
New Diagnosis and a Head Full of Questions? What to Do First (and What Can Wait)
When a name is finally given to how your child’s brain works, it often comes with mixed emotions Relief. Finally, a name for what you’ve been noticing.And then… confusion and overwhelm. For many families, that ‘name’ might be autism, ADHD, dyslexia, sensory processing differences, anxiety, or a combination that doesn’t fit neatly into one box. Sometimes it’s a formal diagnosis. Sometimes it’s a strong suspicion, followed by a long wait for confirmation. Suddenly, there are PDFs to read, leaflets from school, links from friends, and a growing sense that you should be doing something, even if you’re not sure what that something is yet. If this feels familiar it’s important to take things one step at a time. Here are five manageable first steps to help you move forward without burning out (and a reminder that you don’t need to do everything at once). 1. Give yourself permission to pause Before you organise, research, or book anything, pause. Many parents describe the early days after diagnosis as emotionally heavy, not just practically busy. It’s common to feel anxious, uncertain, and even numb at times. You don’t need to “get on top of everything” immediately. Understanding, clarity, and confidence come in layers, not all at once. A pause isn’t avoidance. It’s how you protect your capacity for what comes next. 2. Put everything in one place (you’ll thank yourself later) In the early weeks, information comes from everywhere: Trying to hold all of that in your head is exhausting and unnecessary. One of the simplest ways to reduce stress is to keep everything in one easy-to-find central place, even if you don’t understand or need it yet. This matters even more because many families face long wait times for follow-up assessments, therapy slots, or school support. Months can pass between steps. When that happens, important details are easily forgotten or lost in an email chain. An app such as Dalza gives you one secure place to store reports, emails, notes, and observations. So when the next appointment finally arrives, you’re not hunting through emails at 11 pm the night before, or relying on memory. 3. Learn the language slowly, and ask the “small” questions Words like executive functioning, sensory seeking, or processing delays can feel intimidating when you first encounter them. You don’t need to master the language overnight. Learn terms as they come up in real conversations with teachers, therapists, or doctors. What does help is having somewhere to ask the questions, even when you might feel silly asking out loud: With Dalza, parents can message the relevant professional directly and ask a quick question in context, instead of holding onto confusion or trying to decode reports alone. 4. Trust what you notice about your child Reports matter. Professionals matter. But so do you. You notice the moments in the day: Write those observations down. They don’t need to be polished or clinical. Your insights help professionals understand your child as a whole person, not just a snapshot from one appointment. Dalza makes it easy to quickly capture those real-life notes and share them when needed. So your child’s support is shaped by lived experience and patterns, not guesswork. 5. Choose one next step and stop there It’s tempting to try to do everything at once: book all the appointments, read all the articles, fix all the things. That’s how overwhelm takes over and burnout starts. Instead, choose one next step: Then pause again. Progress isn’t about speed. It’s about sustainability. You don’t have to carry this alone A new diagnosis doesn’t come with a manual, and it certainly doesn’t come with extra time or energy. What helps is having: Dalza was built to support you at this early stage and at each stage of the journey from now on. To hold your child’s story as it unfolds, so you don’t have to hold everything in your head. Dalza is free for 30 days, so you can try it out to see if it helps, completely risk-free. To get started today, simply add your name and email here.






