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  • Sensory-Friendly Strategies for Autism: Enjoy a Calm, Joyful Easter Holiday!

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    #EasterWithAutism

    If you’ve ever watched your autistic child melt down during an Easter egg hunt — the noise, the chaos, the pressure to perform — you already know that holidays don’t come with an autism-friendly instruction manual.

    You’re not alone. And you’re not doing it wrong.

    When Jacob was younger, Easter looked a lot less like a Hallmark movie and a lot more like survival mode. Too many people, too much noise, too many expectations that nobody had thought to prepare him for. I loved the holiday. He dreaded it. And that gap broke my heart every single spring. Unlocking the Easter Joy: A Guide to Teaching Children with Autism about Easter

    What changed everything wasn’t a bigger Easter basket or a better egg hunt location. It was preparation. Simple, visual, consistent preparation. Once I started building the holiday toward Jacob instead of dragging him into it, Easter became something he actually looked forward to.

    In this post, I’m sharing the exact strategies our family uses — rooted in my background as a special education teacher and refined through years of real life on what I call Autism Island. Whether you’re brand new to autism parenting or just looking for fresh ideas, these Easter strategies for autistic children can help your family exhale a little this season.

    Why Easter Can Be Hard for Autistic Children (And Why That’s Not a Character Flaw)

    Before we get to the how, it helps to understand the why. Easter is a holiday loaded with sensory and social demands that can genuinely overwhelm an autistic child:

    • Unexpected schedule changes from a typical routine
    • Noisy, crowded gatherings with extended family
    • Unfamiliar foods, textures, and smells
    • Abstract concepts (resurrection, new life) that are hard to make concrete
    • Social pressure to perform — hug people, say thank you, act excited
    • Sensory overload from scratchy Easter outfits, bright decorations, or loud environments

    None of these things mean your child is broken or that your family is failing. They mean your child’s nervous system is working exactly as it was wired, and your job is to build a bridge — not bulldoze a path.

    “The strategies that made Easter possible for Jacob weren’t complicated. They were just intentional.”

    Step 1: Build a Visual Schedule for Easter Morning

    Visual schedules are the single most effective tool I’ve used with Jacob — both as his mom and as a special education teacher. For autistic children, uncertainty is often more distressing than the actual event. A visual schedule removes the uncertainty.

    For Easter specifically, I recommend creating a simple, picture-based schedule that covers the entire day from wake-up to bedtime. Here’s what Jacob’s Easter schedule has looked like:

    • Wake up
    • Eat breakfast (familiar foods first)
    • Get dressed
    • Easter basket time at home
    • Egg hunt (with a visual showing where we’re going)
    • Family gathering (show whose house, how many people)
    • Quiet break
    • Dinner
    • Home and wind-down routine

    The key is predictability. Your child doesn’t need every surprise removed from Easter — they need to know the shape of the day so their brain can stop bracing for impact.

    If you’re not sure where to start with visual schedules, my free Visual Schedule Starter Kit walks you through exactly how to build one, even if you have zero design experience. You can grab it at the link below.

    Step 2: Use a Social Story to Prepare Your Child Before Easter Arrives

    A social story is a short, simple, first-person narrative that walks your child through what’s going to happen and what’s expected of them. Carol Gray developed this approach specifically for autistic children, and it’s been a cornerstone of our Easter prep for years.

    Your Easter social story might cover:

    • What Easter is and why your family celebrates it
    • What an egg hunt looks like and how it works
    • Who will be at the family gathering and what the house will look like
    • What your child can do if they feel overwhelmed
    • What a successful Easter day looks like for your family

    Start reading the story 3–5 days before Easter, not just the morning of. Repetition is what makes social stories work. By the time Easter arrives, your child’s brain has already rehearsed the day.

    For families who celebrate the religious meaning of Easter, books like Max Lucado’s The Easter Story for Children can help make abstract theological concepts more concrete and age-appropriate.

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    Use social stories, video and visual schedules to prepare!

    Step 3: Adapt the Egg Hunt to Actually Work for Your Child

    The traditional Easter egg hunt is chaos by design — kids scrambling, adults cheering, everyone moving fast. For many autistic children, this is a sensory nightmare dressed up in pastels.

    Here’s how to adapt the egg hunt so your child can actually participate and enjoy it:

    Modify the Environment

    • Choose a familiar location (your own backyard is gold)
    • Hunt with just your immediate family before any larger gathering
    • Set clear physical boundaries for where eggs are hidden
    • Reduce noise by keeping the group small

    Modify the Hunt Itself

    • Use color-coded eggs so your child knows which ones are “theirs”
    • Try a “reverse egg hunt” where your child hides eggs instead of finding them
    • Offer eggs with different sensory elements (textured, light-up, ones that make sounds)
    • Give your child a visual showing how many eggs they’re looking for and where to start

    Fill the Basket with Purpose

    Jacob’s Easter basket has never looked like a Pinterest board. It looks like Jacob. Fidget tools, sensory items, and a few of his favorite snacks alongside any traditional treats. That simple shift from “traditional Easter basket” to “Jacob’s Easter basket” helped him feel seen. That’s the whole goal.

    Step 4: Set Your Family Gathering Up for Success

    Extended family gatherings are often where Easter goes sideways for autistic children. And honestly? For autism parents, too.

    Here’s what has helped our family navigate Easter with extended family:

    • Communicate ahead of time.
    • Designate a quiet space.
    • Set a time limit and stick to it.
    • Have an exit plan.
    • Bring familiar foods.

    Let me say a little more about each:

    Communicate ahead of time. A brief, kind heads-up to family members — “Here’s what helps Jacob thrive at gatherings” — goes a long way. You don’t need to write a dissertation. Just the basics.

    Designate a quiet space. When we arrive somewhere new, the first thing I do is find or create a low-stimulation space where Jacob can retreat if he needs to decompress. A bedroom with the door cracked, a corner with headphones — whatever the space allows.

    Set a time limit and stick to it. Promising your child you’ll leave by 3pm means nothing if you stay until 6. Honor what you said. This builds trust.

    Have an exit plan. Agree on a word or signal with your child that means “we’re leaving soon.” This gives them agency and reduces the panic of unexpected transitions.

    Bring familiar foods. Holiday meals are full of unfamiliar textures and smells. Pack one or two foods you know your child will eat so they’re never stranded without a safe option.

    Step 5: Make the Religious Meaning of Easter Accessible

    For those of us who celebrate Easter as a faith holiday, finding ways to make the meaning of the resurrection accessible to our kids is important. And it’s possible — it just takes a little creativity.

    What has worked for our family:

    • Using concrete objects to represent parts of the Easter story (a stone, a cloth, flowers)
    • A Lent calendar or visual wreath to track the journey leading up to Easter
    • Age-appropriate books with illustrations that anchor abstract concepts
    • Short video resources made specifically for children with different learning styles
    • Simply telling the story in plain, direct language without pressure to “get it all” right now

    Jacob’s understanding of Easter has grown over many seasons. There is no deadline. God’s faithfulness doesn’t hinge on how quickly our children can articulate theological concepts. We plant seeds and trust the process.

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    Parenting autism without chaos!

    The CALM Framework: How We Navigate Every Holiday, Including Easter

    Everything I’ve shared above lives inside the framework I use with every holiday and every new challenge we face as an autism family. I call it the CALM Framework:

    C — Consistent Action Forward. Small, steady steps every day. You don’t have to overhaul everything before Easter arrives. Pick one strategy and start there.

    A — Always Celebrate Wins. Your child wore the Easter outfit without a meltdown? That’s a win. They tried one new food? Win. They made it to the egg hunt? Win. We celebrate what actually happened, not what we wished had happened.

    L — Learning to Create Schedules. Visual schedules aren’t just an autism tool — they’re a communication bridge. They say to your child: I thought about you. I planned for you. You are safe here.

    M — Mindset. You are not behind. You are not failing. You are learning how to love your child well in a world that wasn’t designed for them. That is not small. That is everything. 4 ways overwhelmed autism parents can move from chaos to CALM! Autism Family Life

    One More Thing Before You Go

    Easter doesn’t have to be perfect to be meaningful. It doesn’t have to look like anyone else’s Easter photos. It just has to be yours — thoughtfully shaped around the real child in front of you.

    I’ve spent years figuring out what that looks like for Jacob, and I want to help you figure out what it looks like for your child. That’s the whole reason Educating Jacob exists.

    If you’re not sure where to start, grab the free Visual Schedule Starter Kit. It’s the foundation of everything else, and it takes less than an afternoon to put into practice.

    And if you’re looking for a community of parents who actually get it — the exhaustion, the grief, the stubborn hope — the Autism Thrive Tribe is your people. Come find us.

    Because every child deserves to learn. And every parent deserves to hope.

    Wishing your family a peaceful, chaos-free Easter. — Melissa

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