Sensory Seeking/SEN-sor-ee SEE-king/

Preferring or seeking extra sensory input (movement, pressure, sound, texture) to feel regulated.

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Sometimes the dial needs turning up to feel “just right.”

Updated 2025-08-17
Sources: Community Contributors
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Detailed Explanation

Seeking can look like spinning, jumping, tight hugs, loud music, or strong flavors. It varies by sense and context. Safe outlets reduce risk and improve focus.

Community Context

Normalize appropriate seeking (trampolines, weighted items, chewables). Work with, not against, sensory needs.

Quick Tips

  • Provide safe movement and pressure options; plan “sensory snacks”
  • Use weighted/compression items if welcomed
  • Set clear zones/times for high‑energy input

Do / Don't

  • Do: channel seeking safely; offer choices
  • Don't: punish harmless seeking; remove regulation without alternative

Scientific Context

Part of sensory modulation patterns; responsive environments support regulation.

Language Notes

Pairs with sensory avoidance; both can exist in one person.

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