January 23, 2026 min
10.00 min
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If you work in care, education, fostering, or parenting, you’ve probably heard (or thought) it before: “They’re just being difficult.”
But what if the behaviour isn’t actually the problem?
In this powerful solo episode of the Able to Care Podcast, Andy Baker unpacks why the old logic of control, punishment, and “because I said so” so often backfires – especially when supporting people affected by trauma, mental health challenges, neurodiversity, dementia, or emotional distress.
Andy explores how much of what we call “behaviour that challenges” is deeply subjective. What feels difficult, defiant, or disruptive to one person may barely register to another. Often, the issue isn’t the individual – it’s that our current skills, mindset, or environment can’t hold what’s happening.
Drawing on personal experience, including a formative life event in his teens, Andy explains how curiosity replaced judgement and set him on a lifelong path of understanding human behaviour beyond labels like “naughty”, “lazy”, or “oppositional”.
This episode breaks down why traditional reward-and-punishment systems can escalate distress rather than reduce it – particularly for people with trauma histories, learning disabilities, autism, mental health needs, or dementia.
Andy introduces the idea of pausing before responding – regulating yourself first before trying to influence anyone else. This shift from reaction to response is central to trauma-informed, person-centred behaviour support.
Rather than asking, “How do I stop this?”, Andy encourages carers, educators, and parents to ask better questions:
To close the episode, Andy shares three simple but powerful mindset changes that can transform relationships and outcomes:
This episode is a compassionate, practical reframe for anyone who supports others through distress, dysregulation, or challenging moments – and wants to protect their own wellbeing at the same time.