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July 28, 2025 by BHP Leave a Comment

Parental presence in a digital age: lessons from Netflix’s ‘Adolescence’ and the NVR approach

The new Netflix series Adolescence has sparked conversation for its raw portrayal of teenage life and family tension. As an NVR practitioner for the past nine years, I’ve come to realise that I view my world now through an NVR lens.

As I was watching the show I was struck by its affirmation of a key principle within NVR, which is that parental presence (or adult presence) is the most protective factor of all that we have for our children – and is a mantra I find myself stating over and over again within the therapy room with my clients.

The Adolescence show was certainly hard-hitting, and its themes run far deeper than its dramatic portrayal.

Perhaps one of the most striking elements was that the parents were seemingly unaware of what was happening for their child. As I was watching the show I was thinking about how there is so much that we as parents, as adults, can’t fully understand about our children’s world and found myself wondering if that has perhaps always been the case. There has been an exponential growth in the use of technology and social media by children of all ages, and in the marketing of products and advancement of the technology, so finely tailored to hook our children in. It seems this part of the world is set to stay.

For the most part our children seem to be able to keep pace with the evolving technology at a rate which far exceeds the capacity of most of us, and for many that in itself feels a terrifying prospect. We can educate ourselves and build in as many appropriate restrictions and safeguards as we can for our children, but it seems they are likely to remain one step ahead in their understanding of, and competency with, the advancing technology. As parents we are often acutely aware of the potential technological risks posed to our children. I can’t think of a family I have worked with for whom concerns about the extensive use of tech hasn’t been a significant one. I think for many parents though, what to do about those concerns is often the greatest challenge and becomes a source of significant daily tension within the family home.

The NVR approach can be helpful in cutting through some of these tensions for parents if we hold firm to the idea that parental presence can play a significant role in mitigating risks for our children. The more that we are able to see, hear and understand what is happening for our children and their experiences, the more we have the potential to be alongside them, connect with them, challenge them and support them. This is about so much more than stating the risks or imposing restrictions in attempts to mitigate them. By focusing on a child’s experiences of the parent’s presence in their life, both physically and emotionally, we can look to support the parent to tailor their presence and to use it to its best protective effect.

We explore how unconditional relational gestures can sustain connection and ‘reach out across the void’. We look at ways we can prioritise the relationship, strengthening the child’s experiences of their parents’ care, love, compassion and concern, alongside resisting disruptive patterns which pose a risk for the child, the parents and for the family as a whole.

Adolescence is a time of significant turbulence in many families and so often this can lead to a disconnect in the relationship between the child and their parents; a void between them which can feel hard to breach. For some this difficult time is viewed as inevitable – ‘everybody knows teenagers are a nightmare, right?’ However, with this pervasive narrative comes an increased vulnerability for the child, as parents come to accept rejection, erasure and the disconnect. This can set in as an entrenched pattern of interaction within the family – right at the point the teenager is exercising and establishing their right to greater freedom and autonomy.

Throughout adolescence young people are increasingly striving towards this independence, while also paradoxically seeming to operate as a much younger child in many regards. Significant behavioural challenges can set in within the family as miscommunications, misunderstanding, and differences of opinions ensue. Add to this a relational void, and for many the atmosphere can be explosive or avoidant – further widening the experience of disconnect and increasing vulnerability and risk.

Through the NVR approach we look to balance these tensions, to be guided towards ‘striving for thriving’, autonomy and independence while at the same time exploring ways to emotionally reconnect, to reconcile challenges, to reach out across the void, to keep showing up as a parent – actively resisting elements within the family system and relationship which serve as a block to connection.

NVR is an effective, optimistic and short-term intervention which uses principles of non-violence in relational and family contexts. Parental presence, resistance and the role of the community are cornerstones of the approach which help to bring about significant change for individuals and families. In a world where connection is too easily lost, presence becomes a quiet form of resistance — and perhaps the most radical act of parenting.

 

Georgie Leake is an NVR UK accredited advanced level NVR practitioner and holds a BSc (Hons) in Psychology, a Master of Education (Special Needs and Inclusive Education), a Master of Arts in Social Sciences and QTLS. Georgie is available at our Brighton & Hove Practice, Lewes Practice and Online.

 

Further reading by Georgie Leake –

An NVR journey

Filed Under: Child development, Families, Georgie Leake, Mental health, Society Tagged With: adolescent mental health, digital risks and teens, family therapy, Netflix Adolescence series, Non-violent resistance, NVR, parent-child relationship, parental presence, Parenting, parenting teenagers, teenage technology use

May 12, 2025 by BHP Leave a Comment

A journey into understanding Non-Violent Resistance

Non-violent resistance (NVR) is a hugely effective, forward-looking and relational approach which helps parents to un pick what is happening in the family, to begin to recognise and disrupt entrenched patterns of interaction and to break down the barriers which stand in the way of change. In so doing, parents, who might start the work feeling lost and depleted, powerless and helpless against destructive dynamics which threaten the stability of their family, are able to regain their parental strength. The approach focuses on supporting parents to develop narratives and impactful methods of resistance, and to align themselves alongside their child while encouraging them to get back in touch with their own boundaries, wants, needs and wishes – alongside recognising those of their children.

Fundamental principles within the approach of ‘presence’, ‘resistance’ and ‘community support’, provide an over-arching structure, which enables the exploration of the complexities of behaviours such as violence, aggression, control and coercion which challenge family systems.

Below is an extract of a reflective summary provided by a mother to a fifteen-year-old son, J, who frequently displayed significant violence towards his parents and siblings. J was diagnosed with ADHD at age twelve. The parents completed a short-term intervention of NVR support. Her summary highlights some of the reticence experienced by parents in considering starting to work with NVR, and of the challenges encountered along the way:

“As you know I was sceptical to say the least when a friend recommended my husband and I start a program of NVR. In fact, I was actually pretty annoyed, as if silently and subtly they were suggesting that our parenting wasn’t somehow good enough. Despite this though I did reach out, maybe because things were feeling so unbelievably broken and I felt like I had tried so much that just wasn’t working. I felt really anxious about coming to the first session and even started typing an email to cancel but my husband was determined we had to give it a go. I tried to read up a bit about the approach before we came in. In my mind though I think really I was getting ready to defend myself and to assure myself, my husband, my friend (and you) that we really didn’t need to do this work, that it was J who needed to see someone, not us, whilst at the same time also feeling desperate that my friend was right and that this could actually help.

What I liked instantly about the work was that you challenged us to look forwards. We’d been stuck as a family for a very long time, and I was feeling exhausted, angry, devastated, hopeless, helpless – completely lost. I think we look back on that time as very dark days and so it feels great to be writing this from a place which honestly feels so much lighter, brighter and optimistic – all things actually that I think we agreed when we first started talking about what we were striving for.

I remember feeling from that initial consultation ‘wow someone actually gets this’ because the way you summarised things from your experiences with other families really resonated with me. You asked in the first session what I was striving for, and I liked that some of this focus was framed about me – as just me – as well as around me as Mum to J, me as part of a couple with my husband, me as Mum to my other children and for us as a family, and likewise for my husband. In just that first session we began to recognise that because of all the awful behaviour that J was showing at home we were living in a state of chaos and panic. We had neglected our care of ourselves and lost each other as a couple – and I could see that its hardly a surprise that it was so hard to resist the violence when we were feeling so lost and so broken ourselves. I liked the way we explored what we want things to be like.

Just allowing ourselves to imagine a different future helped to begin to move us out of the hopelessness. We reflected on what family life had become for us and we considered some of the things that stopped things moving forwards. It’s lucky we always had a box of tissues in the room because I remember doing a lot of crying in some of those first weeks – and I remember joking with you mid-way through the work that the fact I wasn’t in tears was a good sign of the progress we were making! There seemed somehow a real simplicity in breaking down our experiences and exploring the NVR themes within the sessions. We had a structure around us, that we were able to take away and begin to test out at home. As we began to move deeper into the work together and explore all the different principles within NVR, I could feel it really starting to bed into my thinking and it started to come more naturally to me at home. At first, I remember it feeling quite clunky, and some of it even jarring as it turned some of what we’d been doing on its head, as part of what you described as disrupting the status quo. I liked that we could lean back on the idea that those elements were where we could get our power back as parents and to really begin to get things back on track for our family.

We reflected a lot on the community around our family and I can definitely say at this point I am so thankful to my friend for suggesting this approach. She has been absolutely alongside us, and J, and because she didn’t stay as a quiet bystander to our struggles we are now in an unrecognisable place as a family. Finding the courage to open up our world and let other people in was by far one of the hardest elements of the approach – we had worked so hard to batten down the hatches, to stay compliant to the secrecy and to shield ourselves, J and others from people knowing how bad things were, that the idea of reaching out to others for help felt really scary for lots of different reasons – but this was impactful in so many different ways.

It has definitely been a journey – and we are very aware we have to keep working at the relationship, but it feels easier, and J gives back in so many different ways now that it all just feels very different from where we started. J is now back in college and smokes a lot less weed. We were belly-laughing together last week about something silly, and he even told me about his new girlfriend yesterday. It feels so special to be allowed in… and as you know the violence has stopped. We see J working really hard to control his behaviour – obviously he still gets very cross at times, but it feels like we’re all invested in doing what we can to resolve conflict in new ways together.”

NVR is an approach which can lead to transformation and enduring change within families.

With its focus on relational balance and principles of resistance it is a suitable approach for supporting families with children of all ages. In my practice I have worked with parents of toddlers, young children, teens and adolescents right through to parents of adult children who may not even live in the same home any longer. It is an individualised approach, centred around the needs of all the individuals within the family, recognising it cannot be a one-size-fits-all approach. As such the approach is effective for supporting children and/or parents with neurodivergence.

 

Georgie Leake is an NVR UK accredited advanced level NVR practitioner and holds a BSc (Hons) in Psychology, a Master of Education (Special Needs and Inclusive Education), a Master of Arts in Social Sciences and QTLS. Georgie is available at our Brighton & Hove Practice, Lewes Practice and Online.

Filed Under: Child development, Families, Georgie Leake Tagged With: families, Non-violent resistance, Relationships

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