15 // {Part 3/3: The 8 Sensory Systems Every Parent Needs To Know}: The Sense no one talks about
This episode is about the 8th sensory system — interoception, and it’s the sense no one talks about. It's the one that connects your child's meltdowns, their anxiety, their inability to notice they're hungry until they're already falling apart, their emotional dysregulation, and so much more. And it's the one that, when I researched it, explained a lot about who I was as a child.
This episode closes out the 3-part series on the 8 Sensory Systems, and it's the one I'd hand to every parent, teacher, and caregiver who has ever looked at a child in a full meltdown and had absolutely no idea what triggered it.
In this episode:
* What interoception actually is — the nervous system's process of sensing, interpreting, and integrating signals from inside the body, including heart rate, hunger, temperature, pain, and emotional states
* What a large interoceptive cup looks like — deeply tuned in to hunger, fullness, bathroom needs, body temperature, and emotional shifts
* What a small interoceptive cup looks like — missing hunger cues until complete breakdown, potty accidents, not noticing they are overheating, unable to identify where discomfort is coming from
* The direct connection between interoception and emotional regulation — why children who can sense what is happening inside their bodies regulate better
* The highly sensitive child who absorbs everyone else's energy and emotions — what is actually happening neurologically
* A personal story about growing up with interoceptive hypersensitivity, being called a crybaby, and the shame that came with it
* What to do — practical tools including body check-ins, body awareness language, predictable schedules, and validating your child's physical experiences
* How all 8 cups interact with each other, and why a child can go from fine to completely dysregulated so quickly
* The school angle — why children with unidentified sensory needs are frequently mislabeled as defiant, and how understanding this makes you a more powerful advocate in every school meeting
* A note on microschools and co-ops as alternative environments worth exploring
The shift this series is meant to create:
No cup size is wrong. Your job is not to change your child's cup — it is to understand it. That understanding is what moves you from frustration to empathy, from confusion to confident advocacy. You stop being just the disciplinarian and start being the person who truly knows your child.
Resources mentioned:
* Full blog post with all 8 systems: raisingkidswithpurpose.com/sensory-processing-systems
* Free Sensory Profile Worksheet — fill it out for each of your kids: https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/h9m3f5 [https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/h9m3f5]
* Work with Adriane — coaching programs for parents who want personalized support, understanding and advocating for their child: www.raisingkidswithpurpose.com/chat [http://www.raisingkidswithpurpose.com/chat]
Missed the earlier episodes in this series:
* Episode 13 covers the foundation of sensory processing, the cup analogy, and the tactile, vestibular, and proprioceptive systems.
* Episode 14 covers the auditory, visual, olfactory, and gustatory systems — including a complete reframe on picky eating and why noise-sensitive children are often the loudest ones in the room.
A note before you go:
Take the reflection question from this episode seriously — which cup surprised you the most, and which one finally explains something about your child that has been confusing you? Then download the free Sensory Profile Worksheet and fill it out for each of your kids. That one exercise will change the way you see their behavior, possibly forever.
Thank you for spending this series with me. Sharing this podcast with another parent who needs it is one of the most meaningful things you can do — for their family and for mine.