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Emotional Regulation and Interoception: A Practical, Neurodiversity-Affirming Guide

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It is the process of noticing emotions, making meaning of them, and responding in a way that supports safety, participation, and well-being. Emotional regulation can include:

A quick, neurodiversity-affirming reminder: needing support is not failure. Many people regulate best with the right environment, accommodations, and relational safety.

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Interoception is a sense that helps us notice internal body signals. This can include signals like heart rate, breathing, muscle tension, temperature, hunger, fullness, pain, and the need to use the bathroom.

When we notice body signals, our brain uses them as clues to emotions and internal state. This is one reason interoception and emotional regulation are so closely connected.

Interoception and emotional regulation overlap because emotions are not just thoughts. They are also bodily experiences.

This is not a character flaw. It is often a skills and support gap.

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Interoceptive differences are common, and they can show up in many ways. Some people notice body signals intensely. Others barely notice them. Some notice them, but cannot interpret what they mean.

You might see:

These interoceptive differences are very common in a variety of individuals, including autistic people, trauma histories, sensory processing differences, anxiety, depression, and behavioral challenges. This is not about labels. It is about understanding support needs.

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Why Do Some Traditional Emotion Regulation Strategies Not Work?


Interoception Activities That Support Emotional Awareness

2) “Interoception Attention” (Guided Noticing)

3) Body-Signal to Emotion Mapping (Gently, Over Time)

4) Regulation Strategy Experiments (What Changes the Signal?)

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