Current:Home > ContactNot all New Year's Eve parties are loud and crowded. 'Sensory-friendly' events explained. -Golden Summit Finance
Not all New Year's Eve parties are loud and crowded. 'Sensory-friendly' events explained.
View
Date:2025-04-14 06:32:41
As millions prepare to celebrate New Year's Eve with crowds of people, loud music and fireworks, some Americans are ringing in the New Year a different way.
They're often called sensory-friendly events, and they're usually planned with young people, autistic people or people with post-traumatic stress disorder in mind. They aim to be an alternative to traditional NYE festivities that can overstimulate and overwhelm the senses for some people, experts say.
"There are plenty of kids with autism, or kids with sensory sensitivities and adults too, who deserve to be able to experience the same stuff as someone who might not have the same sensitivities," said Sophie Shippe, a communications director at the Port Discovery Children's Museum in Baltimore, which is having its first sensory-friendly New Year's Eve event this year.
Here's what you need to know about sensory-friendly NYE options.
What does 'sensory-friendly' mean?
Loud noises, like dramatic pops from fireworks, easily create sensory overload and discomfort for autistic people and people with sensory processing disorder, sometimes called SPD.
A sensory processing disorder is where a person has difficulty processing information from the senses, according to Columbia University's Irving Medical Center.
A sensory-friendly business or event means the environment is relaxed and calm for people with sensory processing disorders, according to the Minnesotan nonprofit Fraser.
NYE:How to keep your pets calm during the fireworks
The cause of the disorder is unclear and can be present in a variety of other disorders and disabilities. Effects can include sensitivity to certain foods based on texture, being sensitive to specific fabrics or being uncomfortable with certain movements.
The STAR Institute, a sensory-processing nonprofit, says at least one in 20 people could have a sensory processing disorder.
Sensory-friendly New Year's Eve events pop up across US
This year, some communities are offering 'Noon' Year's Eve celebrations that are sensory-friendly.
About 50 people are expected to attend Port Discovery's sensory-friendly countdown to noon on Dec. 31, where there will be no-noise confetti and make-your-own 2024 number templates, Shippe said.
"It's really important to make sure people with those sensitivities can still celebrate New Year's, they can still come out, they can still participate, but making sure that they do it in a way that is comfortable for them, and is exciting and fun," she told USA TODAY.
In Reading, Pennsylvania, the Reading Public Museum is also have a sensory-friendly Noon Year's Eve inside the planetarium.
The Denver Zoo is also having a "low sensory" Zoo Light New Year's Eve event for people with SPD, the zoo's website says. Attendance will be capped at lower than normal and there will be quiet rooms available for breaks throughout the zoo "to meet the needs of those who may feel overwhelmed by typical Zoo Lights offerings," the zoo says.
Who might want to attend a sensory-friendly event?
Veterans, people with young kids and groups that include autistic people may all want to attend New Year's Eve celebrations that are labeled as sensory-friendly.
Military veterans can experience PTSD symptoms when they associate civilian sensory events, like fireworks, with similar past sensory events, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
"When fireworks or other loud noises occur, a veteran’s brain can feel in danger," the VA's website says.
Shippe said that the museum decided to expand its sensory-friendly programming to include New Year's Eve this year because it's part of the organization's mission to "be an accessible space for anyone," she said.
Throughout the rest of the year, the museum has sensory-friendly Sundays once per month and sensory-friendly headphones, fidget toys and weighted blankets for patrons who need them, Shippe said.
veryGood! (79)
Related
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Tuberville tries to force a vote on single military nomination as he continues blockade
- David Beckham Netflix docuseries gets release date and trailer amid Inter Miami CF hype
- 10 protesters arrested for blocking bus carrying asylum-seekers
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Republican former congressman endorses Democratic nominee in Mississippi governor’s race
- 4 firefighters heading home after battling B.C. wildfires die in vehicle crash in Canada
- Zelenskyy returns to Washington to face growing dissent among Republicans to US spending for Ukraine
- Trump's 'stop
- Dutch photographer Erwin Olaf has died at 64. He shot themes from gay nightlife to the royal family
Ranking
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Gossip Girl Alum Leighton Meester Channels Blair Waldorf in Stylish Red Carpet Look
- Iran’s president says US should ease sanctions to demonstrate it wants to return to nuclear deal
- Seattle City Council OKs law to prosecute for having and using drugs such as fentanyl in public
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Blackhawks rookie Connor Bedard leads 12 to watch as NHL training camps open
- Behind all the speechmaking at the UN lies a basic, unspoken question: Is the world governable?
- Former federal prosecutor who resigned from Trump-Russia probe says she left over concerns with Barr
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Suspect pleads not guilty by reason of insanity in murder of LA sheriff's deputy
Russian strikes cities in east and central Ukraine, starting fires and wounding at least 14
Why Jon Bon Jovi Won’t Be Performing at His Son Jake’s Wedding to Millie Bobby Brown
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
'Wellness' is a perfect novel for our age, its profound sadness tempered with humor
Pro-Trump attorney Lin Wood to be prosecution witness in Georgia election case
Inside a Ukrainian brigade’s battle ‘through hell’ to reclaim a village on the way to Bakhmut