Parenting Different - How to raise your neurodivergent kids to be their authentic, awesome selves.
"This is the book I wish I'd had when my daughter was diagnosed autistic. The book I wish I'd had when I was parenting any of my children as they faced challenges or didn't fit the "norm". I've written it for every parent who wants to encourage and affirm their children for who they are, not who they're meant to be" - Sarah Hayden.
Parenting can be hard. Parenting a neurodivergent child in a neurotypical world can be even harder. But know you are not alone - all the reassurance, guidance and support you need is right here. Sarah Hayden, social worker, mother and neurodivergent human herself, helps you unlearn everything you thought you needed to know about parenting neurodivergent kids.
Come along and meet Sarah Hayden, author of the awesome book "Parenting Different - How to raise your neurodivergent kids to be their authentic, awesome selves".
A chance to listen to her experiences and discuss her new book, which covers diagnosis, family life, siblings, schooling, puberty, therapy, food, peer relationships and so much more. Sarah's book provides new ideas and practical tools on how to support your child to be their best and most authentic self.
Equipped with both professional expertise and hard-earned learnings from her own parenting journey, she also shares the story of her daughter Chloe Hayden's autism and ADHD diagnoses and how that transformed her expectations and parenting.
A chance to listen to her experiences, and to ask questions in a safe and inclusive space. We are truly excited to be able to offer this opportunity, and thank Sarah so much for kindly offering to present this webinar for us.
Date: Tuesday 04 March 2025, 7.30pm - 8.30pm
Where: Online via Teams - so you can do it from the comfort of your own home!
Cost:
Parenting can be hard. Parenting a neurodivergent child in a neurotypical world can be even harder. But know you are not alone - all the reassurance, guidance and support you need is right here. Sarah Hayden, social worker, mother and neurodivergent human herself, helps you unlearn everything you thought you needed to know about parenting neurodivergent kids.
Come along and meet Sarah Hayden, author of the awesome book "Parenting Different - How to raise your neurodivergent kids to be their authentic, awesome selves".
A chance to listen to her experiences and discuss her new book, which covers diagnosis, family life, siblings, schooling, puberty, therapy, food, peer relationships and so much more. Sarah's book provides new ideas and practical tools on how to support your child to be their best and most authentic self.
Equipped with both professional expertise and hard-earned learnings from her own parenting journey, she also shares the story of her daughter Chloe Hayden's autism and ADHD diagnoses and how that transformed her expectations and parenting.
A chance to listen to her experiences, and to ask questions in a safe and inclusive space. We are truly excited to be able to offer this opportunity, and thank Sarah so much for kindly offering to present this webinar for us.
Date: Tuesday 04 March 2025, 7.30pm - 8.30pm
Where: Online via Teams - so you can do it from the comfort of your own home!
Cost:
- Financial members $20.00 (incl. GST), and
- Non-financial members: $59.95 (incl. GST and 1x financial membership to ADHD NZ for one person, for one year).
Introducing Sarah Hayden
Sarah Hayden is a qualified social worker and equine-assisted psychotherapist. Sarah's professional expertise focuses on autism, neurodivergence, adoption, fostering and complex family dynamics. She is also a mum to five amazing kids, including world-renowned actor, author and autism advocate Chloe Hayden. Sarah and her husband have also fostered 55 children and, as a dedicated volunteer, Sarah has counselled refugees and asylum seekers. She also provides emotional support and psychological first aid to disaster-affected people, particularly during bushfire seasons. Sarah is neurodivergent herself, having finally (and not surprisingly) been diagnosed with ADHD at the age of 48. |