The Dumb Dads Finally Meet The Brainy Moms

For our 200th episode, we had to celebrate in a BIG way. In this kind of funny, completely fun, and highly engaging conversation, The Brainy Moms interview The Dumb Dads! Dr. Amy and Sandy bring on comedians Evan Berger and Kevin Laferriere to talk about what modern fatherhood actually looks like when the cameras are off and the kids are melting down.

We laugh about the daily stuff that tests your patience and your parenting skills: motion-activated toys that will not stop talking, slime that somehow becomes part of your carpet forever, and the special frustration of kids’ gadgets that need a mystery battery plus a tiny screwdriver. The stories are funny because they’re painfully real and they lead to something useful: how to notice when you’re overloaded, own the mistake, and do the repair with your child.

We also talk about social media algorithms, parenting comparison, and how to protect your mindset while still finding community. We share the “detective” framework we use with families, including tired, hungry, sick, or stressed checks, plus how unmet needs and weak cognitive skills like attention, auditory processing, and memory can drive behavior.

Subscribe for more practical parenting advice with a brain-based lens, share this with a mom or dad who needs a laugh today, and leave a review to help other families find us. What’s the one parenting moment you can finally laugh about now?

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ADHD-Friendly Organization Tips | Dr. Kelly Cagle

Need some help getting your ADHD child organized? (Or yourself?) Chaos isn’t a character flaw, and “just get organized” isn’t a plan for ADHD kids and adults. On this episode of The Brainy Moms podcast, Dr. Amy and Sandy chat with Dr. Kelly Cagle to talk about what actually makes home life simpler when ADHD and other neurodivergent needs are in the mix. Dr. Kelly is a parenting educator, ADHD researcher, host of the Parenting IQ podcast, and homeschool mom of three so she knows a little about this topic! If you’ve ever stared at a pile of papers, a closet full of clothes you don’t even like, or a kitchen missing every spoon, you’ll hear yourself in this conversation. 

We dig into why simplicity matters for the ADHD brain: fewer options means fewer distractions, less decision fatigue, and fewer spirals that steal your attention before the day even starts. Dr. Kelly shares concrete, realistic systems that reduce daily friction, including a “technology basket” approach for chargers and devices, plus ways to set non-negotiables in shared spaces without turning your home into a drill camp. We also talk sensory processing and why clothing comfort can make or break focus, sleep, and emotional regulation, along with how curiosity can replace power struggles when a child insists on the same outfit again and again. 

If you’re parenting in a mixed neurotype home, we cover how to support without shaming, including better language than “pay attention” and how to offer practical strategies in the moment. You’ll also hear how to chunk tasks for overwhelmed teens, how to balance messy creative zones with calmer community spaces, and why movement and sleep can be the quiet backbone of better executive function.

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Rethinking Organization for Disorganized Kids | Dr. Rochelle Matthews Somerville

Does your home runs on constant reminders, never-ending rescuing, and last-minute scrambling for missing shoes, backpacks, and sporting equipment? Then this episode is for you! Dr. Amy and Sandy sit down with Dr. Rochelle Matthews-Somerville, a special needs education consultant, homeschool advocate, and mom of six, to make organization feel practical again for real families raising neurodivergent kids with ADHD, autism, learning differences, and big emotions.

We dig into why saying “they have no executive functioning skills” misses the point, and how supports like labels, visuals, family calendars, and simple routines help kids build planning skills and follow-through over time. Dr. Rochelle shares a powerful communication reset: stop asking for “clean” and get specific. Her zone method turns room cleanup into clear, doable steps and helps kids experience success instead of overwhelm. We also talk about why a parent’s favorite system might not fit their neurodivergent child’s brain, and how to keep testing strategies until you find the match.

Then we zoom out to the middle school handoff when parents stop being the external brain and kids suddenly carry a full load of schoolwork, chores, and activities. We cover writing everything down to expose overload, using framed choices to reduce power struggles, and teaching consequences as cause-and-effect rather than punishment. Finally, we address emotional regulation at the learning table: when frustration melts the day down, it may be time to adjust goals and rebuild skills before pushing academics.

Subscribe, share this with a homeschool parent who needs hope, and leave a review so more families can find these executive functioning and homeschool organization strategies. What’s the one daily routine you want to make easier this week?

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