Shutdown and Meltdown Crisis Support Global
Low-pressure crisis support

Shutdown & Meltdown Crisis Support – Global

A calm starting point for autistic, ADHD, neurodivergent, disabled, traumatised, or sensory-sensitive people who experience shutdowns, meltdowns, panic, loss of speech, overwhelm, or moments where everything feels too much.

If you need help right now

If you or someone else is in immediate danger, at risk of harm, or unable to stay safe, contact local emergency services now.

  • New Zealand: 111
  • Australia: 000
  • United States / Canada: 911
  • UK: 999 or 112
  • Europe: 112

Gentle note

Shutdowns and meltdowns are distress responses, not bad behaviour. The first goal is safety, lower pressure, less sensory input, and dignity.

Quick pathways

Choose the option that fits what is happening right now.

I need emergency help now

Use emergency services first if there is immediate danger, medical risk, violence, suicide risk, or someone cannot stay safe.

Open emergency numbers

I cannot speak or call

Use text, chat, online messaging, relay options, written notes, or ask a trusted person to help communicate.

Open text/chat support

I need sensory-safe support

Use accessibility and sensory-aware crisis support pathways when standard support feels too overwhelming.

Open accessibility support

Understanding shutdowns and meltdowns

Shutdowns and meltdowns can happen when someone’s nervous system is overwhelmed. They are not choices, manipulation, or attention-seeking.

Shutdown

The person may go quiet, still, frozen, sleepy, disconnected, or unable to respond.

Meltdown

The person may cry, yell, move, panic, flee, or lose control because distress is too high.

Loss of speech

Words may become hard or impossible. Written or non-verbal options may help.

Recovery time

Afterwards, the person may feel exhausted, ashamed, sore, confused, or fragile.

Respond safely

Support should reduce danger and pressure, not increase shame or escalation.

First steps

  • Check immediate safety.
  • Reduce noise, light, crowding, and demands.
  • Use fewer words.
  • Give space if safe.

Helpful support

  • Offer quiet, water, comfort items, headphones, or a safe space.
  • Use calm body language.
  • Ask one simple question at a time.
  • Let recovery happen slowly.

When urgent help is needed

If someone is unsafe, medically unwell, at risk of harm, missing, or unable to stay safe, use emergency or crisis support immediately.

Communication during shutdown or meltdown

Speech and processing can become unreliable during overload. This does not mean the person is ignoring you.

Helpful communication

  • Use short sentences.
  • Offer yes/no or two-choice questions.
  • Use text, writing, AAC, visuals, or gestures.
  • Allow silence and processing time.

What to avoid

  • Do not demand eye contact.
  • Do not crowd or corner the person.
  • Do not shame, lecture, threaten, or punish.
  • Do not ask lots of questions at once.

Simple phrase

“I cannot talk right now. I need quiet, space, and time.”

For carers, family, supporters, and professionals

Supporters can help by recognising distress early and responding with calm, low-demand support.

What helps

  • Stay calm and reduce stimulation.
  • Protect dignity and privacy.
  • Offer space, quiet, and time.
  • Support recovery afterwards without shame.

What makes it worse

  • Arguing, shaming, or crowding.
  • Taking coping tools away unless unsafe.
  • Demanding quick answers.
  • Calling it bad behaviour.

Afterwards

Recovery may need rest, hydration, quiet, reassurance, reduced demands, and a gentle check-in later when the person is ready.

Where to go next

This page links into the wider Aspie Answers crisis support structure.

Sensory Overwhelm Crisis Support

For sensory overload, environmental distress, and low-demand safety support.

Open sensory support

Autism Crisis Support

For autism-specific crisis needs, sensory distress, shutdowns, meltdowns, and communication access.

Open autism support

Neurodivergent Crisis Support

Return to the main neurodivergent crisis support doorway.

Open ND support

Accessibility-Specific Crisis Support

For sensory, communication, disability, and access-based crisis support.

Open accessibility support

Crisis Support by Location

Find crisis support by country, region, or wider location pathway.

Open location hub