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Behaviour & sensory

Sensory overload — what it is and what helps

Sensory overload is the upstream condition for many meltdowns, shutdowns, and "difficult behaviour" in autistic children. This piece covers what overload actually feels like, common triggers, and what helps in the moment and over time.

Sensory overload is the upstream condition for many of the behaviours families struggle with — meltdowns, shutdowns, refusal to enter certain places, what looks like sudden defiance. Understanding it changes how you respond. The same child who looks "difficult" in a supermarket starts to look — accurately — like a child whose nervous system is being asked to take in more than it can process.

What sensory overload is Autistic people often have differently-tuned sensory processing — typically more intense than non-autistic people, sometimes in only some channels (sounds but not lights, for example), sometimes across multiple channels at once. When the cumulative load exceeds the nervous system's capacity to process it, the result is overload: a state where the thinking parts of the brain effectively stop receiving useful information and the regulatory parts go into emergency mode.

This is not a metaphor. fMRI studies of autistic sensory processing (Marco et al. 2011, Robertson and Baron-Cohen 2017) show that some autistic brains genuinely respond more strongly to baseline sensory input than non-autistic brains. The supermarket isn't louder for them in objective decibels; it is louder in how the brain is processing the input.

What it can feel like (from autistic accounts) Autistic adults have described sensory overload in remarkably consistent ways:

  • Sounds that "press in" or feel painful — fluorescent-light hum, distant conversations, traffic
  • Lights that feel like noise — fluorescents in particular
  • A creeping inability to filter — every sensation arriving at full volume
  • Time distortion — minutes feeling like hours
  • Words stopping — knowing what to say but being unable to produce it
  • The body wanting to leave or hide or shut down

Children rarely have the vocabulary for this. They show it instead — covering ears, running, refusing, going still, lashing out, crying without explanation.

Common triggers A short, non-exhaustive list of what tips children into overload:

  • Auditory: shopping centres, school assemblies, busy classrooms, crowded restaurants, fireworks, hand dryers, vacuum cleaners
  • Visual: fluorescent lights, screens with fast cuts, busy patterns, crowds
  • Tactile: certain clothing fabrics, seams, tags, sand, glue, wet food
  • Olfactory: perfumes, cleaning products, cooking smells
  • Interoceptive (internal): hunger and tiredness felt late, illness coming on, full bladder
  • Cumulative: a busy day that was fine until it wasn't

The cumulative trigger is especially worth recognising. Many autistic children appear to manage individual situations fine and then "suddenly" melt down — often in a fourth situation that on its own would have been tolerable. The fourth situation didn't cause the overload; it was the last drop in an already-full cup.

What helps in the moment The fastest intervention is reducing input, not adding more.

  • Lower your own voice; better yet, stop talking
  • Move to somewhere quieter and dimmer
  • Reduce who is looking at the child (strangers leaving, audience moving away)
  • Don't ask questions
  • Don't deliver consequences
  • Offer proprioceptive input (a firm hug, a heavy blanket) only if the child seeks it

After the wave, allow real recovery time. Many autistic children need significant downtime — sometimes hours, sometimes a full evening — to come back from overload. Resuming demands too early reliably extends the recovery.

What helps over time - Sensory diary. Track when overload happens. The triggers are usually patterned once you see them on paper. - Predictable sensory inventory at home. Soft clothes, low lighting in the evening, ear defenders within reach, a quiet corner the child can retreat to without asking. - Sensory diet. An occupational therapist familiar with autism can design a personal "diet" — sensory inputs scheduled across the day (heavy work, swing, deep pressure) that pre-empt overload rather than reacting to it. - Reduce the load before high-demand situations. A quiet morning before a busy afternoon. A nap before a family event. Cumulative load is real; managing it is part of caregiving. - Educate teachers and family. A short note explaining what overload looks like for your specific child saves a lot of explaining later.

When to bring in a professional An occupational therapist with sensory-integration training is the right partner for sustained sensory work. The approach to look for is neurodiversity-affirming sensory integration — working with the child's profile rather than trying to make them "tolerate more." Older "sensory desensitisation" approaches that pushed exposure are largely out of favour; modern sensory work is collaborative.

If overload is causing severe meltdowns, school refusal, or daily-functioning impairment, a paediatrician or developmental paediatrician can coordinate care across OT, psychology, and (rarely) medication where co-occurring anxiety is severe.