Home→Forums→Emotional Mastery→Become less sensory sensitive?
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October 4, 2018 at 7:19 pm #229113ShannonParticipant
This spring I was diagnosed with autism type 1. I am 29 years old. I’ve coped “well” until now, meaning that no one, including myself, have ever thought about putting my quirks under the looking glass before. A series of events lead to the recommendation to undergo a neuropsychiatric investigation. This whole procedure led to some answers, but of course gave rise to a lot of new questions as well.
I have so many new things to investigate now so I choose to focus sharply at one thing at a time. I’ll start with the most energy-consuming and crippling matter in my situation.
Can you learn to deal with/get less affected of sensory sensitivity??
I have sensory sensitivity and have had this since birth. The Sound of speech are like salty waves striking the beach with different force: one or two people talking can be manageable, while thundering laughter from a group hits me like a tsunami. Explaining my tactile sensitivity feels as illogical every time; light touch can burn, whereas still pressure over a larger area is soothing. I detect the tiniest fractions of smell, and although I haven’t had a smell overload so far, the mere prescence of extra attention given to smells are bound to take unnecessary energy. Bright light isn’t contributing to overload until I’m already overloaded by sound and touch. Oh, by the way, I count textures in the mouth to the tactical area whereas tastes will undergo the smell cathegory.
As you can imagine, the constant intake of sensory input in a more or less intense manner, creates stress in a sensitive mind. The stress easily culminates into overwhelm and “overreactions” otherwise known as meltdowns.
I imagine that you deal with this kind of stress the same way you deal with stress in general: with off-periods and time to recover. But imagine you were so sensitive that the recovery time were never enough. Imagine that well-meaning people caring about you actually make the situation worse, because they aďd speech and sound to your already overloaded senses. Imagine to need so much alone time that hanging out with friends is like cutting up bleeding wounds, and despite the pain you still do it because you want to participate in social interaction, engage in other peoples’ lives and try and keep friendships.
So, in order to sort this out a bit, I’m asking an open question of if you can imagine any way of becoming less sensitive (well, hardened) when it comes to sensory input. I would like to say that this is the same as exercising – the more you expose yourself for movement the better you get at performing that movement – but, in my experience, sensory sensitivity tend to work the opposite way. The more I expose myself to sound, touch, smell and light, the more exhausted and overwelmed I become.
So, any ideas?
October 5, 2018 at 6:02 am #229167AnonymousGuestDear Shannon:
I did become less sensory sensitive recently. I used to be overly sensitive to sounds, light, smell, taste, skin sensations (heat, perspiration, itchiness, etc.) as well as other bodily sensations. So much sensory input used to cause me distress and so, I was distressed a lot of the time. Focusing in social situations was difficult as I wasn’t able to understand what a person was saying, the words were noise, nothing more. Often living in apartments or close to neighbors was a torture, the noise was overwhelming.
You asked for ideas. My ideas for lowering overwhelming sensory sensitive: reduce anxiety overall, heal from it and manage it best you can. Actually, this is my only idea at this point, healing from childhood emotional injuries that brought about the condition of anxiety.
anita
October 5, 2018 at 6:25 am #229171ShannonParticipantIt’s a tricky subject, isn’t it? Sensory sensitivity isn’t a problem in itself, it can even be an asset depending on how you use it. Sensory sensitivity becomes a problem when the mind can’t handle the amount of sensations bombarding our body every day.
Your idea makes all sense. Since sensory sensitivity isn’t the only thing occupying my stress coping mind, a good approach is to reduce stressors that I can have more control over. That is, every anxiety issue that come from within. Anxiety over relationship drama. Future plans and mispleasure with the current situation. Anxiety over not having a neat home, having a sink full of unwashed dishes because of that dang broken dishwasher and the repairman won’t come for another two weeks, and I don’t have enough energy to play with my daughter or exercise, and not having enough time to getting ready in the morning stresses the heck out of me… Etcetera. Loosening on all of these self-made requirements would surely make up more space for stress management regarding the sensory sensitivity. Less of a backpack to carry, so to say.
Another thing that I know makes my mind more stress tolerant, and therefore also more tolerant to sensory input, is exercise. Running is the most effective for me since it wakes positive memories, you get fresh air from running in the nature, and you choose your own pace depending on daymood… So, despite that I know this, I still don’t exercise on a regular basis. Why? Because of tiredness. And what would running help me with in the long run? Reducing turedness! So I’m practically just stupid. Or lazy. or both.
October 5, 2018 at 6:51 am #229175AnonymousGuestDear Shannon:
Sticking to my idea of healing, I see healing as a Macro job and a Micro job. The Macro would be things like:
1. Disengaging from some people in our life so to reduce that “Anxiety over relationship drama” that you mentioned.
2. Keeping your home neat on a daily basis, that is, placing things in place continuously, so to not have a growing and growing mess to be dealt with later, so to reduce or eliminate your “Anxiety over not having a neat home”.
3. Wash those dishes without the use of a washing machine.
4. Prepare things in the evening for the next morning and/ or wake up earlier in the morning (“not having enough time to getting ready in the morning stresses the heck out of me”).
5. Establish a habit of running. Once it is a habit it will be more difficult to not run regularly, then it would be to run. Easy on the joints (walking fast is safer).
And then, there is the Micro work, re-visiting childhood so to correct our understanding, not strictly the rational understanding that we have now, but emotional understanding. I noticed in your writing that your rational brain is very strong, highly evolved. But as is true to most, the emotional understanding is lagging behind.
anita
October 5, 2018 at 7:48 am #229193ShannonParticipantDear Anita,
I’m curious! What do you get the Micro and Macro terms from? How do you use them? In my concious, something Macro (in a health and self-care concept) refers to an overall picture. Just to take an example: The will of having a healthy balance between sleep, meals, rest, intellectual and emotional stimulance, and physical exercise. And the contrary, the Micro, would then be micromanagement of how to sustain that balance through performing certain habits. But since you use the Macro term to describe the latter, how would you define your usage of the two words?
I thank you for your benign attempt on sharing information on how to solve some practical issues that I mentioned. Although, issues mentioned might just have been graphic examples on some other miscellaneous everyday issues causing unnecessary anxiety that can easily be taken away from the daily bucket of stress tolerance simply by letting go of self-created demands, thus giving more space for stress management on issues that are more biologically rooted and therefore harder to get rid of. Such as sensory overloads.
I didn’t quite follow your reasoning on the micromanagement part. Could you clarify?
October 5, 2018 at 8:13 am #229201AnonymousGuestDear Shannon:
The words Macro and Micro, I didn’t refer to anything I previously read about these terms, I didn’t mean anything like micromanagement in my use of Micro. This is what I meant by Macro healing: changing our outer circumstances so to make them congruent with healing, such as keeping one’s home neat enough. By Micro healing I meant re-visiting our childhood which is recorded in our brain’s neuropathways.
These neuropathways are small, that is, micro. A neat house is big, that is, macro.
anita
October 5, 2018 at 8:46 am #229211ShannonParticipantDear Anita, you talk about emotional understanding regarding “re-visiting childhood so to correct our understanding”.
How do you interpret emotional understanding as opposed to rational understanding?
How do you integrate the need of evolving emotional understanding in self-management of sensory issues?
I’m also interested in hearing your reason of grouping me with most people whose emotional understanding is lagging behind 🙂 I refer to this phrasing: “I noticed in your writing that your rational brain is very strong, highly evolved. But as is true to most, the emotional understanding is lagging behind.” Bear in mind that it’s practically impossible to offend me. I’m interested in your honest impression. It helps me understand how people interpret my communication!
October 5, 2018 at 9:05 am #229215AnonymousGuestDear Shannon:
After I posted that sentence about your emotional understanding lagging behind I had a feeling it was or could be offensive but wasn’t sure at the time. Having read your recent post I realize that my discomfort … was congruent with reality, I really was offensive. I was wrong to have included that sentence in my post to you, really, I have no basis to have stated that. It was quite arrogant of me. I apologize.
I will rephrase: I noticed that you are very intelligent and educated.
“How do you interpret emotional understanding as opposed to rational understanding?”-
I will use the example of what just happened: my rational understanding is that most people (including myself) understand rationally but less so, emotionally. What I didn’t understand when I posted that sentence to you was that my anger was triggered a little earlier, leading me to type and post that statement. If I had the emotional understanding that I was indeed angry, I would have paused and rethought. Then I wouldn’t have posted to you unless I didn’t feel anger anymore.
“How do you integrate the need of evolving emotional understanding in self-management of sensory issues?”-
I will give you an example: my neighbors have a new barking dog. Barking used to distress me a whole lot. What I found out via emotional understanding was that a big part of what bothered me about it was believing that the neighbors either wanted to cause me misery by allowing that barking to go on and on, or they thought I was worthless and therefore didn’t bother doing something about the barking. Once I figured that out, when hearing the barking, I repeated what I believe is rationally true: that the neighbors are not trying to punish me, nor is the barking related to my (early life) belief of being worthless.
The barking bothers me still but way, way less so.
anita
October 5, 2018 at 10:32 am #229249ShannonParticipantOh.
Your response under “How do you integrate the need of evolving emotional understanding in self-management of sensory issues?” left a particularly mesmerizing mark in me. I just realized that I actually sometimes react differently on different kinds of sounds. For example, when I need to calm down, I listen to a track with heavy rain and thunder. The natural white noise makes me calm, and I can keep it on a fairly high volume – or need to do so in order to drown any distracting background noise. What is interesting is that also other loud, temporary and fairly predictable sounds – approaching ambulances, helicopters etc – affects me a lot less than sounds connected to social situations, such as the ambivalent noise of a party or a group of people laughing. One explanation might be that it’s stressful not to know when I can get out of the noisy environment or when the noise will cease, though I don’t think that is the entire explanation. Now I think of it, I believe a part of the reaction is because of sadness or dissapointment of my own inability to enjoy the situation due to the noise sensitivity.
I’ve decided to do a little experiment the next time I’ll be in a noisy and social environment, which will take place this sunday. I will try to think of the fact that I might be sad not because of the noisy environment but because of my noise sensitivity and how it inhibits my ability to sustain in social assemblies, and just enjoy the occation for as long as possible without putting any pressure on myself to “not be concerned” with the noise. I’ll try and just embrace the fact that I am who I am, with abilities and disabilities, and will be in the environment for as long as it feels comfortable. It’ll be interesting to see how that works.
October 5, 2018 at 11:24 am #229263AnonymousGuestDear Shannon:
Experimenting, like you plan to do this Sunday, is a good idea.
“noise of a party or a group of people laughing”- it might be that this distresses you because this noise triggers for you the distress of being trapped, “it’s stressful not to know when I can get out of the noisy environment or when the noise will cease”, having no control over how loud this type of noise is and how long it will last. The feeling of being trapped and not in control is the original distress.
Then there is a secondary distress, over the original distress, “sadness or disappointment of my own inability to enjoy the situation due to the noise sensitivity”.
anita
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