This guide is part of our pillar on What Calms Autistic People?
A Sensory Diet is a personalized plan of physical activities used to keep an autistic person’s nervous system regulated throughout the day. It prevents the “bottle” from overflowing.
Proprioception is the body’s sense of position and muscle feedback. It is universally considered the most grounding sense for autism.
The vestibular system controls balance. Warning: This sense is powerful. Spinning can cause over-excitement.
Deep Pressure Therapy (DPT) triggers the parasympathetic nervous system (rest and digest).
A sensory diet is most effective when implemented proactively throughout the day, not just during crisis moments. The goal is to prevent sensory overload by maintaining optimal arousal levels.
Morning (7-9 AM)
Mid-Morning (10-11 AM)
Afternoon (1-3 PM)
Evening (5-7 PM)
Related: For crisis situations when the sensory diet isn’t enough, see our guide on Meltdown vs. Shutdown De-escalation.
Sensory regulation activities work because they directly influence the autonomic nervous system. When we provide targeted sensory input, we’re essentially “feeding” the brain the information it needs to maintain homeostasis.
The vagus nerve plays a crucial role in this process. Deep pressure and proprioceptive activities stimulate the parasympathetic nervous system, also known as the “rest and digest” response. These activities help to counteract the sympathetic activation, known as “fight or flight,” that occurs during sensory overload.
](https://101autism.com/nervous-system-regulation-autism/) explains the biological mechanisms in detail.
While sensory activities are crucial, the physical environment plays an equally important role in maintaining regulation. Creating a “low-arousal” home environment reduces the baseline sensory load. This reduction makes it easier for the nervous system to stay within the window of tolerance.
Lighting
Sound
Visual Organization
Learn more: Our guide on Creating a Low-Arousal Environment provides detailed strategies.
| Sensory System | Calming Activities | Alerting Activities | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proprioception | Heavy work, deep pressure, compression clothing | Jumping, pushing heavy objects | Anytime – universally regulating |
| Vestibular | Slow linear swinging, rocking chair | Spinning, bouncing, fast movement | Calming: Before bed / Alerting: Morning |
| Tactile | Weighted blankets, warm baths | Textured toys, sensory bins | Calming: Downtime / Exploration: Play time |
| Oral/Chewing | Crunchy foods, chewy tubes | Sour/spicy flavors, cold foods | Throughout day as needed |
A sensory diet is a personalized schedule of physical activities and sensory experiences. It is designed to keep an autistic person’s nervous system regulated throughout the day. Unlike a food diet, it provides targeted sensory input (proprioceptive, vestibular, tactile) to prevent sensory overload and maintain optimal arousal levels.
Proprioceptive activities provide deep pressure and joint compression input that helps the brain understand where the body is in space. Examples include: heavy work (carrying groceries, pushing furniture), wall push-ups, compression clothing, weighted blankets, and chewing crunchy foods. These activities are universally calming for autistic individuals.
Sensory activities should be scheduled proactively throughout the day, typically every 90-120 minutes. The goal is prevention – maintaining regulation before dysregulation occurs. A morning session, mid-day session, and evening session create a strong foundation.
Calming input (slow linear movement, deep pressure, heavy work) activates the parasympathetic nervous system, promoting relaxation. Alerting input (spinning, bouncing, cold/sour flavors) increases arousal levels. Match the input type to the current need – calming before bed, alerting when sluggish.
Sensory diet activities complement but don’t replace occupational therapy or other interventions. An OT can assess individual sensory needs and create a personalized sensory diet. However, caregivers can implement many sensory strategies at home between therapy sessions.
While most autistic individuals benefit from targeted sensory input, responses vary by person. Some may be sensory-seeking (craving input), others sensory-avoiding (overwhelmed by input). A personalized approach based on individual sensory profile is essential.
Resistance often indicates the activity doesn’t match their current sensory needs or preferences. Try different sensory systems (switch from vestibular to proprioceptive), adjust intensity, or embed activities into preferred routines. Never force sensory input.
Step 1: Observe and document when dysregulation typically occurs
Step 2: Identify which sensory systems need support (proprioceptive, vestibular, tactile)
Step 3: Create a daily schedule with 3-4 sensory breaks
Step 4: Start with proprioceptive activities (most universally effective)
Step 5: Track effectiveness and adjust as needed
Remember: Sensory regulation is foundational to all other skill development. A regulated nervous system is a prerequisite for learning, communication, and social engagement.
For the complete framework on autistic regulation strategies, return to our main guide: What Calms Autistic People.Learn more: Our complete guide on [Nervous System Regulation and the Vagus Nerve
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