The Empowered Parent with Dana Baltutis

Dana Baltutis

Welcome to The Empowered Parent Podcast. This podcast is a space for parents to learn, reflect, and grow.Each week, we explore topics that help parents understand themselves and their children more deeply - from communication and connection, to supporting neurodivergent development at home and in the community. We’ve had wonderful conversations with experts, parents, and professionals - including speakers from the Neurodivergence Wellbeing Conference, and a special series following one mum’s journey in unschooling her child. Every episode is here to inspire curiosity, compassion, and confidence in your parenting journey. Don’t forget to follow along, share your reflections, and join the conversation.You can connect with me at danabaltutis.com or mytherapyhouse.com.au. Let’s celebrate neurodivergence.Let’s celebrate belonging.

  1. 15 hrs ago

    ALL4ONE: A FATHER'S STORY: Episode 6: From Carer To Founder

    Send us Fan Mail Brad’s doing the things many families are told to stop hoping for: he’s building a life with purpose, friendships, and a sense of belonging, not just “being cared for”. Graham joins us for a heartfelt final check-in on how Brad is travelling now, why small routines like journalling matter, and how volunteering at a school canteen can become real confidence, dignity, and community connection. We also talk honestly about what changes for parents when the caring load eases. Graham and Tracy are learning to plan for themselves again while still staying connected through strong systems: written shift reports, digital documentation, and photo updates that create real transparency. That practical approach feeds straight into their next chapter as founders of All For One Ability Services, moving carefully, building foundations, and designing supports that start in the community and can grow towards day programs and short term accommodation when a person chooses it. Then we get into the big topic families are living with every day: the NDIS. Graham shares why the NDIS has been crucial for Brad’s choice and control, identity, and safe supported living, and why plan reviews can trigger real anxiety when funding uncertainty puts families back on the hook. We also explore why therapy should be ongoing maintenance for adults, what better looks like for the disability support workforce, and the “weather” we bring into a shift, because feelings often land before words. If you know a parent or carer who needs hope grounded in real life, share this conversation. Subscribe to the Empowered Parent Podcast, leave a review, and tell us: what would you change to make disability support in Australia safer and more human? admin@all4oneabilityservices.com.au danabaltutis.com,  mytherapyhouse.com.au, https://mytherapyhouse.com.au/your-childs-therapy-journey/ https://www.danabaltutis.com/services

    52 min
  2. 17 June

    ALL4ONE: A FATHER'S STORY: Episode 5: You Can Love Deeply Without Burning Out

    Send us Fan Mail Watching your child step into independence can be the proudest moment and the most unsettling one. Graham Clark joins us to speak honestly about what happened when his son Bradley, an autistic young adult, moved into his own home and Graham’s full-time carer role began to change. What do you do when the routines that once held you together disappear, and the question “Who am I now?” will not go away?  We talk about carer identity and why so many parents lose themselves in survival mode. Graham shares what burnout looked like for him, how carrying every decision became a “burden”, and why building a team around your loved one can protect your mental health. He also opens up about the darker stretch of uncertainty and grief that followed the transition, the isolation of having no support network for himself, and receiving a PTSD diagnosis in 2023. Therapy becomes a turning point, not as a quick fix but as the steady maintenance that helps him notice early warning signs and respond with care.  You will also hear practical guidance on disability support in Australia and the NDIS space: finding the right support workers, relying on word of mouth, letting an established team mentor new staff, and taking safety seriously with checks and qualifications like Certificate III and NDIS screening. We finish with a grounded reminder that asking for help can start with one call to a helpline, your GP, or services like Beyond Blue and Carer Gateway. If this resonates, subscribe to the Empowered Parent podcast, share the episode with a fellow carer, and leave a review so more families can find it. danabaltutis.com,  mytherapyhouse.com.au, https://mytherapyhouse.com.au/your-childs-therapy-journey/ https://www.danabaltutis.com/services

    50 min
  3. 10 June

    ALL4ONE: A FATHER'S STORY: Episode 4: From Safety To Independence Through Supported Living

    Send us Fan Mail Buying a home for your child sounds like a practical decision until you realise it also forces a whole new identity for everyone involved. We sit down with Graham to unpack how his family moved from assuming Bradley would live with them forever to building a supported home where he can grow into adulthood with safety, dignity, and choice. Along the way, we talk about OCD, tics, anxiety, and what it looks like when a young person’s needs are expressed through behaviour rather than neat explanations.  A big thread through our chat is the power of curiosity. Graham shares how a developmental educator helped him notice patterns, understand what he was seeing, and stop defaulting to “No, that’s not possible.” We explore what a developmental educator actually does in the home, why predictable routines and tailored resources matter, and how the right professionals can take pressure off parents while still keeping the child’s voice at the centre.  We also get very real about the NDIS logistics: comparing living options, deciding against a shared model that didn’t suit Bradley, then dealing with rosters, staffing, funding changes, medication processes, and the learning curve of managing a team. Graham speaks honestly about the emotional load, survival mode, and later recognising PTSD, plus the surprising signs of adulthood when Bradley starts setting boundaries and claiming his space. If you’re planning future living options and independent living supports, this conversation will give you language, ideas, and hope. Subscribe, share this with another parent, and leave a review so more families can find it. danabaltutis.com,  mytherapyhouse.com.au, https://mytherapyhouse.com.au/your-childs-therapy-journey/ https://www.danabaltutis.com/services

    45 min
  4. 3 June

    ALL4ONE: A FATHER'S STORY: Episode 3: School Was The Anchor And Then It Ended

    Send us Fan Mail School can feel like it’s “for the kids”, but for many families it’s also the first place a parent stops feeling invisible. I sit down with Graham to keep following Bradley’s journey from childhood into adulthood, starting with the school years and the surprising way a school community can become a carer’s support system. We talk about the power of a simple hello at drop-off, how volunteering helped Graham feel he belonged, and why identity shifts for both child and parent when school becomes a stable routine.  Then things change fast. When Bradley starts saying “no school”, the family faces the messy reality of transitioning out of education without a gentle runway. Graham shares what the loss of predictability did to everyone’s anxiety, why time and permanency are so hard to navigate, and how stress showed up through OCD patterns and tics. We also unpack a six month caravan “gap year” that began with careful planning and ended with tough decisions, including flying home to restore safety and regulation. It’s an honest reminder that travel with neurodivergent young people can be brilliant, but only when the structure matches their needs.  From there, we get practical about rebuilding. We explore how the right support coordinator can simplify the NDIS, why bringing support workers into your home is such a big emotional step, and how independence is taught through logical sequencing, visuals, and daily living skills. Cooking becomes a gateway to shopping, schedules become a tool for calm, and we challenge the way NDIS forms can accidentally overstate ability when parents are silently scaffolding every task.  If you’re supporting an autistic teen or young adult through big transitions, this conversation will leave you with real strategies and a lot of hope. Subscribe, share it with a parent who needs community, and leave a review so more families can find these stories. What part of the school-to-adulthood shift are you in right now? danabaltutis.com,  mytherapyhouse.com.au, https://mytherapyhouse.com.au/your-childs-therapy-journey/ https://www.danabaltutis.com/services

    1hr 2min
  5. 27 May

    ALL4ONE: A FATHER'S STORY: Episode 2: The Survival Years Of Neurodivergent Parenting

    Send us Fan Mail Some parenting seasons are loud, messy, and relentless and you don’t even realise you’re surviving until you finally stop to breathe. We pick up Graham's story as a full-time carer for his non-verbal, neurodivergent son Bradley, stepping into the years filled with routines, appointments, behaviour storms, paperwork, and the constant job of advocating through education and health systems. Graham explains why their days had to run like a military operation, and how predictability became the foundation for safety. We also go to the place many families dread: public spaces. Supermarkets bring sensory overload, triggers you can’t always predict, and the sting of being judged. We talk honestly about staring, unhelpful comments, and what real community inclusion looks like when a child is struggling. We then shift to what happens inside the home when all energy goes into care. Graham shares how being a strong “team” can still strain a marriage, why communication matters, and how therapy and mental health support can help parents who feel depleted or alone. You’ll also hear the most practical advice in the whole conversation: find five minutes for yourself, keep it simple, and reframe a “bad day” as a challenging event inside a bigger day. We also mention helplines like Parentline and Beyond Blue for anyone who needs a voice on the other end of the phone. If this connects with you, subscribe, share it with another parent or carer, and leave a review so more Australian families can find support when they need it most. If you need support or help please reach out to parenting help lines. You can find information here https://raisingchildren.net.au/grown-ups/services-support/about-services-support/helplines#sa-parent-helplines-nav-title https://www.beyondblue.org.au/get-support/urgent-help danabaltutis.com,  mytherapyhouse.com.au, https://mytherapyhouse.com.au/your-childs-therapy-journey/ https://www.danabaltutis.com/services

    42 min
  6. 21 May

    ALL4ONE: A FATHER'S STORY: Episode 1: The Beginning

    Send us Fan Mail A child can be sleeping through the night, walking on time, and lighting up your world with cheeky joy, and you can still end up facing a diagnosis that changes everything. Graham Clark joins us to start a special six-week series, sharing what it’s been like to parent Bradley, a now mid-twenties neurodivergent young man, from the earliest signs right through to supported independence. We talk about the moments that first raised questions, like speech developing into substituted sounds, and sensory differences around food textures and loud environments. Graham takes us back to the uncertainty of assessments and the long wait for an autism diagnosis, and he’s candid about the grief that followed, the fear of the unknown, and the flood of “what if” questions that so many parents carry in silence. We also reflect on how much has changed in Australia, with stronger neurodiversity awareness, neuro-affirming perspectives, and NDIS supports that can make real independence possible. Most importantly, Graham shares what helped his family move forward: teamwork with his wife Tracy, learning from therapists without getting overwhelmed, and building Bradley’s skills through practical steps, visual supports, and a steady belief in what’s possible. We explore what “success” can mean when you reframe it as safety, happiness, community contribution, and belonging, and why dads need more spaces to talk to other dads without judgement. If you’re parenting a child with autism or supporting neurodivergent adulthood, you’ll walk away with hope that feels grounded, not wishful. Subscribe to the Empowered Parent Podcast, share this series with someone who needs it, and leave us a review so more families can find these stories. What’s one question you wish you could ask a parent who’s further down the track? danabaltutis.com,  mytherapyhouse.com.au, https://mytherapyhouse.com.au/your-childs-therapy-journey/ https://www.danabaltutis.com/services

    36 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Welcome to The Empowered Parent Podcast. This podcast is a space for parents to learn, reflect, and grow.Each week, we explore topics that help parents understand themselves and their children more deeply - from communication and connection, to supporting neurodivergent development at home and in the community. We’ve had wonderful conversations with experts, parents, and professionals - including speakers from the Neurodivergence Wellbeing Conference, and a special series following one mum’s journey in unschooling her child. Every episode is here to inspire curiosity, compassion, and confidence in your parenting journey. Don’t forget to follow along, share your reflections, and join the conversation.You can connect with me at danabaltutis.com or mytherapyhouse.com.au. Let’s celebrate neurodivergence.Let’s celebrate belonging.

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