What Is Interoception (and Why It Matters for Your Child)
Interoception is our ability to notice what’s happening inside our body—like hunger, thirst, emotions, or needing the bathroom.
For many neurodivergent children, these signals can be unclear, delayed, or overwhelming. This isn’t a behavior issue—it’s a body awareness difference.
What It Might Look Like
Your child may:
- Not notice hunger or thirst
- Have last-minute bathroom urgency
- Struggle to identify emotions
- Go from calm to overwhelmed quickly
- Say “I don’t know” when asked how they feel
Why it Matters
Interoception is the foundation for:
- Emotional regulation
- Self-awareness
- Coping skills
If a child can’t recognize what they’re feeling in their body, it’s much harder to respond or regulate.
How OT Helps
Occupational therapy focuses on building awareness and connection—not “fixing” behavior.
OT may help by:
- Teaching kids to notice body signals
- Connecting physical sensations to emotions
- Practicing awareness during real-life moments
- Adding external supports (timers, routines, visuals)
- Teaching regulation strategies through movement and sensory input
Simple Ways To Support At Home
- Do quick daily “body check-ins”
- Ask specific questions (“Does your body feel fast or slow?”)
- Model your own awareness
- Use consistent routines for meals, water, and breaks
The Reframe
Your child isn’t ignoring their body—they may not be getting clear signals from it.
With support, interoception skills can grow—and so can regulation, independence, and confidence.

