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Teaching the Five Sensana Foundations

This teaching guide introduces the core principles of the Sensana approach for individuals, carers, support workers, educators, and families supporting someone living with ALPIMS-pattern conditions.

Each foundation includes a definition, why it matters, and how to support it in others. These principles support trauma-aware, neurodivergent-affirming, and consent-based care practices.


1. Zone Awareness

What it is: The Zone System uses five color-coded states to reflect a person’s nervous system and capacity level:

  • 🟢 Green – Regulated, balanced
  • 🟡 Yellow – Rising tension, fragility
  • 🔴 Red – Flare, panic, overload
  • 🔵 Blue – Shutdown, flat, withdrawn
  • ⚫ Black – Collapse, survival mode

Why it matters: Zone awareness helps people match activities, expectations, and support to their actual capacity. It also helps others avoid pushing them into distress or overload.

How to support it:

  • Ask, “What zone do you think you’re in right now?”
  • Use zone-matched task menus or visuals
  • Adapt plans based on zones (e.g., simplify when Yellow or Red)
  • Praise self-awareness, not performance

2. Consent-Led Care

What it is: Consent-led care centers the person’s internal cues—not just whether they say “yes” to others, but whether they feel allowed to say “no” to themselves.

Why it matters: Many ALPIMS-affected individuals override their needs to meet expectations. This can cause flares, crashes, or shutdown. Internalised pressure often blocks recovery.

How to support it:

  • Normalize changing plans or saying no
  • Model self-consent in your own behavior
  • Avoid praise for pushing through
  • Ask, “What would feel kind to your body right now?”

3. Sensory Safety

What it is: Sensory safety means environments, relationships, and routines are gentle on the senses and adaptable to needs.

Why it matters: Sensory overload can trigger pain, shutdown, immune flares, or emotional dysregulation. Creating low-threat sensory environments can be healing.

How to support it:

  • Ask about light, sound, scent, and texture preferences
  • Offer noise-canceling tools, soft clothing, quiet spaces
  • Reduce unexpected sensory changes (e.g., surprise touches or loud noises)
  • Design shared spaces with multiple sensory profiles in mind

4. Minimal Effective Strategy (MES)

What it is: MES means doing the smallest, simplest version of a task that still meets the need—especially in Yellow, Red, or Blue Zones.

Why it matters: People with ALPIMS conditions risk overdoing or underdoing. MES helps preserve energy while protecting dignity, connection, and safety.

How to support it:

  • Reframe MES as strength, not avoidance
  • Offer choices like “Would you like to do the 10% version today?”
  • Pre-plan MES options for key tasks (meals, hygiene, communication)
  • Help build MES libraries (visuals, cards, routine hacks)

5. Co-Regulation and Anchoring

What it is: Co-regulation is the use of shared rhythm, voice, movement, or presence to return to safety. Anchors are personal sensory tools or phrases that help bring calm.

Why it matters: When someone is dysregulated, logic often fails. Co-regulation is a biological need, especially for people with trauma, pain, or sensory sensitivity.

How to support it:

  • Stay calm and present when others are in distress
  • Use soft voice, slow breath, and safe distance
  • Offer anchoring tools: weighted items, calming scent, music
  • Use scripts like, “You don’t have to talk. I’m here.”

Teaching Notes

  • This framework works well with neurodivergent, trauma-aware, and disability support teams
  • Can be adapted for group settings (classrooms, homes, clinics)
  • Use visual aids, check-ins, and modeling to reinforce the five foundations

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