Overview
This original Guide to Autism brief summarizes the main practical value of National Autistic Society's resource, "Sensory differences." It is not a copy of the source article. It is a new, plain-language article designed to help the Guide to Autism team decide how this topic could become useful site content.
Article brief
Sensory processing can shape clothing preferences, food choices, sleep, transitions, school participation, public outings, hygiene, and emotional regulation. Sensory differences are not simply preferences or misbehavior. They can be intense, physically uncomfortable, and exhausting, especially when a person is expected to tolerate environments that overwhelm their nervous system. A Guide to Autism article should translate sensory information into everyday examples: socks that feel painful, lights that feel sharp, noises that make thinking impossible, smells that trigger nausea, or movement needs that look disruptive in a classroom. It should also explain sensory seeking, sensory avoiding, and mixed profiles. Useful additions include a sensory checklist, calm-corner planner, classroom accommodation ideas, haircut and dentist preparation guides, and questions to ask an occupational therapist.
How this becomes site content
Strong respectful source for sensory pages and low-sensory design.
Action takeaways
Create a plain-language page for Autistic people, families, educators. Label the evidence lens clearly: Autistic-friendly guidance. Connect this topic to action tools, downloads, and professional questions. Avoid cure-based, fear-based, or shame-based wording. Include autistic perspectives when the topic affects identity, dignity, or lived experience.
Citation
Primary source: National Autistic Society, "Sensory differences." URL: https://www.autism.org.uk/advice-and-guidance/topics/sensory-differences
Educational summary written for Autism Lifeline. Verify clinical claims against the primary source before public use.