28/05/2026
To all our families celebrating, may your homes be filled with peace, happiness, laughter, and countless beautiful moments together.
Eid Mubarak from all of us at Khad-San Academy. 💛
26/05/2026
Little drops of water make a mighty ocean. Everyday practice is crucial. The secret is discipline and consistency!!
25/05/2026
As we celebrate AU Day, we are reminded that inclusion matters. Community matters. And investing in children matters deeply.
We are proud to raise children in an environment that values identity, diversity, compassion, and growth.
Happy AU Day from all of us at Khad-San Academy. 🌍✨
25/05/2026
Why James Chews. And What It Actually Means.
James chews. He always has. Clothes, toys, his hands, anything within reach. For a long time people around him saw it as a habit. Something to redirect. Something to stop.
It was never about manners. It was never about habit. It was his nervous system communicating something that had no other language.
The mouth is one of the most sensory-rich parts of the human body. It has more sensory receptors than almost anywhere else. Deep pressure to the jaw and mouth delivers powerful proprioceptive input directly to the nervous system. For many autistic children, chewing is one of the most efficient regulatory tools available to them. Not because they have chosen it consciously. Because their body knows what it needs.
When James chews, his nervous system may be seeking deep oral input to feel calm and grounded. It may be managing overwhelm, reducing the sensory load by giving the body something organising to focus on. It may be self-regulation, the same instinct that leads many adults to chew gum, bite their lip, or clench their jaw under stress. It may be a response to anxiety, fatigue, hunger, or too many demands arriving at once.
It is not attention seeking. It is sensory seeking. And those are not the same thing.
Telling a child to stop chewing without offering an alternative is asking their nervous system to give up one of its coping strategies with nothing to replace it. Shaming them for it, punishing them for it, or making it a repeated point of conflict adds stress to a system that is already struggling to regulate.
What actually helps is understanding the why, and meeting the need safely. Chewelry and oral sensory tools designed for this purpose. Deep pressure activities that provide the proprioceptive input the body is searching for. Calm, low-demand environments that reduce the sensory load driving the behaviour in the first place.
Chewing is communication. Once you can read it, everything changes.
For the educators, therapists, and professionals reading this.
Oral sensory seeking in autistic children, including chewing non-food items, is a well-documented response to proprioceptive need and nervous system dysregulation. It is not a behavioural problem to extinguish. It is a sensory need to accommodate safely.
Chewelry, oral motor tools, and proactive sensory regulation strategies address the underlying need far more effectively than any consequence-based approach. If a child in your setting is chewing constantly, ask what their nervous system is trying to manage, not how to make them stop. Share this with someone who is still removing the chewing without replacing the regulation.
If this resonates with you, please share it with your family and friends. So many parents across the world are carrying this quietly and not one of them should feel alone. Support is always here.
Follow Nonspeaking Autism for more. 💙
© Nonspeaking Autism
25/05/2026
Toys are great indoor activities during this rainy season.
19/05/2026
With Derrick Abaitey – I just made it onto their weekly engagement list by being one of their top engagers! 🎉