Choosing a Dog for Your Neurodivergent Family: What Breed Lists Don't Tell You You chose the "right" breed for kids — gentle, patient, good with children — and now you have a dog who's overwhelmed by your household or running it in ways nobody anticipated. This episode replaces breed lists with five better questions drawn from the L.E.G.S. framework: What does this dog do when something unpredictable happens? How does he handle the specific touch, noise, and routine disruptions your neurodivergent household actually produces? These questions work for any dog, any background, any mix. Topics covered: choosing dogs for autism families, ADHD households and dogs, breed selection for neurodivergent children, L.E.G.S. Genetics pillar, dog temperament assessment, unpredictable household dynamics, sensory processing and dog selection, drive management in dogs 📍 If you're choosing a dog or already struggling with a mismatch: A Behavioral and Wellness Assessment at R+R Canine Consulting helps you understand what you're actually asking of a dog. Book here. They did everything right. They read the articles. They consulted the lists. They chose a breed described, reliably and across dozens of websites, as gentle, patient, good with children, easy to train. And now they're sitting with a dog who is either overwhelmed by their household, or running it in ways nobody anticipated — and they're not sure what went wrong. This is one of the most common conversations Jennyfer Tan has as a certified Family Dog Mediator. And her answer is almost always the same: nothing went wrong with the dog, and nothing went wrong with the family. What went wrong was the question they were trying to answer. "Which breed is good with kids?" is not a useful question when your child is neurodivergent. Breed lists measure tolerance of typical child behavior — predictable noise, recognizable movement patterns, touch that is clumsy but not intense or sustained, a child who can read a dog's stress signals and respond to them. That's a reasonable thing to measure for a lot of families. It's just not what neurodivergent households look like. In this episode of Under the Same Roof, Jennyfer replaces the breed list with something more honest: five questions, drawn from the L.E.G.S. model that describe your household as it actually is — not on a calm Tuesday in spring, but on the hard days. Because that's the household the dog is joining. What does this dog do when something unpredictable happens — and how fast does he recover? What is his relationship with physical contact, including the heavy, prolonged, or intense touch that a child with sensory differences might offer? How does he handle noise — not loud noise in general, but the specific profile your household produces? What does his unmet drive look like on the days when the walk doesn't happen, because your child had a hard morning and leaving wasn't possible? And what happens to him when the routine breaks — because in neurodivergent family life, it will? These questions don't have single right answers. Individual dogs always defy frameworks. But they are the right questions — the ones that describe what you are actually asking of a dog before you ask it of him. And they apply to any dog, any background, any mix, in a way that a temperament category never will. This episode also speaks directly to families who are already in it — who chose carefully and still landed somewhere hard — and what understanding the mismatch can do, even after the fact. Under the Same Roof is grounded in the L.E.G.S. model and Family Dog Mediation, both developed by Kim Brophey, and in the kind of lived experience that no certification can replace. It's for families navigating autism, ADHD, sensory processing differences, and reactive or anxious dogs in the real world. Understanding before strategies. Always.