Therapist Brain, Mom Heart

Suzanne Elizabeth Orlando, LCSW

Therapist Brain, Mom Heart is a raw, honest podcast where a Gen X therapist-mom shares the messy truth of raising neurodiverse kids, navigating school systems, and advocating without shame — so parents everywhere feel seen, supported, and never alone.

Episodes

  1. Mar 5

    You Don’t Have to Be Everyone’s Friend (And Neither Does Your Kid)

    As Gen X parents, we got a break from social drama when the school bell rang on Friday. Our kids don’t. Their social world follows them everywhere, through texts, posts, group chats, and social media, and it changes the way they experience trust, rejection, and connection. In this episode, I talk about how we can teach kids to build trust in friendships using the marble theory, how to recognize who really shows up for them, and why noticing the small moments of connection matters more than grand gestures. But just as important, and something nobody talks about, is how to teach kids how not to be friends with someone respectfully. Kids don’t need to be close with everyone, but they do need to learn how to set boundaries while still being kind and emotionally mature. We’ll talk about: • How kids actually learn to trust their friends • Why social media makes friendships harder than ever • The psychology behind belonging and rejection • How to teach kids to be thoughtful friends • How to step back from a friendship without being cruel • Why middle school doesn’t have to feel like social warfare Because friendship isn’t just about being nice, it’s about learning who deserves a place in your marble jar and how to coexist with the people who don’t. If you’re raising kids in today’s social world, or still healing from your own middle school friendships, this episode is for you.

    18 min
  2. Jan 23

    The Clique I Didn’t Sign Up For: Motherhood, Belonging, and Walking Away

    No one warns you about this part of motherhood. The mom cliques. The unspoken rules. The pressure to belong. The subtle — and not-so-subtle — relational aggression that shows up in carpools, group texts, birthday parties, and school functions. In this episode, I talk honestly about losing myself while trying to fit into a culture that never truly aligned with who I am — the drinking, the parties, the performances, the moments I laughed along while quietly disappearing inside. I share what it felt like to pull away and realize I wasn’t missed. The grief of recognizing relationships weren’t as real as I thought. The awkwardness of running into people afterward. The fake smiles. The social media gut punches. The silence when you finally share something that matters to you. We unpack the psychosocial dynamics of mom cliques, why relational aggression cuts so deeply in adulthood, how these patterns trickle down to our kids, and what it costs children when belonging is modeled as conditional. This isn’t about blame. And it’s not about villainizing other women. It’s about awareness. Boundaries. Authenticity. And choosing alignment over approval — even when it comes with loss. If you’ve ever felt invisible in a room full of parents… If you’ve ever tried to be someone else just to stay included… If you’ve ever realized the table you were sitting at was slowly stripping you of yourself… This episode is for you.

    18 min
  3. 12/22/2025

    Seen, Heard, Understood: How One Connection Can Change Everything for Your Child (and You)

    In this powerful, episode, Suzanne Orlando takes listeners on a deeply personal, raw, and hilarious journey into the realities of parenting and educating children with learning differences, behavioral struggles, and mental health challenges. Drawing on her dual perspectives as a parent and licensed therapist, Suzanne unpacks the frustrations, the systemic failures, and the heart-stopping moments that many parents and educators face. Through candid anecdotes, Suzanne illuminates how children absorb every glance, whisper, and interaction—and how crucial it is for adults to meet them with connection, validation, and understanding. Listeners will hear the honest truth about educators: how they navigate impossible systems, endless paperwork, and professional development trainings that often don’t equip them for the realities of today’s classrooms. Suzanne offers a window into their challenges, showing empathy for their work while highlighting the need for consistency and emotional intelligence in schools. The episode also dives deep into mental health support as a lifeline for both children and adults. Suzanne gives actionable tools for parents and educators to advocate, model healthy expression, and support children emotionally and socially. The conversation is peppered with humor, Gen-X cultural references, that make you nod, laugh, and maybe even cry. Listeners walk away feeling seen, empowered, and equipped with practical strategies to make meaningful change for their children, themselves, and the educators around them. This episode is essential for parents, teachers, and anyone invested in the well-being of kids navigating today’s complex educational and social landscape. Key Takeaways: How one adult can transform a child’s experience The ripple effect of validation and connection on social and emotional health Mental health support as a critical and consistent lifeline Real-world tools for parents to advocate without shame Ways teachers can navigate systemic pressures while fostering genuine relationships Understanding the lived experience of children who feel misunderstood Why anti-bullying programs fail when school culture doesn’t match the messageTrigger Warning: This episode includes discussion of panic attacks, anxiety, bullying, and emotional distress.

    17 min
  4. 12/13/2025

    The Other Side of the Table: IEPs, Advocacy, and the Panic No One Warns You About

    In this episode of Therapist Brain, Mom Heart, Suzanne Orlando, LCSW takes you to the other side of the IEP table—the side no amount of professional training can emotionally prepare you for. After 15 years as a school social worker on a Child Study Team in New Jersey, Suzanne thought she understood the IEP process inside and out. She wrote the reports. Ran the meetings. Interpreted the data. Knew the law, the timelines, and the scripts by heart. Then she became a parent sitting across the table. What she shares in this episode is the truth parents rarely hear out loud: knowing the system does not protect your nervous system when it’s your child being discussed. The meetings hit differently when the data belongs to your kid, the stakes feel existential, and your prefrontal cortex quietly exits the room. Suzanne walks listeners through: What it really feels like to sit in IEP meetings as a parent—even with insider knowledge Why parents often leave meetings confused, emotional, and doubting themselves How shame, fear, and childhood memories hijack the brain during these conversations Why behavior rooted in disability is so often misunderstood The moment she realized her son needed more—and how advocacy changed his life. She also offers a compassionate look at educators and case managers, who are often overwhelmed, under-supported, and stuck inside a system that prioritizes compliance over connection—while still holding firm to this truth: your child deserves to be understood, and you deserve to be heard. This episode is for any parent who has: Sat at an IEP table with their heart in their throat Felt intimidated by reports, scores, and jargon Been afraid of being labeled “that parent” Walked out of a meeting emotionally wrecked and unsure what just happened You are not overreacting.  You are not failing.  You are advocating—and that matters more than you know.

    21 min
  5. 12/12/2025

    The Panic Walk: Parenting Out Loud

    In this deeply honest and darkly funny episode, Suzanne Orlando, LCSW—licensed clinical social worker, psychotherapist, and former school social worker—steps out from behind her credentials and speaks from the place that feels far more vulnerable: motherhood. With nearly two decades of professional experience helping families navigate trauma, emotional regulation, and school struggles, Suzanne is the person everyone assumes has it all figured out. She doesn’t—and she’s here to say that out loud. Suzanne shares what it’s really like to parent two kids in the thick of adolescence while carrying the invisible weight of professional expectations, Gen X conditioning, and a nervous system that never quite powers down. She opens up about parenting a son with ADHD and emotional regulation challenges, raising a teenage daughter who is doing exactly what teens are wired to do, and the humbling reality that clinical knowledge does not protect you from losing your patience before 8 a.m. At the heart of this episode is Suzanne’s raw exploration of something many parents feel but rarely name: the trauma of being seen during your hardest parenting moments. From the dreaded school pickup walk to the fear of judgment, she unpacks how shame, hypervigilance, and nervous system overload show up in the body—explaining the neuroscience behind why your brain knows better, but your body panics anyway. This isn’t weakness or failure; it’s biology colliding with impossible expectations. This episode sets the tone for the podcast ahead—a space where the therapist brain and the mom brain can both speak freely. Together, we’ll talk about parenting without neat endings, the IEP process from both sides of the table, emotionally intense kids and teens, and what it means to survive parenting with honesty, humor, and compassion. If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed, judged, or quietly falling apart in your car, this episode is for you. You’re not broken. You’re not alone, and you’re doing better than you think.

    19 min

About

Therapist Brain, Mom Heart is a raw, honest podcast where a Gen X therapist-mom shares the messy truth of raising neurodiverse kids, navigating school systems, and advocating without shame — so parents everywhere feel seen, supported, and never alone.