space is for you. The Decision Pause — for real decisions made under real constraints.Copyright 2026 Dr. Leslie Jensen-Inman Hygiene & Healthy Living Parenting Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Relationships
Episodes
  • Push or Protect — and Why That’s the Wrong Question
    Feb 3 2026
    Episode Description

    Parents of neurodivergent children are often forced into an impossible decision frame: push or protect.

    In this episode of Decision Pause, Dr. Leslie Jensen-Inman explores why this binary causes so much stress—and why the problem isn’t your ability to decide, but the question itself.

    We talk about fluctuating capacity, invisible data, recovery costs, and why responsiveness is not the same as inconsistency. This episode offers a gentler way to think about decisions that honors real life, real constraints, and real nervous systems.

    What You’ll Hear in This Episode
    1. Why “push or protect” is a false and harmful binary
    2. How fluctuating capacity makes prediction impossible
    3. The hidden emotional weight many parents carry when they choose to protect
    4. Why changing your mind isn’t failure—it’s responsiveness
    5. The invisible data parents of neurodivergent children are constantly tracking
    6. A gentler reframe for making decisions without guilt or judgment

    A Gentler Reframe

    Instead of asking “Should I push or protect?”, consider asking:

    1. What does capacity look like right now?
    2. What is the recovery cost of this decision?
    3. What am I protecting—and what am I supporting—with this choice?
    4. What would make this moment gentler?

    Sometimes what you’re protecting is your child’s nervous system.

    Sometimes it’s trust, safety, or your relationship.

    Sometimes it’s your own capacity.

    Those are not small things.

    Key Takeaway

    You are not failing when you refuse a false choice.

    You are allowed to make decisions that don’t fit neatly into someone else’s framework.

    And you’re allowed to decide differently at different times—without having to justify that change.

    Coming Up Next

    In the next episode, we’ll talk about the cost that doesn’t show up until later:

    The meltdown after the activity, the next-day exhaustion, and the impacts that don’t fit neatly into reports or data.

    Thank you for being here.

    This has been Decision Pause—and we’ll pause again next time.

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    7 mins
  • Why Decisions Feel So Heavy
    Jan 27 2026
    Why Decisions Feel So Heavy

    Episode Description

    Decisions don’t feel heavy because you’re indecisive, anxious, or doing something wrong.

    They feel heavy because of what they’re carrying.

    In this episode of Decision Pause, we talk about why decision-making feels especially hard when you’re raising a neurodivergent child—and why most advice about “just deciding” misses the point entirely.

    This conversation is about naming the real weight behind everyday choices, understanding why hesitation can be a form of awareness, and beginning to separate capacity from character.

    If you’ve ever replayed a decision late at night, wondered if changing course says something about you, or felt exhausted by the constant mental load of choosing—this episode is for you.

    In This Episode, We Explore
    1. Why decision-making isn’t usually a skill problem for parents of neurodivergent children
    2. The hidden costs every decision is carrying—nervous systems, trust, recovery time, and stability
    3. How constant vigilance keeps your decision-making system from ever fully resting
    4. Why the fear of being “wrong” makes hesitation completely reasonable
    5. The difference between deciding under ease vs. deciding under pressure
    6. A gentle reframe that can change how you relate to hard decisions

    Key Takeaways
    1. Decisions feel heavy because the context is heavy—not because you are failing
    2. Hesitation can be a sign of awareness, not weakness
    3. Second-guessing often comes from deciding under exhaustion and uncertainty
    4. You deserve support that reduces harm, not advice that adds pressure

    A Question to Sit With

    Instead of asking “What’s wrong with me?”, try asking:

    “What is this decision asking me to carry?”

    That single question can soften the entire process.

    What’s Next

    In the next episode, we’ll talk about one of the most painful decision binaries parents face:

    Push or protect—and why that framing often makes decisions harder instead of clearer.

    Thank you for listening to Decision Pause.

    If decisions feel heavy today, you’re not alone in that.

    We’ll talk again soon.

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    6 mins
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