Sensory Overload & Misophonia
What it is
Section titled “What it is”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.”
What it feels like
Section titled “What it feels like”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.
The parts of it
Section titled “The parts of it”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.
You might recognize this
Section titled “You might recognize this”- 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
Why this isn’t being “fussy”
Section titled “Why this isn’t being “fussy””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.