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Holiday Overload: 7 Therapist-Backed Tips to Keep Your Child Regulated This Season

The holiday season is full of joy, celebration, and family time — but for many kids, it can also be a season of overwhelm. Bigger crowds, louder settings, disrupted routines, travel, new foods, and lots of excitement can quickly lead to dysregulation, meltdowns, and stress.

And let’s be honest… It’s not just kids who feel it. The whole family feels it.

Our therapy team at Carolina Therapy Connection put together this helpful guide to support children (and parents!) in staying calm, connected, and regulated this holiday season.

These strategies come straight from our OT, PT, Speech, and Mental Wellness clinicians who help families navigate sensory overload, transitions, and big emotions every day.

1. Prep Your Child Before Events (Predictability = Peace)

Kids regulate best when they know what to expect.
Before you leave the house, try sharing:

  • Where are you going
  • Who will be there
  • How long you will stay
  • What activities will happen
  • What food will be served
  • What the expectations are

Consider showing pictures or using simple visuals for younger children. Social stories also come in handy! A few minutes of preparation can prevent an hour of overwhelm later.

2. Build in Sensory Breaks — Before They’re Needed

Holiday gatherings are full of bright lights, noises, smells, and excitement.
Plan “regulation moments” throughout the day:

  • A walk outside
  • Quiet room breaks
  • Heavy work activities (push/pull/lift)
  • Deep pressure squeezes
  • Vibration plate time before you leave (Galileo!)
  • Chewy snacks or crunchy foods
  • Noise-reducing headphones

Think of these as “prevention breaks” instead of “meltdown rescue missions.” Engaging in deep pressure and heavy work activities before you leave is a great way to prepare! 

3. Create a Safe Space at Home and When Traveling

Whether you’re visiting family or hosting, identify a calm corner or sensory safe space where your child can reset.

You can include:

  • A soft blanket
  • Books
  • Fidgets
  • A calming visual timer
  • Headphones
  • A small weighted item

Let your child know they can go there anytime they need a break — no shame, no punishment. 

4. Keep Nourishment & Sleep on Track (As Much as Possible)

Hunger and tiredness are the hidden triggers behind many holiday meltdowns.

Try to maintain:

  • Regular mealtimes
  • Snacks on hand
  • Earlier wind-down routines
  • Familiar sleep cues
  • Comfort objects

Even slight consistency can help the brain stay regulated.

5. Support Picky Eaters Without Pressure

Holiday meals can be overwhelming for kids with sensory or feeding challenges.
Try this:

  • Offer one safe food you know they’ll eat
  • Let them explore or smell new foods without expectations
  • Serve food “family style” so they can control what’s on their plate
  • Avoid “just try one bite” pressure
  • Model enjoying the food yourself

Positive exposure now leads to expanded eating later.

6. Give Choices to Reduce Anxiety & Build Independence

When kids feel overwhelmed, they often feel out of control.
Offer choices like:

  • “Do you want to sit at the kids’ table or the couch?”
  • “Do you want to stay 30 more minutes or 15?”
  • “Do you want to bring your backpack or your fidget bag?”

This promotes buy-in and lowers power struggles.

7. Remember: Connection Regulates More Than Anything

Your presence is your child’s anchor.
When things feel “too big,” your calm becomes their calm.

Try:

  • Getting to eye level
  • Using a soft voice
  • Offering a hug
  • Naming their feelings
  • Taking deep breaths together

Kids don’t need a perfect holiday — they need a connected one!

Our therapists created a FREE resource to help your family stay calm and regulated during the holiday season. Download it below!

Download the Holiday Checklist

Final Thoughts

At CTC, we believe every child deserves to enjoy the magic of the holidays. With the right tools, support, and strategies, families can create joyful moments that feel peaceful, regulated, and full of connection.

If your child struggles with sensory overload, emotional regulation, feeding challenges, motor delays, or communication needs, our team is here to help!

All CTC clinics currently have NO WAITLIST — Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Speech Language Therapy, Feeding, Mental Wellness Counseling, Tutoring.

You can request an appointment anytime!

Picky Eating or Something More? Signs Your Child Needs Feeding Support

Does your child avoid certain foods, gag at new textures, or flat-out refuse entire food groups? Mealtimes shouldn’t feel like a battle, but for parents of picky eaters, it can be one of the most stressful parts of the day. Pediatric occupational therapy can help transform mealtime from a struggle into a positive experience by addressing the root cause of your child’s food aversions.

What Is a Picky Eater?

Picky eating is more than just being “a little particular.” It can include avoiding specific textures, colors, smells, or temperatures of foods, often resulting in a restricted diet. While some pickiness is typical during development, extreme food avoidance or distress around eating may signal an underlying sensory or developmental challenge.

Children may be labeled “picky” when they:

  • Eat fewer than 20 foods
  • Refuse entire food groups (like fruits or vegetables)
  • Struggle with food textures or strong smells
  • Experience anxiety or meltdowns at mealtimes
  • Have difficulty chewing or swallowing certain foods

Why Occupational Therapy for Picky Eaters?

Pediatric occupational therapists (OTs) are trained to look beyond eating behaviors and uncover the “why” behind picky eating. Often, it’s tied to sensory processing difficulties, oral motor challenges, or poor postural control that makes eating physically uncomfortable.

Sensory Processing and Feeding

Children who are sensitive to textures, smells, or temperatures may experience a sensory overload when introduced to new foods. For example, a soft banana might feel “mushy” and unpleasant, or the smell of broccoli might feel overwhelming.

OTs help children explore these sensitivities in a supportive environment through sensory integration therapy. They work to slowly and safely desensitize kids to new sensations so that food becomes less threatening.

Oral Motor and Postural Skills

Eating also requires strong oral motor and postural control. Children with weak jaw muscles, poor tongue coordination, or low muscle tone may find chewing difficult or exhausting, which can make food less enjoyable. OTs support these underlying motor skills to help children feel more confident and capable during meals.

Red Flags That May Indicate a Need for Help

If your child’s picky eating is affecting growth, nutrition, or daily routines, it might be time to speak with a professional. Some red flags include:

  • Difficulty transitioning to solid foods
  • Coughing, gagging, or vomiting during meals
  • Eating the same foods every day without variation
  • Poor weight gain or slow growth
  • Avoiding social situations involving food

Strategies OTs Use with Picky Eaters

Occupational therapy doesn’t just take place at the clinic—it empowers families with practical strategies to use at home. Here are a few common approaches used by OTs:

  • Food Chaining: This method helps children transition from preferred foods to new foods by making small, manageable changes. For example, moving from plain crackers to whole wheat crackers, then to toasted bread.
  • Play-Based Exposure: Children explore new foods through play and sensory activities—touching, smelling, and eventually tasting foods at their own pace. Removing pressure and expectations allows kids to feel safe and curious.
  • Positive Mealtime Routines: Therapists help families create consistent routines and eliminate everyday power struggles during meals. This might include visual schedules, timer-based meal times, or family-style dining to model good behavior.
  • Environmental Modifications: Simple changes, such as adjusting seating posture, minimizing distractions, or using adaptive utensils, can make a significant difference in a child’s willingness to participate in meals.

How Carolina Therapy Connection Can Help

At Carolina Therapy Connection, we understand how frustrating and emotional it can be to raise a child who struggles with eating. Our pediatric occupational therapists specialize in identifying the underlying causes of picky eating and providing customized strategies that make a real difference.

Whether your child needs support with sensory processing, oral motor skills, or building positive routines, we are here to help. We offer free screenings to determine if your child would benefit from therapy, and we can schedule a comprehensive feeding evaluation to get started. Let us help turn mealtime into a time of connection, not conflict.