Oct 22

When Halloween feels a little too spooky: supporting neurodiverse children through the celebrations

Halloween can be fun, but for many neurodiverse children it can also bring sensory overload, sleep disruption, and emotional strain.

Here’s how your family can make it work and why keeping it simple matters.

Halloween seems to get bigger every year , more lights, louder decorations, and buckets of sweets. For many families, it’s a day of laughter and fancy dress. But for those of us raising neurodiverse children, Halloween can be more “tricky” than “treat”.

When the spooks come home 

For years, we avoided Halloween altogether.

Our child, with a busy ADHD brain and vivid imagination, struggled to switch off from all the spooky sights and sounds. The line between reality and fantasy blurred, and bedtime became a battle. It wasn’t just about fear, it was about the emotional exhaustion that lingered for days.

Even a Halloween costume could turn into weeks of bedtime anxiety. The sensory overload, the late nights, and the effects of sugar all added up to a full system meltdown.

The year of the skeleton ghost

I still remember one year when my mum turned up proudly with a Halloween decoration for the kids,  a spooky skeleton ghost. They were about six and four at the time. She expected gasps of delight. Instead, two sad little faces stared back. It terrified them and it meant that not much sleep was had by any of us that night! 

The next morning, it magically made its way to the charity shop! That’s the moment it really hit me,  our version of Halloween fun needed to look different for a while!

Understanding the why

Research shows that neurodiverse children often develop executive function skills about a third more slowly than their neurotypical peers.

That means a six-year-old might regulate emotions more like a four-year-old. When you add in excitement, costumes, sugar, and scary imagery, it’s easy to see why Halloween can overwhelm your child when others seem to cope fine.

While sugar itself isn’t proven to cause hyperactivity, it does affect sleep. A 2016 study published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine found that diets high in sugar are linked with lighter, more restless sleep. And sleep, as we know, is one of the foundations for Executive Functions, including emotional regulation and impulse control: key areas where neurodiverse children may already need extra support!

For many children the line between reality and fantasy are a little blurred anyway, but for some neurodiverse children, when night falls and they are left alone with their racing thoughts, vivid imaginations and questioning minds things can easily get out of hand for more than just one night. 

Our Halloween, our way

In the early years, we kept it simple.

No pumpkins on the doorstep. Lights off at the front. Autumn crafts at the kitchen table.

We made pumpkin-shaped sandwiches, had a “special tea”, and ended with a “disco bath” — glow sticks in the water and music playing. Our sparkler was stuck safely into a carrot. It was low-stress, but special and it worked.

Now that our child is older, we venture out for a short round of trick-or-treating. But we still set boundaries and expectations.

What helps us (and might help you)

If your child finds Halloween challenging, here are a few ideas that make it calmer:

Go early
Visit houses while it’s still light to give time to wind down afterwards.
Keep it short. Plan just a few.

Take 5
Our children choose 5 sweets to eat that night and the rest are saved for another day!

Talk to neighbours
Let them know if masks or jump scares might be difficult.

Code word
Have a code word or phrase that your child can say, without losing face in front of the peers that means, I’m done, I want to go home.

Plan for recovery
The next day might be tough, so keep plans flexible.

Create your own traditions
Swap trick-or-treating for a sweet treasure hunt at home or a themed movie night.

Sometimes, the most inclusive thing we can do is redefine what celebration looks like.

Finding the joy (even if you don’t love Halloween)

I’ll admit it: Halloween still isn’t my favourite. Give me Christmas any day.

At our school’s spooky disco, I went as the “anti-Halloween” mum, in a sequinned jumpsuit and light-up wings. My husband says if I went as a witch, it’d look like every other day. Cheeky, but probably fair.

And maybe that’s the point. You don’t have to follow the crowd.

For more on helping support your neurodiverse child, why not try the taster of our twigged Toolkit for ADHD for free today.
gee eltringham

The founder

I started twigged out of both personal urgency and professional insight.
As The Toolkit Therapist and parent to a neurodivergent child, I experienced first hand the overwhelm and isolation families often face after a diagnosis.
Frustrated by the lack of practical, empathetic support, I set out to create what I couldn’t find: simple, evidence-based tools that make everyday life easier.
Read more of the twigged blog and follow twigged on socials.

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