Nov 26

International tolerance day: why active acceptance matters for neurodiverse children

Understanding tolerance in real family life

International Day for Tolerance, marked each year on 16 November, was created by UNESCO in 1995 to promote active acceptance, respect for difference and dialogue across communities. It also shines a light on the harm caused when intolerance shapes the spaces where people live and learn.

For many families, this feels both personal and public. Tolerance is not only something we talk about in society. It is something we practise every hour at home. It is the patience we build on difficult mornings. It is the understanding we reach for in moments that stretch us thin. And when a child is neurodiverse, including children with ADHD, that tolerance becomes part of the emotional glue that holds connection together.

A recent UK study found that around 1 in 20 children show ADHD-related traits, yet only 1.6% receive a formal diagnosis, meaning many families are navigating needs that others may not see or understand (NHS Digital, 2023). That gap matters, because when needs are unseen, tolerance often depends on guesswork, guilt and exhaustion.

When tolerance looks different for every family

Many caregivers picture family life one way, then discover it unfolds in another way. We all bring our own childhoods, values and expectations to the parenting table. But raising a child with ADHD or other neurodiverse needs often asks us to widen the gap between expectation and reality.

In some homes, tolerance looks like understanding that each person has a different social battery. One child may want to be out all weekend, running at full speed. Another feels settled only when they can stay home and keep things quiet. Holding space for both is a daily act of active acceptance which starts with tolerance.

In other homes, tolerance is the quiet voice inside a parent saying, “I know this feels scary for you,” even when nothing about leaving a child with a grandparent should feel frightening from the outside. It is the choice to look for the why beneath the behaviour. It is the decision to accept a child’s window of tolerance as real and valid, even when it does not match the plans we hoped for.

Small acts of acceptance create the biggest change

It is easy to link tolerance only with the big topics: faith, race, language, culture. Yet the small acts are what shift the dial for children with additional needs.
In classrooms, tolera
nce does not mean allowing behaviour that disrupts learning. It means recognising the sensory, emotional or cognitive load behind that behaviour and making small changes that support everyone. This might include:
turning the lights down slightly
offering a quieter seat
using predictable routines
giving time to doodle between tasks
creating gentle transitions
These are simple adjustments, not special treatment. They help a child stay regulated so they can learn, join in and feel part of their community.
This is tolerance in action through caring and understanding.

Moving beyond tolerance to shared understanding

Tolerance can sound like a surface-level idea, as if we are simply putting up with each other. But neurodiverse families need more than that. We need a deeper understanding of each child’s inner world, so we can see the strengths as well as the struggles. So we can value what each child brings to their family, school and wider community.

Active acceptance means shaping the environment rather than asking a child to carry the whole weight of change. It means planning ahead if last-minute shifts create overwhelm. It means replacing traditional punishments with consistent, predictable consequences that do not rely on shame but instead teach and support. It means knowing that flexibility is not giving in. It is giving space for a child to grow.

Celebrating difference in family life

At its heart, International Day for Tolerance is a reminder that diversity is something to celebrate. None of us would choose to eat the same meal every day. We do not all reach for the same chocolate in the box at Christmas. Our families are richer because of our differences, not in spite of them.

Active acceptance helps children feel safe in who they are. It helps caregivers feel less alone. And it helps schools and communities build spaces where neurodiverse children can thrive.

If tolerance is more than a surface level idea when it comes to neurodiversity in children, then we need to start asking the “why’s and the what’s”. Why our children react the way they do, why is this behaviour or reaction happening and then what can we do to change the environment or scaffold around them to help them thrive.

Currently many neurodiverse children have to operate in a neurotypical world but my hope is that in the future, they don’t have to tolerate this and instead, through acceptance and true tolerance. the world celebrates them and their unique differences and all the wonders it brings.

For more on helping support your neurodiverse child, why not try the taster of our twigged Toolkit for ADHD for free today.
gee eltringham

The founder

I started twigged out of both personal urgency and professional insight.
As The Toolkit Therapist and parent to a neurodivergent child, I experienced first hand the overwhelm and isolation families often face after a diagnosis.
Frustrated by the lack of practical, empathetic support, I set out to create what I couldn’t find: simple, evidence-based tools that make everyday life easier.
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