Understanding Stimming: More Than a Stereotype
When most people hear the word stimming, they often imagine a stereotypical image: hand-flapping, rocking, or spinning. While those are absolutely valid and common forms of self-stimulatory behaviour, stimming is a whole universe of unique, creative, and personal expressions.
What Is Stimming?
Stimming (short for self-stimulatory behaviour) is any repetitive movement, sound, or action that helps regulate sensory input, emotions, or attention. For many autistic and ADHD people, itβs a way to cope with being overstimulated, under-stimulated, anxious, excited, or simply needing something predictable in a world that often isnβt.
Itβs not always visible or loud. Itβs not always obvious. And itβs definitely not always what people expect.
My Personal Stims
My stims are a bit sneakier. You probably wouldnβt notice them unless you were really paying attention, and even then, you might just think Iβm fidgeting. I twist and play with my hair, often unconsciously. I rub my feet together when Iβm lying in bed or rock my foot if Iβm sitting still for too long. Itβs soothing, itβs familiar, and it helps me focus or calm down when the world feels like too much.
These are the quiet, daily stims that help me function and feel like myself.
A Home Full of Noise, Rhythm, and Regulation
Now, add in a household full of neurodivergent children and adults, and youβve got yourself a sensory circus. A beautiful one, but still very loud.
Let me paint the picture:
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My teenager is constantly rapping rhythms, bars, and spontaneous freestyling. Sometimes itβs clever. Sometimes itβs persistent.
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My oldest whistles endlessly. Tuneful, sure, but one high-pitched note at 7 a.m. can feel like a lot.
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And the youngest is a walking jukebox, humming and singing everything from Disney songs to made-up jingles about breakfast cereal.
On a good day, itβs like living in a musical, quirky and expressive. On a tough day, when Iβm already juggling sensory overload, it can feel like everyoneβs stims are competing for space. Sometimes I have to step outside, breathe, or retreat to a quiet corner of the house with noise-cancelling headphones and a cup of tea just to reset.
But hereβs the thing. I wouldnβt change it.
Every whistle, hum, foot rub, or rap is a message: βIβm here. Iβm managing. Iβm expressing.β Itβs not bad behaviour or something to be corrected. Itβs a language of regulation, and in our house, itβs spoken fluently.
Itβs messy, musical, overstimulating, funny, frustrating, and beautiful.
Understanding Why We Stim
Stimming isnβt just a habit. Itβs a biological and neurological response to how our brains process information.
For neurodivergent people, the brain often takes in too much or too little sensory input compared to neurotypical brains. This can lead to feeling overwhelmed, unfocused, anxious, or disconnected. Stimming helps balance that sensory load.
Hereβs how it works:
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Regulation: Repetitive motion or sound activates predictable sensory feedback. This can calm the nervous system and bring a sense of control and grounding.
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Dopamine and the ADHD brain: In ADHD, stimming can help release small bursts of dopamine, a chemical linked to motivation and focus. This can support attention and emotional regulation.
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Emotional expression: Stimming can be a way of expressing joy, excitement, frustration, or anxiety, especially when those feelings are hard to put into words.
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Motor and sensory feedback loops: Certain stims, such as rubbing feet, tapping, or humming, provide satisfying sensory feedback that can soothe the brain and body when other stimuli feel unpredictable or intense.
In short, stimming is a neurological strategy, a smart and adaptive one, that helps people manage the world in a way that works for their brains.
When we understand stimming, we create a more accepting world. One where neurodivergent people donβt have to mask or shrink themselves to feel safe.
Letβs move toward curiosity, not correction.
Letβs celebrate the diversity of how people express themselves.
Letβs make room for stimming just as it is.
By Kylie Gardner
The A List