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Starting Small The Power of Tolerable Connection in Parenting

Two individuals sit on a yoga mat in a living room, practicing a seated meditation pose with legs crossed. A couch, pillows, dumbbells, and a water bottle are visible in the background.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

1. Blocked care is a stress response, not a character flaw. 

2. Chronic stress can shut down connection and compassion.

3. Small daily joys can help restore margin and reconnect your heart.

This blog is part of our “Rewiring Connection: The Science of Blocked Care” Training. If you would like to learn more about this training or any of other trainings. Click Here.

When Connection Feels Impossible

Parenting a child with a history of trauma, foster care, or adoption comes with unique challenges. You want to connect with your child, but sometimes it feels overwhelming, frustrating, or even painful. If your child constantly rejects your efforts to connect or their behaviors feel unpredictable, you may experience blocked care— when prolonged stress causes your nervous system to shift into protection mode, making it hard to sustain warm, loving feelings toward your child. 

Blocked care can leave both of you feeling stuck in patterns of avoidance, conflict, and disconnection—making connection seem impossible. 

Dr. Bruce Perry, a leading expert in trauma and child development, explains that children with early relational trauma often develop an “intimacy barrier”—where connection feels threatening rather than safe. Because of this, the very thing they need most—relationships—can also be what they fear the most. Perry writes: 

“Caregivers begin to feel like they are walking on eggshells. No other problem with maltreated children leads to more misunderstanding and placement disruption than problems with attachment and these ‘intimacy barrier’ sensitivities.”
Dr. Bruce Perry
The Intimacy Barrier, Neurosequential Network, 2018

So, what do we do when connection is difficult for both parent and child?  

We start small 

The truth is connection doesn’t have to be big to be meaningful. Instead of forcing deep, emotional moments, we focus on low-pressure, manageable ways to show up for our children. 

Understanding Tolerable Connection: What It Means in Parenting

Tolerable connection is the idea of starting small—choosing moments of connection that feel safe and manageable for both you and your child. Instead of forcing closeness or spending hours together, you can create connection in tiny, low-pressure ways that reduce the risk of rejection and overwhelm. 

The goal is simple: Break the cycle of disconnection by taking one small step. 

Before connection can happen, both parent and child must feel safe in their body and environment. Instead of trying to force immediate closeness, we can create tolerable connection—gentle, flexible interactions that don’t feel forced or overwhelming. 

The Benefits of Small Interactions: Building Trust and Safety

Small interactions play a crucial role in building trust and safety within parent-child relationships. Regular moments of connection, such as sharing a laugh, having a brief conversation, or simply being together, reinforce the bond between parent and child. These interactions help children feel secure and understood, laying the groundwork for emotional stability. 

By focusing on consistent, safe, and manageable moments, caregivers can slowly shift a child’s association between relationships and fear, helping them feel safer over time.  

Practical Strategies for Creating Tolerable Connections

When a child has experienced trauma, connection can feel threatening rather than safe. And when a parent has experienced repeated rejection or unpredictable responses, connection can feel emotionally risky for them, too. 

The key is to reduce the intensity of interactions, making them more tolerable for both parent and child.  

1. Connect from A Distance

Show your child you’re thinking about them, without the risk of face-to-face interaction. This minimizes the chance of rejection and keeps things light.

2. Focus on Proximity and Presence

Instead of forcing interaction, try parallel activities where each of you can engage at your own pace.

3. Regulate Before You Connect

Connection is difficult when either person is dysregulated. Before trying to bond, increase your own capacity and offer something similar to your child.

4. Keep It Brief and Predictable

Long interactions can feel overwhelming for everyone. Instead, create short, structured moments of connection with a clear beginning and end.

Start Small—And Watch the Ripples Grow

Even one degree of change can set off a ripple effect in your relationship. You don’t have to fix everything overnight. Just start with one tolerable step toward connection today.

💡 Want help brainstorming? Download our free Tolerable Connection Guide and start finding small, sustainable ways to reconnect with your child. 

What is Blocked Care?

Blocked care is a self-protective mechanism in the nervous system activated by excessive stress. This suppresses the higher brain functions needed for caregiving, causing your nervous system to develop a defensive stance toward your child. You are still providing good care to your child, but your heart seems to have left the relationship.” [1]Blocked care happens when your nervous system gets stuck in survival mode from chronic stress. Parenting kids with trauma histories or extra needs can mean constant unpredictability, big behaviors, and high emotional demands. Over time, your body tries to protect you by shutting down your ability to connect.

You’re not choosing this, and you’re not a bad person. Your brain is doing it for you without your permission.

When we get stuck in blocked care, we may still be meeting our child’s physical needs—meals, baths, bedtime routines—but the warmth and enjoyment of parenting fade away. Instead of feeling engaged, we just feel… done.

Rewiring Connection: Science of Blocked Care

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Connecting with Teens through Shared Journaling

LOOKING FOR MORE SUPPORT?

Explore our resource library for practical tools and guidance for families impacted by trauma. If you’re interested in diving deeper, check out our upcoming trainings. And if your family needs parent coaching, we’re here to help every step of the way.