The Holidays Are Coming⊠and So Is Chaos (Unless You Plan!)
Letâs talk about autism holiday routine tips: Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas are meant to be joyful, restful, even sacred.
But if youâre parenting a child on the autism spectrum, especially a Level 2 or Level 3, then you already know: holidays often bring the perfect storm of disruption.
I call it Autism Island Weather. đȘïž One minute it’s sunshine and visual schedules, the next, you’re elbow-deep in meltdown management.
Whether itâs Labor Dayâs long weekend, Thanksgivingâs full house, or Christmasâs gift-wrap sensory overload, here are three reasons holidays are hardâand how our CALM Framework keeps our home grounded. Looking for a better way? Visual Schedules reduce Chaos!
1. đïž Routine and Schedules? What Are Those?
Our kids thrive on structure. Jacob lives by his visual scheduleâand when holidays hit, that reliable rhythm? Out the window.
Just this past Labor Day weekend, things looked promising. Nicholas, everyoneâs favorite big brother, came home Saturday yay! But even good change is still change on Autism Island. We had it on the calendar. We talked it through. Jacob was ready.
But then I got sick. Sinus, allergies, migraineâthe whole trifecta. By Sunday, I was in bed, vomiting, texting my husband David to come home from work because I couldnât feed Jacob. Nicholas had to head back to Raleigh. The plan was off track.
The only thing that saved us? Everything else was in place.
- â Jacobâs work bags were ready for the week
- â His visual schedule was still visible
- â Favorite meals like pizza and burgers were already cooked
- â He could see what to expectâeven when I wasnât functioning
đĄ CALM Strategy â C: Consistent Action Forward
Even when the plan shifted, the structure didnât. We had consistently built routines he could fall back on. That consistency helped him navigate the weekend without falling apart even when I was.

2. đ€§ Someoneâs Always Sick (Usually Me)
If youâre a parent, you know this story: the minute you take time off for rest, your immune system collapses. For me, this long weekend meant a migraine from the underworld that knocked me flat.
And letâs be real: when youâre raising a child with autism, being sick isnât just inconvenient itâs dangerous to the delicate balance of your household.
Jacob was expecting Panera Bread on Sunday, like always. Thatâs our thing. Our outing. A marker in his routine. And when I didnât get out of bed, you could see the wheels turningâ“This is different.”
But he didnât panic. He didnât scream or melt down.
Why?
Because his schedule still had anchors. Panera didnât happenâbut burgers did. David heated up the food. The evening played out like the visual cues suggested.
đĄ CALM Strategy â L: Learn to Create Schedules
Years ago, missing Panera wouldâve sent us all into a spiral. But weâve learned to build schedules that donât rely on me being Supermom every second. That structureâvisual, repeatable, consistentâisnât just for Jacob. Itâs for me, too. It keeps all of us afloat.

3. đ Anticipation Doesnât Cancel Out Anxiety
Jacob adores Nicholas. He counted down the days to see his big brother. But excitement and anxiety walk hand-in-hand on Autism Island.
This is true for every holiday. Christmas might mean presents, but it also means wrapping paper, different food, visitors, noise, and surprises. Thanksgiving might mean pumpkin pie, but it also means smells, textures, unfamiliar faces, and overstimulation.
Even with the best of intentions, holiday joy can feel like chaos.
Jacob was happy Nicholas was coming, but he still needed:
- đ Prep talk after prep talk
- đ The calendar visual
- đŠ His safe snacks and routines intact
- đș A space where he could retreat if it got overwhelming
And guess what? He did amazing.
No meltdown. No shutdown. Just calmâeven when the plan had holes.
đĄ CALM Strategy â M: Mindset for You and Your Child
You have to shift the mindset: your child might look forward to the holiday, but they still need support to handle it. Just because they love their brother doesnât mean they can emotionally process all that change without help.
And you need grace, too. Itâs okay to mourn the perfect moment you imagined. We didnât get family movie night. I was asleep. But we got peaceâand sometimes thatâs the win worth celebrating. This too shall pass, how we changed our mindset on autism island!
đĄ What You Can Do Before the Next Holiday:
- â Build visual countdowns to holidays, starting several days out
- â Prep favorite meals or snacks earlyâyour childâs comfort food matters!
- â Keep some routines the same, even if others shift
- â Set realistic expectations for yourself and your family
- â Celebrate the small winsâa meltdown-free morning is a victory!
If youâre on Autism Island, just know youâre not alone.
Youâre not doing it wrong. The holidays are just hard. But you donât have to let them sink your ship. Here’s an article I found if you are new to autism, check back on my older blog posts too. https://www.merakilane.com/how-to-cope-9-parenting-tips-for-overwhelmed-autism-moms/
With the CALM Framework, even the biggest disruptions can be softened into manageable transitions. And the good news? Your child doesnât need perfect. They just need youâCALM, prepared, and present.