Sensory Avoiding Behaviors
Sensory-avoiding children are overwhelmed by typical sensory input. Sound, light, texture, food, touch can all trigger distress. Accommodations beat trying to desensitize.
What Sensory Avoiding Behaviors Actually Is
Sensory Avoiding Behaviors is one of the most-questioned behaviors in autism parenting. Understanding what's actually happening neurologically transforms how you respond to it.
Why It Happens
For most autistic kids, this behavior serves a regulatory function. The autistic nervous system processes input differently, and what looks like odd behavior is often the brain's way of managing that input.
How to Respond Helpfully
- Observe first. Note when it happens, what precedes it, what follows it. Patterns reveal function.
- Don't try to stop it without understanding why. Suppressing regulatory behavior leads to displacement, not extinction.
- Make environments that don't require it as much. Lower sensory input often reduces the need.
- Offer alternatives, not prohibitions. If the behavior is unsafe, redirect to safer regulation, don't just say "no."
- Communicate with your child about it (age-appropriate). Help them understand their own brain.
What NOT to Do
- Punish or shame the behavior
- Force eye contact or compliance during the behavior
- Embarrass your child in front of others
- Try to "extinguish" the behavior without understanding its function
Tool for this: Calm Down Corner
Our Calm Down Corner Workbook gives autistic kids a structured way to regulate when the nervous system is overwhelmed. sensory avoiding behaviors often reduces in frequency when kids have other regulation options available.
Get Workbook Or on EtsyThe Bottom Line
Sensory Avoiding Behaviors in your autistic child is not a problem to fix. It's a window into how their brain manages the world. Support it, accommodate around it, and stop trying to make it look neurotypical.