The Family Dinner Project

Sensory Sensitivities at Family Dinner

PARA ESPAÑOL, HAGA CLIC AQUÍ

Sensory processing challenges can make family dinners difficult for everyone. Far more than typical “picky eating,” sensory issues cause physical reactions to foods and to the dinner table environment that are more extreme than parents might expect. At mealtimes, our senses are bombarded with everything from smells to tastes, textures, sounds, and even lighting within the room. For a person with sensory sensitivities, any one – or all – of these pieces of input can cause extreme discomfort. It’s no wonder that parents often name sensory sensitivities as a top mealtime challenge!

What are sensory sensitivities, and how can sensory processing challenges impact family dinners? What should parents know about sensory issues at mealtimes? What are some signs to look for? And, most importantly, how can families deal with sensory sensitivities and challenging feeding behaviors, so shared meals can be welcoming for everyone?

What’s the Difference Between Picky Eating and Sensory Processing Challenges?

Up to 20 percent of parents report that their preschoolers are often or nearly always very selective about food. So how can you tell if your child is a typical “picky eater,” or whether there’s something more serious going on? We asked Melanie Potock, MA, CCC-SLP to help clarify the distinction.

“The main thing is, if it’s stressing out the family, we need to address it now,” she says. “When there is stress over the feeding relationship, it can create a wave of challenges that take time to resolve.” But to help parents further evaluate their child’s eating habits, she outlines the following “red flags” that may indicate the need for professional help:

Potock stresses that it’s better to catch potential feeding issues early, so if parents are worried, it’s a good idea to approach the child’s doctor with a request for a feeding evaluation.

What Parents Should Know About Sensory Processing Challenges

Many people associate sensory processing challenges with the autism spectrum. While people on the autism spectrum are highly likely to experience sensory issues, they’re not the only ones. Many children exhibit signs of sensory sensitivities, and they’re relatively common among people with ADHD or other learning differences as well. Some experts believe that Sensory Processing Disorder should be considered a standalone diagnosis, illustrating the fact that it’s possible for people to struggle with sensory integration even without another diagnosed condition.

It’s also possible to have some symptoms of sensory issues, without necessarily rising to the level of a disorder. Experts generally agree that in order for issues to rise to a “clinical” level, the symptoms need to negatively impact one or more areas of everyday life. This can be a tricky line for parents to navigate. When does a child’s fussiness about touching and smelling certain foods, for example, cross the line from picky eating to an impairment? What’s the difference between a child with a typical “strong will” at the table, and a child who’s melting down because they’re actually experiencing real anxiety and discomfort they can’t control?

“Children communicate through their behavior,” says Naureen Hunani, RD., a pediatric and family dietitian who specializes in neurodiversity and weight-inclusive practices. “If he melts down during dinner, what is he telling us?” She cautions that parents who don’t know how to tell the difference between a sensory issue and willful behavior may cause more harm by reacting with discipline. “Parents may pressure kids to eat foods when they have aversions to those foods, and that can cause trauma,” she says. “Neurodivergent children are more likely to experience trauma because the world isn’t set up for them.”

Dr. Martha Straus, Psychology Professor at Antioch College and international expert on attachment and trauma, agrees. “We treat kids differently if we think about this as a control issue. But really, it’s not about control so much as it is about tactile or sensory defensiveness. They’re overwhelmed, or the foods are unfamiliar. If you think about it as overload, then caregivers will engage with less emotion. We really need to focus on the adults being regulated at mealtime, not the kids.”

What Do Sensory Sensitivities Look Like at Family Meals?

The most common clue that a child might be struggling with sensory sensitivities at mealtime is food refusal. “Kids with sensory-based challenges won’t tolerate smells, textures, how food looks,” says Jennifer Stornelli, an Occupational Therapist specializing in Pediatric Feeding Issues at Spaulding Outpatient Center for Children. “Sometimes a child will play with food but won’t put it in their mouth, or will put it in their mouth and then spit it out. Parents will come (for help), saying that kids are refusing to eat.” But what’s causing the refusal is the child’s unique processing of all the sensory information that comes with the food.

“Food sensitivity and selectivity is pretty common,” Dr. Straus emphasizes. “(Often, kids) can’t stand to have foods touching, or can’t stand certain colors and textures. They’re overloaded and not integrated. Their difficulties with sensory integration show up in other arenas too: Their socks need to line up in a certain way, strong smells are upsetting, tags have to be taken off.”

Sensory processing issues don’t always look like aversion. Sensory challenges exist on a spectrum; at one extreme, there are people who are hyper-sensitive to input, who might gag or even vomit at smelling, touching, or tasting an undesirable food. They might exhibit what looks like fear, panic or tantrum behavior if the lighting is too bright or the music is too loud, or seem unusually sensitive to things like the temperature of the food or the way the napkin feels on their face. At the other extreme, there are people who are hypo-sensitive to input. For these people, it’s as if their experiences are muted; they might exhibit sensory-seeking behaviors like smearing foods with their hands to get a sense of the texture, fidgeting uncontrollably or bouncing, wiggling, and dancing instead of sitting still, or craving and even demanding strongly flavored and textured or highly aromatic foods like sucking on lemons, crunching ice, or adding large amounts of spice and salt to food.

Bob Cunningham, Executive Director for Learning Development at Understood.org and former Head of School of the Gateway School, says that it may be difficult for some kids with sensory processing challenges to explain what’s bothering them. He recalls working with a particular family whose 6-year-old child had developed sensory sensitivities after a traumatic brain injury. “She had a lot of food sensitivities and olfactory challenges, and she didn’t like the smells of the foods her siblings were eating,” he shares. “Her siblings had difficulty with that. We were working through her anxiety…it took us a few weeks to figure it out. She couldn’t explain that it was the smell; she didn’t know she was reacting to the smell. It was just, ‘I don’t like it when they are eating broccoli and boxed mac and cheese.’”

The struggle to communicate about sensory experiences, along with the fact that many of the signs of sensory overload or seeking behavior can look to parents like disobedience, can make it difficult for caregivers to recognize the signs and respond appropriately. Also, internalized expectations about what mealtimes “should” be like, what foods a child “should” eat, or what constitutes “good manners” can cause conflict for parents who have trouble letting go of their beliefs. But dealing with sensory challenges at meals takes patience, creativity, and empathy. “In the disability community, there is a lot of ableism and lack of compassion,” Naureen Hunani says. “Families will look different from what people think they should look like. Lots of accommodations need to be made. Sure, it’s hard that you have to eat just what your child eats, but you can meal plan so that everyone can have food preferences.” She cautions parents to remember that children who are struggling with sensory processing challenges aren’t choosing to behave in a certain way; they can’t be expected to eat and behave at the table in the same way as a typically developing child, so the family needs to adjust in order to make everyone comfortable.

What Can Parents Do To Help Kids With Sensory Processing at Mealtimes?

The good news is that, while challenging, sensory issues don’t have to totally derail your family dinner plans. There are a number of ways to help kids cope with sensory input, starting with identifying the major challenges or triggers that are most disruptive to your shared meals. Once you know what is bothering the child, it’s easier to make a plan to create a more welcoming mealtime environment. But stay focused, says Megan Mayo, MA, BCBA, LBA and doctoral candidate in clinical psychology at Antioch University New England. “Don’t work on too many things at once. For example, if a child is food smearing as well as having difficulty sitting for a whole meal, perhaps initially you’ll work on the food and not worry about sitting for the meal until things improve.”

To help with taste and texture aversions:

To help with smell aversions:

To help with sensory seeking behaviors like food smearing:

To help make the dinner environment sensory-friendly:

Ultimately, sensory processing challenges can add to mealtime stress for parents and kids alike, but the most important takeaway for parents is to practice acceptance, patience, and understanding. “We need to help parents not take it as a reflection of their parenting skills,” Mayo says. Stornelli and the other experts we spoke to agree that despite the frustration a parent may feel, it’s important – especially for the child – to take the pressure off. With time, care, and practice, families can make adjustments to their shared meals to make the table a welcoming and sensory-friendly place for everyone.

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