Therapeutic Mindset

See Through the Child's Eyes

A practical guide to understanding autism through the child's inner experience

From

Behavior control

To

Understanding internal experience

🧠

Understanding Behavior

4 topics to explore

What the child is really doing

  • Children often understand far more than they can express
  • Behaviors that appear disruptive are attempts at self-regulation
  • They may be trying to communicate something important
  • Sensory overload drives many responses
  • Motor planning difficulties create visible frustration

The fundamental question

  • Always ask: "What internal experience is this behavior trying to regulate?"
  • Shift from behavior control to understanding internal experience
  • Assume competence — the child knows more than they can show
  • Observe the function, not just the form of behavior

The child is not trying to be difficult. They are trying to navigate a world that feels overwhelming.

What it feels like inside

  • "Something inside is forcing me to do it"
  • The behavior regulates arousal level
  • It provides critical proprioceptive feedback
  • It helps manage emotional stress

Redirect, don't suppress

  • Identify the sensory need the behavior fulfills
  • Provide functional sensory alternatives
  • Understand the regulatory purpose before intervening
  • Offer replacement activities that meet the same need

Sensory Alternatives

BehaviorNeedIntervention
JumpingVestibular / ProprioceptionTrampoline, crash pad
Hand flappingArousal regulationWeighted tools
SpinningVestibular seekingControlled spinning activities

What it provides

  • Creates a feeling of lightness and body awareness
  • Helps the child feel their body more clearly
  • Organizes sensory input that feels chaotic
  • Provides emotional release

Sensory integration view

  • Recognize jumping as vestibular input
  • Understand it provides strong proprioception
  • Channel the need into therapeutic activities
  • Use trampolines, swings, and movement breaks

These movements are therapeutically useful — they help the child organize their sensory world.

Why patterns feel safe

  • Numbers and patterns are predictable
  • Human emotions are unpredictable and difficult to read
  • Predictable systems create a sense of safety
  • Lining up objects creates order in a chaotic world

Use structure therapeutically

  • Provide visual schedules
  • Maintain predictable routines
  • Use clear sequences for transitions
  • Build on pattern-seeking as a strength

Always Ask These 3 Questions

What sensory input is the child seeking?

What emotion is the child regulating?

What communication is the child attempting?