<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><!-- generator=Zoho Sites --><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><atom:link href="https://www.sovran-solutions.com/blogs/Self-Regulation-Limits/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title>SOVRAN - Blog , Self-Regulation Limits</title><description>SOVRAN - Blog , Self-Regulation Limits</description><link>https://www.sovran-solutions.com/blogs/Self-Regulation-Limits</link><lastBuildDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 10:59:06 -0700</lastBuildDate><generator>http://zoho.com/sites/</generator><item><title><![CDATA[When Hunger Feels Like Threat: The Interoceptive Pattern Beneath Disordered Eating  ]]></title><link>https://www.sovran-solutions.com/blogs/post/when-hunger-feels-like-threat-the-interoceptive-pattern-beneath-disordered-eating</link><description><![CDATA[ The first distortion in disordered eating is ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_FXnY2_YyQn-yU9IqmkHOfA" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_ToRmxOVOROSRcdud6p7kxQ" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_7VD_fSuKSSmsi77qlhhi_w" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_QCsIpwqxAcNflbr1yulglg" data-element-type="imagetext" class="zpelement zpelem-imagetext "><style> @media (min-width: 992px) { [data-element-id="elm_QCsIpwqxAcNflbr1yulglg"] .zpimagetext-container figure img { width: 500px ; height: 398.40px ; } } @media (max-width: 991px) and (min-width: 768px) { [data-element-id="elm_QCsIpwqxAcNflbr1yulglg"] .zpimagetext-container figure img { width:500px ; height:749.77px ; } } @media (max-width: 767px) { [data-element-id="elm_QCsIpwqxAcNflbr1yulglg"] .zpimagetext-container figure img { width:500px ; height:749.77px ; } } [data-element-id="elm_QCsIpwqxAcNflbr1yulglg"].zpelem-imagetext .zpimage-text, [data-element-id="elm_QCsIpwqxAcNflbr1yulglg"].zpelem-imagetext .zpimage-text :is(h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6){ font-size:16px; line-height:28px; } </style><div data-size-tablet="" data-size-mobile="" data-align="left" data-tablet-image-separate="false" data-mobile-image-separate="false" class="zpimagetext-container zpimage-with-text-container zpimage-align-left zpimage-tablet-align-center zpimage-mobile-align-center zpimage-size-medium zpimage-tablet-fallback-medium zpimage-mobile-fallback-medium hb-lightbox " data-lightbox-options="
            type:fullscreen,
            theme:dark"><figure role="none" class="zpimage-data-ref"><span class="zpimage-anchor" role="link" tabindex="0" aria-label="Open Lightbox" style="cursor:pointer;"><picture><img class="zpimage zpimage-style-none zpimage-space-none " src="/Screenshot%202026-05-10%20at%208.03.22%E2%80%AFPM.png" width="500" height="749.77" loading="lazy" size="medium" data-lightbox="true"/></picture></span></figure><div class="zpimage-text zpimage-text-align-left zpimage-text-align-mobile-left zpimage-text-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p></p><p></p><div><p></p><p><span style="font-size:24px;"><strong>The first distortion in disordered eating is not body image. It is interoceptive trust.</strong></span></p><p><br/></p><p><span style="font-size:18px;">Long before hunger and fullness become confused, emotion has been denied, corrected, or made unsafe. The person learns to mistrust fear, sadness, anger, and hurt, giving rise to shame, rejection, powerlessness, abandonment, and humiliation. From there, beliefs erode into self-blame; self-blame hardens into core belief wounds, and the body becomes unsafe.</span></p><p><span style="font-size:18px;"><br/></span></p><span style="font-size:18px;">For these reasons, disordered eating cannot be fully understood as a food problem, a body image problem, or a control problem. Those are expressions of a deeper sequence. The pattern begins when natural emotional responses are denied, corrected, shamed, attacked, or often interrupted enough that the person loses accuracy about what they feel.</span></div>
<div><span style="font-size:18px;"><br/></span></div><p></p><p></p><p></p><div><span><span style="font-size:18px;"><span>This is </span><span style="font-weight:700;">interoceptive pattern corruption</span><span>: learned disruption in a person’s ability to accurately trust, interpret, and respond to internal experience.</span></span><br/></span></div>
</div><p></p></div></div></div><div data-element-id="elm_04zviS7EQd2GtxS174QX5g" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p style="text-align:left;"><span><span>For example, a child feels hurt and hears, &quot;that was not so bad.&quot; A child feels sad and is told, &quot;stop crying,&quot; or &quot;stop acting like a baby.&quot; A child feels angry and hears, &quot;that should not make you mad.&quot; A child feels afraid and hears, &quot;there is nothing to be afraid of.&quot; A child feels confused, humiliated, excluded, or misunderstood and receives something more direct: &quot;something is wrong with you.&quot; &quot;You are stupid.&quot; &quot;You are weak.&quot; &quot;You are bad.&quot;</span></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><span></span></span></p><div style="text-align:left;"><span>The injury goes deeper than emotions. It has interoceptive connections.</span></div><br/><p></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_9FbMlQGW_gzQ2UzG9DxR7g" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>The person learns that internal signals cannot be trusted. Feeling becomes something to translate, justify, suppress, or hide. The nervous system does not simply register emotion. It learns to suppress the legitimacy of emotion before the person can respond to it.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_tlSkOnXxW4iK71H9UouFSw" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p><span>Logic corrupts next. The person makes conclusions that fit their understanding, often at a young age when insight is limited. Over time, corrupted logic becomes corrupted core beliefs: I am not good enough. I am unworthy. I am too much. I am wrong. I am a bad person. Something is wrong with me. Once this sequence is established, the body is no longer neutral. It becomes evidence. Evidence of failure, weakness, disgust, danger, or loss of control.</span></p><p><span><br/></span></p><span>For people with disordered eating, emotion is misread first. Body sensation follows.&nbsp;</span></div><p></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_t054lwnpqMW8THUpAImwJA" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>Hunger and fullness become interpreted through the same corrupted pattern. Hunger may not feel like a signal to eat. It may feel like a threat, weakness, exposure, need, loss of control, or proof that the body cannot be trusted. It may become a tool to inflict self-pain. Fullness may not feel like fullness. It may feel like disgust. Shame. Panic.&nbsp;</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_tgJjyc2Uf7aOyuof8F-iPw" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>The research on interoception gives us precise language for this. Interoception is the nervous system’s process for sensing, interpreting, and predicting internal body states, including hunger, fullness, pain, tension, heartbeat, fatigue, nausea, and emotions.[1] It is not passive body awareness. Predictive models of interoception describe the brain as actively anticipating and interpreting internal signals before conscious response. [2, 3] Eating disorder research has identified interoceptive disruption as part of the clinical picture. A systematic review found interoceptive deficits across multiple forms of disordered eating, suggesting interoception may function as a transdiagnostic feature. [4] Other studies and reviews describe altered gastrointestinal interoception, disrupted body-signal processing, altered satiation, aversive interoceptive anticipation, and altered interoceptive-self processing in anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating, and broader disordered eating patterns. [5, 6, 7, 8, 9]</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_tSmATMSlCWp37rTZvOt-VA" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-style-none zpheading-align-left zpheading-align-mobile-left zpheading-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><span style="font-size:24px;"><span><span style="font-weight:700;">The Sequence Beneath Interoceptive Disruption</span></span></span></h2></div>
<div data-element-id="elm_kUylyw-2aD7kOJZInY4y_A" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>Interoceptive inaccuracy develops after interoceptive pattern corruption. When emotional experience is corrected often enough, the person stops trusting what they feel. When the body carries emotion, the accompanying sensations become suspect. As this happens, hunger and fullness are pulled into the same corrupted interpretive system. This is where traditional approaches can stall.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_DzxKQ8cKZOV64BAMl_dA7g" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>A person may understand nutrition. They may understand their diagnosis, trauma history, family system, perfectionism, shame, anxiety, and behavior plan. They are likely intelligent and deeply self-aware. Even motivation and compliance don't guarantee accurate access and interpretation of internal signals.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_osf2HNKKzG-7G44C7T6RSQ" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>Insight can help a person recognize their patterns. It does not however, recalibrate the patterns. Skills help survive the moment. Behavioral plans may reduce immediate danger. Therapy may help with insight about what happened and why it hurt. These matter. But they do not always reach the sequence beneath the behavior.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_-4s2SfL9vfiLpcAI9kFCZw" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>One client lived with disordered eating for more than 15 years. It was complicated by autism, major depression, OCD, skin picking, and insecure attachment. Medication, therapy, residential care, and sustained effort had all been tried, yet symptoms persisted and gradually worsened. When the approach shifted to interoceptive pattern recalibration, patterns beneath the behavior could be targeted: emotional misreading, interoception patterns, core belief corruption, and relationship safety. Within four months, the client was able to discontinue medication and therapy, with clinical oversight, and remained free of the desire to restrict food despite major life stressors. After 40 sessions, the client discontinued interoceptive pattern recalibration training and remained stable, connected, and resilient.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_0WgbGDt1EORRpMC_io9xKQ" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>While remarkable, this case is not the argument. The sequence is. The progress matters because it shows what becomes possible when the target is more accurate. If disordered eating is treated only at the level of food behavior and insight, the deeper patterns can remain active. If it is treated only as distorted body image, the emotional and interoceptive distortions can remain unaddressed. If it is treated only as anxiety, depression, OCD, autism-related rigidity, or attachment insecurity, the behavior may shift while the vulnerabilities driving these symptoms remain intact and ready to reactivate with the next stressor.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_AUmrTd99PSKj4Rl3vcowqw" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>The patterns become the source of suffering because the person has lost trust in what internal experience means. Food becomes available because it is immediate, measurable, controllable, punishable, perfectible, private, and public at the same time. Restriction can create the illusion of control. Bingeing can interrupt intolerable emotion. Purging can attempt to erase panic. Body checking can try to resolve uncertainty. Avoidance can protect against exposure. Skin picking can discharge distress. The sequence tightens. The person becomes more vigilant, more inwardly focused, more ashamed, and more dependent on control.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_zp-wA6uQ7tresn7yUoDeoQ" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>This is why resolving disordered eating requires more than skills, behavioral plans, and insight. The visible behavior matters. Safety matters. Nutrition matters. Medical care matters. But the deeper sequence must also be addressed. Emotional signals must become trustworthy again. Body sensation has to lose its threat authority. Hunger and fullness have to return to information. Responsibility has to separate from self-blame. Core belief corruption has to lose its orienting influence. The person has to regain a safe relationship with their internal experience and beliefs about themselves for improvements to hold.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_JMg3V8jqfKtNmjvbUcaVPg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p></p><p><strong style="font-family:Poppins, sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:16px;font-weight:500;">Disordered eating follows a predictable sequence. Eating behaviors are where the patterns become visible. Interoception is where the pattern can be understood. Recalibration is where the sequence can be interrupted.</span></strong></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_H-WhF9JiQkn54giuahUsFw" data-element-type="spacer" class="zpelement zpelem-spacer "><style> div[data-element-id="elm_H-WhF9JiQkn54giuahUsFw"] div.zpspacer { height:30px; } @media (max-width: 768px) { div[data-element-id="elm_H-WhF9JiQkn54giuahUsFw"] div.zpspacer { height:calc(30px / 3); } } </style><div class="zpspacer " data-height="30"></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_W_kPcbwOjDnoYWS-qE282Q" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p><span style="font-weight:700;">References</span></p><ol><li><p><a href="https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6054486/"><span>Khalsa SS, Adolphs R, Cameron OG, Critchley HD, Davenport PW, Feinstein JS, Feusner JD, Garfinkel SN, Lane RD, Mehling WE, Meuret AE, Nemeroff CB, Oppenheimer S, Petzschner FH, Pollatos O, Rhudy JL, Schramm LP, Simmons WK, Stein MB, Stephan KE, Van den Bergh O, Van Diest I, von Leupoldt A, Paulus MP; Interoception Summit 2016 participants. Interoception and Mental Health: A Roadmap. Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2018 Jun;3(6):501-513. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2017.12.004. Epub 2017 Dec 28. PMID: 29884281; PMCID: PMC6054486.</span></a><span>&nbsp;</span></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26016744/"><span>Barrett LF, Simmons WK. Interoceptive predictions in the brain. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2015 Jul;16(7):419-29. doi: 10.1038/nrn3950. Epub 2015 May 28. PMID: 26016744; PMCID: PMC4731102.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28080966/"><span>Seth AK, Friston KJ. Active interoceptive inference and the emotional brain. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2016 Nov 19;371(1708):20160007. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0007. Epub 2016 Oct 10. PMID: 28080966; PMCID: PMC5062097.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31454626/"><span>Martin E, Dourish CT, Rotshtein P, Spetter MS, Higgs S. Interoception and disordered eating: A systematic review. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2019 Dec;107:166-191. doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2019.08.020. Epub 2019 Aug 24. PMID: 31454626.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35061138/"><span>Khalsa, Berner &amp; Anderson, 2022. “Gastrointestinal Interoception in Eating Disorders.”</span><br/><span>Khalsa SS, Berner LA, Anderson LM. Gastrointestinal Interoception in Eating Disorders: Charting a New Path. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2022 Jan;24(1):47-60. doi: 10.1007/s11920-022-01318-3. Epub 2022 Jan 21. PMID: 35061138; PMCID: PMC8898253.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36355249/"><span>Lucherini Angeletti L, Innocenti M, Felciai F, Ruggeri E, Cassioli E, Rossi E, Rotella F, Castellini G, Stanghellini G, Ricca V, Northoff G. Anorexia nervosa as a disorder of the subcortical-cortical interoceptive-self. Eat Weight Disord. 2022 Dec;27(8):3063-3081. doi: 10.1007/s40519-022-01510-7. Epub 2022 Nov 10. PMID: 36355249; PMCID: PMC9803759.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32400920/"><span>van Dyck Z, Schulz A, Blechert J, Herbert BM, Lutz APC, Vögele C. Gastric interoception and gastric myoelectrical activity in bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorder. Int J Eat Disord. 2021 Jul;54(7):1106-1115. doi: 10.1002/eat.23291. Epub 2020 May 13. PMID: 32400920; PMCID: PMC8359291.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30840983/"><span>Berner LA, Simmons AN, Wierenga CE, Bischoff-Grethe A, Paulus MP, Bailer UF, Kaye WH. Altered anticipation and processing of aversive interoceptive experience among women remitted from bulimia nervosa. Neuropsychopharmacology. 2019 Jun;44(7):1265-1273. doi: 10.1038/s41386-019-0361-4. Epub 2019 Mar 6. PMID: 30840983; PMCID: PMC6785154.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35121272/"><span>Phillipou A, Rossell SL, Castle DJ, Gurvich C. Interoceptive awareness in anorexia nervosa. J Psychiatr Res. 2022 Apr;148:84-87. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2022.01.051. Epub 2022 Jan 30. PMID: 35121272.</span></a></p></li></ol></div><br/><p></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2026 01:50:20 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[When the Autistic Nervous System Doesn’t Feel Safe  ]]></title><link>https://www.sovran-solutions.com/blogs/post/autism-and-body-signals</link><description><![CDATA[The interoceptive signal patterns behind dysregulation in autism Dysregulation is often treated as the problem because it is the part other people can ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_7XkmZCfBQtikf8mJW6AtJg" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_lb4s4AK5SMC68OMMJqmV5Q" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_YrN-G31oQnWEY1FZNn7Ilw" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_7dW9RoYkf3f6CDAgAzw6-Q" data-element-type="imagetext" class="zpelement zpelem-imagetext "><style> @media (min-width: 992px) { [data-element-id="elm_7dW9RoYkf3f6CDAgAzw6-Q"] .zpimagetext-container figure img { width: 500px ; height: 333.44px ; } } </style><div data-size-tablet="" data-size-mobile="" data-align="left" data-tablet-image-separate="false" data-mobile-image-separate="false" class="zpimagetext-container zpimage-with-text-container zpimage-align-left zpimage-tablet-align-center zpimage-mobile-align-center zpimage-size-medium zpimage-tablet-fallback-fit zpimage-mobile-fallback-fit hb-lightbox " data-lightbox-options="
            type:fullscreen,
            theme:dark"><figure role="none" class="zpimage-data-ref"><span class="zpimage-anchor" role="link" tabindex="0" aria-label="Open Lightbox" style="cursor:pointer;"><picture><img class="zpimage zpimage-style-none zpimage-space-none " src="/autism-body-signals.jpg" size="medium" data-lightbox="true"/></picture></span></figure><div class="zpimage-text zpimage-text-align-left zpimage-text-align-mobile-left zpimage-text-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p><strong>The interoceptive signal patterns behind dysregulation in autism</strong></p><p><span><br/></span></p><span>Dysregulation is often treated as the problem because it is the part other people can see. But by the time refusal, rigidity, shutdown, panic, avoidance, or volatility appear, the nervous system may have already made its decision: this is not safe.&nbsp;</span></div><div><span><br/></span></div><div><span><span><span>Sometimes, the nervous system interprets ordinary demands, body sensations, relational tension, hunger, fatigue, pain, uncertainty, or change as threat. From the outside, it may look like refusal, rigidity, shutdown, panic, avoidance, or emotional volatility.&nbsp;</span></span><br/></span></div><p></p></div>
</div></div><div data-element-id="elm_QNI3EfPdS_msUcHEFB9xDQ" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p style="text-align:left;"><span><span>From the inside, it can feel like danger has already been decided before the person has a chance to choose. An autistic person can have the right diagnosis, supports, language, and plan, and still lose access to language, flexibility, and choice when the internal signal load gets too high.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_moFLNEeIDvfVQkTfSq0HjQ" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>Research supports a precise way to understand this. Interoception is the nervous system’s process for sensing and interpreting internal body signals, including hunger, pain, fatigue, heartbeat, breath, tension, and emotional arousal. [1,2] In autism, interoception research has moved beyond narrow heartbeat-tracking tasks. [3] The more useful clinical question is how autistic people experience, interpret, tolerate, trust, and act on internal signals. [3,4] Emotional dysregulation is also increasingly recognized as a meaningful part of autistic experience, not simply a behavioral issue. [5]</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_AUe5ai1akeiqWehlyXIHKg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>In one autistic client, interoceptive pattern recalibration showed up as improved emotional balance, greater tolerance when familiar routines or relational patterns were interrupted, more accurate recognition of internal states, and increased empathy during moments that previously triggered withdrawal or escalation. The change was not simply better coping. The client became more able to read internal signals accurately, stay organized when expectations changed, and remain connected to others without the threat response taking over. For another autistic client with strong verbal and cognitive abilities, parenting became easier as emotions were better understood, the ability to connect expanded, and boundary setting no longer required effort.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_OBumclerquGkT3lvDdZmYg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span><span><span>Autism support often focuses on what can be seen from the outside: behavior plans, routines, accommodations, communication strategies, sensory modifications, and regulation tools. These supports can be essential. But they do not always reach the internal prediction patterns that make change feel unsafe in the first place. If the nervous system has learned to read uncertainty, hunger, relational tension, or interrupted routines as danger, then support alone may help the person manage the moment without recalibrating the pattern. Interoceptive pattern recalibration uniquely targets that deeper layer: the meaning and reactions assigned to internal signals before the behavior appears.</span></span></span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_YkH6C0h4hJZvrwvR3gF5ow" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>This is the distinction that matters. Support changes the conditions.Regulation improves recovery. Insight explains the pattern afterward. Interoceptive pattern recalibration works before the behavior appears. It trains the nervous system to interpret internal signals with less threat, less urgency, and more accuracy, and to trust their ability to trust internal signals without escalating into threat. This allows more access to language, flexibility, choice, and connection before dysregulation takes over.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_879NQFEjTQTffelTupukyQ" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>This is not about making autistic people less autistic. It is about recognizing that dysregulation may not be fully addressed when care stops at behavior, coping, accommodation, or recovery after escalation. The next level is not more effort. It is recalibrating the internal signal patterns that make ordinary demands, body sensations, relational stress, or change feel unsafe. When those signals lose threat value, the person does not have to fight so hard to stay organized. Language remains more available. Flexibility becomes easier. Connection is more accessible. And support can finally build on a nervous system that is no longer bracing against the moment it is living in.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_M6MOuAnPYii4KYKnIFxLTA" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p><span style="font-weight:700;">References</span><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><ol><li><p><a href="https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6054486/"><span>Khalsa SS, Adolphs R, Cameron OG, et al; Interoception Summit 2016 participants. Interoception and Mental Health: A Roadmap. Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2018 Jun;3(6):501-513. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2017.12.004. Epub 2017 Dec 28. PMID: 29884281; PMCID: PMC6054486.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7780231/"><span>Chen WG, Schloesser D, Arensdorf AM, et al. The Emerging Science of Interoception: Sensing, Integrating, Interpreting, and Regulating Signals within the Self. Trends Neurosci. 2021 Jan;44(1):3-16. doi: 10.1016/j.tins.2020.10.007. PMID: 33378655; PMCID: PMC7780231.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40909407"><span>Klein M, Witthöft M, Jungmann SM. Interoception in individuals with autism spectrum disorder: a systematic literature review and meta-analysis. Front Psychiatry. 2025 Aug 20;16:1573263. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1573263. PMID: 40909407; PMCID: PMC12406136.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10136046/"><span>Bonete S, Molinero C, Ruisanchez D. Emotional Dysfunction and Interoceptive Challenges in Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorders. Behav Sci (Basel). 2023 Apr 5;13(4):312. doi: 10.3390/bs13040312. PMID: 37102826; PMCID: PMC10136046.</span></a></p></li><li><p><a href="https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10544895/">Dell'Osso L, Massoni L, Battaglini S, De Felice C, Nardi B, Amatori G, Cremone IM, Carpita B. Emotional dysregulation as a part of the autism spectrum continuum: a literature review from late childhood to adulthood. Front Psychiatry. 2023 Sep 18;14:1234518. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1234518. PMID: 37791135; PMCID: PMC10544895.</a></p></li></ol></div><p></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Sun, 10 May 2026 17:40:45 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[Self-Regulation Works. Until It Doesn't. ]]></title><link>https://www.sovran-solutions.com/blogs/post/self-regulation-limits</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://www.sovran-solutions.com/Interoceptive Pattern Recalibration.png"/>Self-regulation skills are among the most valuable tools behavioral science has developed. The evidence for mindfulness-based interventions, for cogni ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_gIdlK8B0R2Kmv3WtThHRwg" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_rICKGrrKS-yQblUqNZTbCA" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_0Fn_Gt7NQ7ycPtJFpatHgw" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_uPW-db6Cla9JXYeSH1ecsw" data-element-type="imagetext" class="zpelement zpelem-imagetext "><style> @media (min-width: 992px) { [data-element-id="elm_uPW-db6Cla9JXYeSH1ecsw"] .zpimagetext-container figure img { width: 500px ; height: 547.32px ; } } @media (max-width: 991px) and (min-width: 768px) { [data-element-id="elm_uPW-db6Cla9JXYeSH1ecsw"] .zpimagetext-container figure img { width:500px ; height:547.32px ; } } @media (max-width: 767px) { [data-element-id="elm_uPW-db6Cla9JXYeSH1ecsw"] .zpimagetext-container figure img { width:500px ; height:547.32px ; } } </style><div data-size-tablet="" data-size-mobile="" data-align="left" data-tablet-image-separate="false" data-mobile-image-separate="false" class="zpimagetext-container zpimage-with-text-container zpimage-align-left zpimage-tablet-align-center zpimage-mobile-align-center zpimage-size-medium zpimage-tablet-fallback-medium zpimage-mobile-fallback-medium hb-lightbox " data-lightbox-options="
            type:fullscreen,
            theme:dark"><figure role="none" class="zpimage-data-ref"><span class="zpimage-anchor" role="link" tabindex="0" aria-label="Open Lightbox" style="cursor:pointer;"><picture><img class="zpimage zpimage-style-none zpimage-space-none " src="/Interoceptive%20Pattern%20Recalibration.png" width="500" height="547.32" loading="lazy" size="medium" data-lightbox="true"/></picture></span></figure><div class="zpimage-text zpimage-text-align-left zpimage-text-align-mobile-left zpimage-text-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span>Self-regulation skills are among the most valuable tools behavioral science has developed. The evidence for mindfulness-based interventions, for cognitive reappraisal, for breath-based regulation, is substantial. These tools produce real effects. For a wide range of situations, they are exactly what is needed.</span></p><p><span><br/></span></p><p><span><span>They also have a ceiling.</span><br/></span></p><p><span><span><br/></span></span></p><p><span><span><span>The ceiling becomes visible in high-stakes moments: the presentation where your body is fully activated before any technique can be applied, the conversation where your emotional intensity bypasses every practiced response, the spiral you recognize in real time and cannot interrupt. You are not losing control in those moments. Control was not an option.</span><br/></span></span></p><p><span><span><span><br/></span></span></span></p><p><span><span><span><span>These approaches require accessibility, a level of activation below which you can still control your reaction.</span><br/></span></span></span></p></div>
</div></div><div data-element-id="elm_Nagu6XC9VnpRRYwH0wyIIg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>&nbsp;Regulation operates at the level of the prefrontal cortex: deliberate, effortful, and dependent on cognitive resources that are muted under intense activation and chronic stress. Deep breathing works when the system is stressed and the cortex is still online enough to direct attention.&nbsp;</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_oafzszRylBD0vMeDzHVZ8Q" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>Mindfulness works when there is enough capacity to observe internal states without becoming them. Beyond that threshold, reactions rule until willpower becomes accessible again.&nbsp;</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_eSCUmMHS2VbHMg2-hXviuA" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>The pattern is not a skill problem. It is a calibration problem. The nervous system is running a response that was appropriate to a context that no longer exists, and it runs it automatically before any skill can engage.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_IkQIceI-C_HZz6lIUTx-ww" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>Surgery performed at the wrong site does not resolve the problem. The question has never been whether to do the work. It is whether the work is aimed at the correct target and is effective enough to change it.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_FFCNQXQBSO2Z_xLFvTd1qg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p style="text-align:left;"><span><span></span></span></p><div><p style="text-align:left;"><span>&nbsp;</span>What lies above the ceiling of regulation is not more sophisticated regulation. It is recalibration: a change to the underlying pattern rather than a more skilled response to its expression. Interoceptive recalibration works below the activation threshold, targeting the predictive patterns that generate the stress response before thought arrives.&nbsp;</p></div><p></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_x7jbs4RGPmok2XcR6DVR7g" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>When the prediction changes, the activation that follows changes. The ceiling rises. The tools become available in situations where they were previously inaccessible because the system activated beyond their reach.</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_8b6OZLI0GPAlSXAspiVBEg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>The goal is not a more disciplined regulator. It is a nervous system with a new baseline, where the evening remains full of potential after the moments that previously derailed it.&nbsp;</span></span></p></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_fBeYwYbLmwTbQt1cX_FA3w" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-left zptext-align-tablet-left " data-editor="true"><p><span><span>Your nervous system is not unchangeable. It is responsive. It updates.</span></span></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2026 03:32:13 +0000</pubDate></item></channel></rss>