To Spook or Not to Spook? Navigating Halloween with DCC Loved Ones

By Miriam Bernard

Halloween can be an exciting holiday for many, but for individuals with DCCs, the sights, sounds, and surprises of the season can feel overwhelming. However, with thoughtful planning and creativity, families can make Halloween a positive, inclusive, and sensory-friendly experience. Here are some ways to make your Halloween just right for your DCC loved ones!

1. Use past interactions with your family member to decide if spooky images or themes are a good idea.

Because people with DCCs may process emotions, sensory input, or social cues differently, it’s important to reduce exposure to frightening or confusing images. Avoid decorations with flashing lights, sudden noises, or realistic horror themes, if your loved one has responded negatively to anything similar in the past.

2. Try before you do.

When watching Halloween movies or attending events, preview them first, or get additional information from event coordinators to make sure the content is gentle and friendly.

3. Prepare through informing, practicing, and role-playing

Consider reading Halloween-themed storybooks or using social stories to explain what will happen during celebrations. This can help your loved one anticipate and feel comfortable with the activities. Try on costumes in advance, or even role-play traditions like trick-or-treating to prepare your loved one for how it will go. This type of anticipation can remove the “what ifs” and help them feel ready.

4. Make the holiday your own!

If trick-or-treating seems stressful, try fun alternatives that feel safe and familiar such as:

  • A family costume night at home. Some families have even reported at-home trick-or-treating, where family members enter a room of the home and close the door, and children knock on doors in the house to get treats or other small toys from their parents and siblings.
  • A pumpkin-decorating party
  • A neighborhood “trunk-or-treat” event with trusted friends
  • Sensory-friendly community events, often held during daylight hours, are also a great option.
  • Baking Halloween treats together
  • Crafting cute decorations

These ideas and others like them can provide the enjoyment and festive feeling of Halloween without sensory overload.

5. Offer Choice

Encourage your loved one to participate in choosing their own costumes or decorations. Let them choose the pumpkin or treats you make! This will help them will feel more in control and engaged. Giving them the ability to opt out of an activity at any time also helps them feel comfortable trying something new.

To create positive experiences, focus on predictable, low-stress traditions. With patience and thoughtful planning, Halloween can become a time of joy and inclusion, ensuring that children and adults with disorders of the corpus callosum can celebrate safely, confidently, and happily. Visit our blog archive HERE for more Halloween-related content, and we hope your family has a BOO-tacular holiday!