Stimming: Why We Do It and Why It's Helpful | NeuroDiversion

Stimming: Why We Do It and Why It's Helpful

Reflective prompt

What does your body do first when it needs to calm down or wake up?

That pattern is often a stim, and it's usually a regulation signal rather than a behavior problem.

Quick start guide

  • If you're overstimulated, lower sensory load and pick a low-effort stim like rocking.
  • If you're under-stimulated, add safe rhythmic input like walking, bouncing, or chewing gum.
  • If a stim is painful or risky, swap it for a safer option with a similar sensory feel.
  • If you're worried about social reactions, build a small list of public stims.
  • If someone criticizes stimming, try: "This helps me focus and regulate."

Introduction

"I rock when I'm tired, bounce when I'm excited, and tap my fingers when I need to think. It's not random. It's how my brain finds balance."

If you've ever bounced your leg, chewed a pen, or replayed the same song on repeat, you already understand the basic idea of stimming. Stimming is short for self-stimulatory behavior. It's the brain's way of regulating energy, attention, emotion, and sensory input. For many neurodivergent people, stimming isn't a quirky side habit. It's a core self-regulation tool.

This guide is a practical explanation of types of stimming, why stimming happens, when it help, and how to support it without shame or suppression. If you're new to the concept or trying to explain it to someone else, you're in the right place.

At a glance

  • What it is: repetitive actions that regulate the nervous system
  • Why it helps: balances sensory input, emotion, and attention
  • Key goal: keep stims safe and supported
  • When to adjust: if pain, injury, or daily functioning are affected

What stimming is

Stimming is repetitive movement, sound, or action that helps the nervous system regulate. It can be subtle or obvious, physical or vocal, calming or joyful. In clinical language, stimming can be described as stereotyped or repetitive motor movements or speech, which is part of the restricted and repetitive behaviors category in autism criteria.12

That doesn't mean stimming is bad. It means it's common and meaningful in autistic neurology. If you were taught to stop stimming, the goal now is to make it safe, supported, and sustainable.

This short explainer from "Autism And Me" gives a clear, beginner-friendly overview of what stimming can look like day to day.

Types of stimming

You don't need to memorize categories. The point is to notice what kind of input your body is seeking, then choose a safe, accessible version of it.

Motor stimming

Hand flapping, rocking, pacing, toe tapping, or leg bouncing.

Tactile stimming

Rubbing fabric, squeezing putty, tracing textures, or skin rubbing.

Oral stimming

Chewing gum, biting nails, crunching ice, or sucking on candy.

Auditory stimming

Humming, clicking a pen, repeating sounds, or replaying songs.

Visual stimming

Watching light patterns, spinning objects, or scrolling for movement.

Vestibular and proprioceptive

Spinning, swinging, heavy lifting, or using a weighted blanket.

Why stimming happens

Stimming is the body's regulation tool. It helps you control sensory input, regulate emotion, and tune attention. In autism, restricted and repetitive behaviors are a core feature and repetitive movements are explicitly listed in diagnostic criteria.12 Research reviews describe these behaviors as a major part of the autistic profile, not a side detail.3

Think of it like a radio dial. Some days the signal is too loud and stimming helps filter and soothe. Other days the signal is too quiet and stimming brings in enough input to focus. The same action can serve different goals depending on what your system needs that day.

When it helps (and when it gets in the way)

Most stimming is helpful. It supports regulation, focus, and emotional stability. It becomes a problem when it causes injury, blocks daily functioning, or triggers social conflict you can't avoid. If any of those are true, the goal is to reshape the stim so you keep the regulation without the downside.

Stimming also changes across seasons of life. A stim that worked in college might feel irritating at 35. If something stops helping, it doesn't mean you failed. It means your body is asking for different input.

Practical strategies

Treat these as a menu, not a prescription. Pick one or two and try them for a week.

  • Build a short list of safe stims so you can pick quickly when you're dysregulated.
  • Create public vs private options to stay flexible without hiding your needs.
  • Match the sensory need, not the exact movement.
  • Use stimming as a reset between tasks and after overload hits.
  • Pre-load tools for high-load environments like airports or crowded stores.

If stimming spikes during emotional overload, pair this guide with Rejection Sensitivity Dysphoria (RSD) for regulation patterns that calm the surge.

This perspective from autistic educator Amythest Schaber adds practical language you can use when you need to explain stimming to other people.

What not to do

  • Shaming or punishing stimming.
  • Removing a stim without offering a safer replacement.
  • Forcing eye contact or stillness as a measure of compliance.
  • Assuming stimming is attention-seeking.
  • Treating all stims the same when safety needs are different.

When to seek professional help

Support can help when stimming causes injury, makes sleep or focus impossible, or ramps up suddenly with no clear trigger. Occupational therapists can build sensory regulation plans, neuro-affirming therapists can support anxiety and emotion regulation, and behavioral specialists can focus on safety without erasing autonomy.

If you look for professional support, ask how they view stimming. You want someone who sees it as regulation first, not a problem to erase.

Long-term management

Long-term support is about building a life where regulation is normal, not hidden. Keep stim tools visible at home, build stim breaks into routines, and normalize sensory supports like headphones or sunglasses. Advocate for accommodations that make regulation possible at work or school.

Keep your joy stims. Bouncing, singing, or spinning can be pure happiness. Those stims are also a form of resilience.

Conclusion

Stimming is a language your nervous system already speaks. It's how you manage sensory input, emotion, and attention. For many neurodivergent people, it's also a source of comfort and joy. The goal isn't to stop stimming. The goal is to make it safe, supported, and understood.

Explore more NeuroDiversion guides

If this helped, you'll find more practical support and community resources in our learning hub.

References

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Clinical Testing and Diagnosis for Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD).
  2. Hyman SL, Levy SE, Myers SM, et al. Identification, Evaluation, and Management of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder. Pediatrics. 2020;145(1):e20193447.
  3. Leekam SR, Prior MR, Uljarevic M. Restricted and repetitive behaviors in autism spectrum disorders: a review of research in the last decade. Psychological Bulletin. 2011;137(4):562-593.

This article is for educational purposes only and does not replace medical advice. If you're concerned about safety, self-harm, or sudden changes in behavior, consult a qualified health professional.

Last updated: February 24, 2026

Questions & Adventure

After two successful events, we're confident there's nothing else quite like NeuroDiversion. Other events focus on clinical education or academic research—we're built around community, lived experience, and the joy of being around people who just get it.

We'll be using multiple venues in Austin for ND27, including Fair Market—a beautiful event space in East Austin close to many restaurants and hotels. It's 15 minutes from the airport and you won't need a car unless you choose to stay farther away.

Not just before, but also during and after! At least a few weeks before the event, you'll have access to an app that allows you to browse attendee interests and make initial connections.

Once the big week arrives, programming details will be added, so you can choose which activities to attend and easily make new friends.

(We think you'll like the app, but if you prefer to opt out of being listed in it, you can do that too.)

ND27 ticket pricing will be announced later this year. Join the waitlist to be notified when registration opens.

NeuroDiversion is hosted by Chris Guillebeau, bestselling author and founder of the World Domination Summit, an annual event in Portland, Oregon that brought together thousands of people for a decade.

The planning team has years of experience producing WDS and other events.

Almost everyone on the planning team has personal experience with ADHD, ASD, or another neurodivergent type—we didn't come to this idea out of academic interest.

That means we design the event differently. Sensory sensitivities are taken seriously. You'll find quiet spaces, clear signage, and a flexible schedule that lets you step away whenever you need to. Talks are short. Breaks are real. Nothing is mandatory.

This is a gathering of people who understand social challenges firsthand—you can be as passive or active as feels right to you.

Think of our schedule as a flexible framework. Each day has anchor points (two sessions where everyone comes together) that provide rhythm, but what happens between those points is up to you.

Want to attend every scheduled breakout or workshop? Great! Need to skip something for alone time or an impromptu conversation? Also great! We'll use a simple app to help you track what's happening when, but you're never locked into anything.

We design every NeuroDiversion event with overwhelm in mind. You'll find quiet spaces throughout the venue where you can decompress whenever needed. The schedule includes natural breaks between sessions, but you're always free to step away for extra time if you need it.

No explanation necessary—we get it. We'll clearly mark the quieter areas of the venue so you can easily find a spot to reset.

For ND27, we'll be working with hotel partners close to the main venue. We'll share discount booking codes with attendees at least three months in advance of the event.

Older kids and teens, definitely! And not just attend—they can also participate. There will likely be a few sessions that are appropriate only for adults, but the great majority of programming will be family-friendly.


Absolutely—and you won't be alone in feeling this way. We're creating multiple paths for connection that don't require traditional networking. You might enjoy joining a meetup where the focus is on doing rather than talking, or you might prefer to observe from the sidelines.

This is a gathering of people who understand social challenges firsthand, so you can be as passive or active as feels right to you.

You can do that if that's all you can get away for, but there's only one ticket option. You'll enjoy the experience much more if you stay for the whole three days, like most attendees.

Yes! We offer a package of continuing education (CE) credits for clinicians in attendance. Details and pricing for ND27 will be announced with registration.

Possibly! Many employers support personal development opportunities like NeuroDiversion, and some of our attendees have already had success getting their costs covered.

Your company and organization may already have a process for this, but in case it's helpful, we've made an employer letter template you can use to support the request. Be sure to copy the template into a new document so you can customize it with your details before submitting. :)


Maybe! But first, note that we're doing everything possible to keep costs low while putting together an exceptional experience. Most of our team are volunteering their time and labor, including our founder and all speakers, and we rely on ticket sales to fund the experience.

That said, we do want to provide a few scholarships to help those who wouldn't otherwise be able to attend. Fill out this form if that might be you.

We'll open applications for ND27 community programming later this year. Join the waitlist and we'll let you know when submissions open.

How rude of us! But we'll fix that: send us an email at team@neurodiversion.org

Sound Interesting?

Join the list to be the first to hear about ticket sales!

© 2025-2026 All rights reserved.