Navigating Family Gatherings and Holidays
Holidays and large family gatherings combine several things that can be genuinely difficult for neurodivergent individuals and families all at once: disrupted routines, sensory overload, unfamiliar social demands, and sometimes relatives who don’t fully understand or accommodate a child’s or adult’s needs. A little planning ahead of time can make a real difference.
Why these events are uniquely demanding
A typical holiday gathering often includes loud, overlapping conversation, unfamiliar foods, changed mealtimes, bright lighting, unpredictable schedules, and an expectation of extended, unstructured social interaction, sometimes with relatives seen only once or twice a year. Any one of these alone can be manageable; together, they add up quickly.
Before the event
Talk with the host ahead of time about specific accommodations. A quiet room to retreat to, flexibility around when food is served, or advance notice about the schedule can all be requested directly, and most hosts genuinely want to know how to help if you tell them clearly.
Prepare your child or yourself with as much predictability as possible. A simple outline of what to expect, who will be there, roughly what the schedule looks like, what the exit plan is, can meaningfully reduce anxiety about the unknown.
Decide on a signal or code word in advance. Agree with your child, partner, or yourself on a simple way to signal “I need a break now” without having to explain it in the moment, when explaining is hardest.
Bring familiar items. A preferred snack, a comfort object, headphones, or a familiar activity can all travel with you and provide a point of stability in an unfamiliar setting.
Decide your real limits ahead of time, not in the moment. How long will you stay. What will you do if things become too much. Deciding this calmly in advance is much easier than trying to decide it under pressure at the event itself.
During the event
- Identify a quiet space as soon as you arrive, even if you don’t end up needing it
- Build in breaks proactively, rather than waiting until distress is already high
- Give yourself or your child permission to skip parts of the event entirely, arriving late, leaving early, or skipping a particular activity are all reasonable choices
- If a relative makes an unhelpful comment about behavior or accommodations, a brief, calm response prepared in advance (“This is what works for our family”) is often easier than improvising one in the moment
On educating extended family
Not every relative needs, or will accept, a full explanation, and you are not obligated to provide one. A short, simple framing, focused on what helps rather than a full clinical explanation, is often enough: “Loud rooms are hard for him, so he might need some quiet time, that’s normal for him and nothing to worry about.”
After the event
Recovery time matters. Build in a quiet, low-demand period after a big gathering, especially for the day immediately following, rather than scheduling something equally demanding right after.
Key words to know
Sensory overload: A state of overwhelm caused by more sensory input (sound, light, touch, smell) than the nervous system can comfortably process at once.
Predictability: Knowing in advance what to expect, a key support for many neurodivergent individuals in unfamiliar or high-demand situations.