⚠️ Crisis Prevention & De-escalation Skills *coming soon
Course overview
Lesson Overview

1.34 – Managing Sensory Overload During Crisis: Sensory overload happens when noise, light, touch, or movement becomes too much for the brain to process. It can trigger panic, anger, or withdrawal. People who are already stressed or neurodivergent may feel this more intensely. Knowing your sensory limits helps you plan escape routes before overwhelm hits. Simple actions like dimming lights, using ear protection, or moving to a quiet space restore calm. Grounding through breathing or touch reminds the brain it’s safe. Recognizing overload as a physical signal, not a failure, makes recovery faster. Managing your environment wisely keeps emotions steady. Reducing sensory stress often reduces emotional stress too.

About this course

Practical skills to prevent crises, de-escalate tense situations, and maintain safety in high-stress environments.

This course includes:
  • Scenario-based role-play exercises for crisis prevention and de-escalation
  • Safety planning templates and behavioral risk assessment tools
  • Step-by-step guides for responding to escalating situations effectively

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