Jan 28

Is there anything lonelier than parenting when you are doing it differently?

The big statement (and the flinch that comes with it)

I can already feel some readers bristling.

So here it is anyway.

Is there anything lonelier than parenting, especially when you are doing it differently?

Yes, of course there is.

There are people who do not see another human all week. That is real and painful loneliness.

But there is another kind of loneliness that is harder to explain if you have not lived it.

It is the loneliness of being surrounded by people. Of showing up. Of doing school runs, birthday parties, appointments. And still feeling utterly alone.

That loneliness often shows up in families parenting children with SEND, including ADHD.

The loneliness that comes with guilt

This kind of loneliness comes with a heavy side order of guilt.

Because we are meant to feel grateful. We do feel grateful .

We are meant to feel lucky and we are lucky.

We are meant to love every minute... but here’s the issue: not every moment is enjoyable.
And when we do not love every moment or when we don’t feel grateful, we feel like something is wrong with us.

There is also the quiet sting of being misunderstood.

Of having your reality minimised.

Of being told, directly or indirectly, that you are overreacting or doing it wrong.

Most parents learn to present the version of themselves that feels socially acceptable.
Especially when judgement can come from:
our own parents
in-laws
friends
wider family
When a child has SEND, that judgement can even creep into the relationship between partners. The stress levels are higher, coping is challenging, energy and resource are scarce …. So what gets neglected … the relationship.

Couples with a child with ADHD are almost twice as likely to divorce before their child turned 8 years old,
being in a relationship can be lonely too!
Research shows that parents of children with disabilities experience significantly higher levels of stress, which is linked to increased relationship strain compared to parents of non-disabled children.

This is not about blaming children. It is about naming systems that do not support families well enough.

This is not about blaming children

It is about blaming systems.

And a society that sells a very tidy version of what parenting is meant to look like.

We are taught that if we are “grateful and blessed” to have children, then enjoyment should naturally follow.

That love should cancel out difficulty.

But show me a single person who enjoys every part of their life or job.

Parenting is a privilege.

It is also relentless, emotional work.

Loneliness does not come from missing a spontaneous trip to the pub.

It comes from feeling that you can only ever whisper the hard parts, usually behind the closed door of a therapy room.

Even then, most of us start with the same sentence.
“I love my children and I feel lucky to have them… but.”

I have done it too.

When loneliness sits right next to joy.

The hardest thing to explain is that loneliness can exist alongside joy.

You can feel lonely while celebrating that your child:
went into school without tears
came home saying they had a good day
managed something that once felt impossible

You can feel lonely in the middle of a hug.

I have sat in the car after school drop-off sobbing because my child could not face the day.

I have also sat in the same car crying because they walked through the school gates for a whole week, not because they were masking, but because the right support was finally in place and that they felt safe.

Both moments were real.

Both moments were lonely.

Loneliness is not about being alone

 
Loneliness is not about how many people are around you.

It is about whether all of you is allowed to exist and whether you are understood.
The good.
The hard.
The messy bits we are told to hide.

Loneliness is feeling misunderstood.

Loneliness is fear of not being accepted as you are or as your child is.

Loneliness is being made to feel wrong for having very human feelings.

Loneliness is loving your child so much and wanting to do what is right by them but feeling you are carrying it alone, or with just your partner.

If we were more honest about parenting, especially parenting children with SEND, fewer parents would feel this alone.

A quieter truth worth saying out loud

Loneliness Awareness Week matters because loneliness is not always obvious.

Sometimes it looks like competence.

Sometimes it looks like coping.

If this article sounds like your life, you are not failing.

You are responding to a reality that is harder than most people realise.

Support matters.

Understanding matters.

And being allowed to say “this is hard” without apology matters.
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.
Read more of the twigged blog and follow twigged on socials.