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Showing posts with the label autism meltdown brain

Why Reasoning Doesn’t Work During an Autism Meltdown (And What Parents Should Do Instead)

 When meltdowns hit, memory fails. That’s exactly why I created the free printable Emergency Reset Sheet — something you can follow in the moment instead of guessing. 👉 Download it here. https://forms.gle/BgTgewHb7AZdriFr6 One of the most confusing moments for parents happens during a meltdown when they try to calm their child by explaining, reasoning, or asking them to think about their behavior. Parents might say things like: “Calm down.” “Use your words.” “Stop yelling.” “Tell me what’s wrong.” But instead of helping, the meltdown often becomes worse. The child may cry harder, yell louder, or become more physically distressed. This can leave parents feeling frustrated and helpless. The reason this happens is simple but extremely important to understand: During a meltdown, the brain is not able to process reasoning. Understanding what happens in the brain during these moments can completely change how parents respond and help prevent situations from escalating further. What Hap...

Why Autistic Meltdowns Happen (And What Parents Can Do About Them)

https://digregorio0.gumroad.com/l/dcxir  If you’ve ever watched your child go from calm to completely overwhelmed in seconds, you know how confusing autistic meltdowns can feel. One moment everything seems fine. The next, there are tears, screaming, shutdown, or panic. It can feel sudden. But it almost never is. Autistic meltdowns do not come out of nowhere. They build quietly, layer by layer, until the nervous system can no longer cope. Understanding why meltdowns happen is the first step toward reducing their intensity — and responding with confidence instead of panic. Meltdowns Are Neurological, Not Behavioral A meltdown is not a tantrum . Tantrums are typically goal-driven behaviors — a child wants something and is upset they cannot get it. A meltdown is different. During an autistic meltdown, the brain shifts from “thinking mode” into “survival mode.” The prefrontal cortex — responsible for reasoning, language, and problem-solving — reduces activity. Meanwhile, the nervous ...

What Happens to the Mind During an Autistic Meltdown?

 When meltdowns escalate, it’s hard to think clearly. This step-by-step reset sheet helps parents stabilize the moment and guide their child back toward calm. 👉 Download the Emergency Reset Sheet https://forms.gle/BgTgewHb7AZdriFr6   To someone watching from the outside, an autistic meltdown can look dramatic, sudden, or even behavioral. But inside the mind of a child experiencing a meltdown, something very different is happening. It is not defiance. It is not manipulation. It is overload . When a meltdown begins, the brain shifts out of “thinking mode” and into survival mode . The part of the brain responsible for reasoning, language, and problem-solving — the prefrontal cortex — reduces activity. At the same time, the nervous system activates a stress response . This is the same biological system that activates during danger. Heart rate increases. Muscles tense. Sensory input becomes amplified. Sounds feel louder. Lights feel brighter. Touch may feel overwhelming. Langu...