14/11/2025
Parenting hits differently when you start truly understanding your own energetic patterns alongside your child’s.
Fridays are my day off with my son, and I really treasure them. It’s our little pause before he starts school next year, a day where I try to slow down and actually be with him.
I’m a Manifestor.
He’s a Manifesting Generator.
When I started exploring Human Design as part of the business development programme I’m on, one of the first things I did was run our entire family’s charts. I was curious about how our energies interplayed, how our patterns collided, and how much of our day to day dynamic might actually make sense from this perspective.
And honestly, the contrast between our designs is something I feel in my body every single day.
As a Manifestor, I’m wired to follow the spark. When inspiration hits, my mind runs, my energy shifts, and I drift into whatever has lit me up. It’s instinctive, internal, absorbed.
My son’s MG energy is the opposite flavour of intensity. His body is expressive, quick, and responsive. He moves from one interest to the next with momentum that feels almost instinctive. He also has a powerful need for autonomy, and if I’m not fully present with him in the moment he’s in, he’ll disengage completely. What makes it even more interesting is the timing. He’ll get absorbed in something and I can’t move him on, so I step back and follow my own spark for a while. Then suddenly he’s ready to shift, but by that point I’m deep in my own flow and not ready to transition. So we end up missing each other, over and over, especially on days without a clear structure. On days like today, where the plan is fluid, our energies can feel like two trains running on different tracks.
Tomorrow should be easier, because there’s a clear time and place we’re going, so the transition might be bumpy but at least it is predictable. The challenge comes when the environment is unstructured and everything depends on our internal rhythms, because his pace shifts far faster than mine, and he needs the next activity to be something he genuinely wants, not something led by me. And of course he’s four, and I’m forty-four, so his momentum is entirely age-appropriate. It’s just a very intense dance between two strong internal worlds.
Some days, that dance is beautiful.
And some days, it is chaotic.
But here’s the part I’m learning to honour.
None of this is personal.
None of this is misbehaviour.
None of this is a flaw in either of us.
It’s just two different nervous systems trying to co-exist in the same space.
His need for movement is part of who he is.
My need for freedom and creative space is part of who I am.
Understanding that softens everything.
When I bring together what I know from sensory integration, nervous system regulation, my lived experience, and this early exploration of Human Design, it helps me parent with more compassion for both of us.
It helps me see the patterns behind the moments.
It helps me respond instead of react.
And it helps me honour both of our needs without shame.
This blend of sensory insight, regulation science, and compassionate interpretation is the foundation of something I’m slowly developing in my work, something I’m calling the Regulation Blueprint. It’s designed to help families understand how their unique energies interact, where friction points occur, and how to find rhythms that feel safer for everyone involved.
It’s early stages, but it feels deeply aligned with where I'm at as a practitioner and a parent.
If that’s something you’d love to learn more about as it evolves, comment “blueprint” or send me a message so I know who’s interested.