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Sensory Overload & Misophonia

Sensory overload happens when the environment — noise, lights, textures — becomes too much for the brain to process at once. The underlying issue is filtering: input that most brains automatically tune out keeps coming through at full strength, until it tips over into “too much.”

You’re in a grocery store with bright lights and a kid screaming, and you suddenly feel like you’re going to explode unless you leave immediately.

The sound of someone chewing gum or a clock ticking makes you feel a genuine urge to scream or leave the room.

Tap any to expand.

Sensory overload

When sights, sounds, and textures stack up faster than the brain can process them, producing a sudden, urgent need to escape the environment. It’s not impatience — it’s a processing system hitting capacity.

Misophonia

An intense, fight-or-flight rage response to specific soft, repetitive sounds — chewing, breathing, a ticking clock. The reaction is disproportionate to the trigger and feels involuntary, because it is.

Tactile defensiveness

An inability to focus because of a physical sensation — a clothing tag, a sock seam, a specific fabric like wool or microfiber. The brain can’t demote the sensation to background, so it dominates attention.

  • Needing to bolt from a busy, bright, loud space
  • A single repetitive sound hijacking your entire focus
  • Cutting tags out of clothes or avoiding certain fabrics entirely

The sensitivity is a filtering difference, not a preference or an overreaction. The input genuinely arrives louder and harder to ignore. The goal isn’t to “get used to it” — it’s to manage the environment so the system doesn’t keep hitting overload.