
Many people feel like they’re constantly forced to perform just to get through the day, like they’re wearing a mask, carefully trying to meet the expectations of others. Sometimes this masking is deliberate; other times, it becomes so automatic that a person may not even realize it’s happening. Either way, it’s a strategy to seek safety, not because they actually feel safe, but because they’re doing whatever they can to get by.
But over time, masking can take a toll on well-being. It can lead to exhaustion, stress, and a deep disconnection from one’s authentic self. The good news? Interoception can help.
Interoception—the sense that helps people feel what’s happening inside their bodies—can support a reconnection to what the body needs for regulation, comfort, and safety in the world. After a potentially lifelong process of ignoring one’s own boundaries and needs, interoception work offers an opportunity to (re)discover a unique set of internal sensations and lived experiences.
Although it takes time, as people begin to (re)listen to their bodies and honor what they need, the mask can slowly start to come down, and their authentic self can begin to shine through.
What Is Masking?
Masking is a survival response—concealing or suppressing natural ways of acting, feeling, or responding to meet often ableist societal norms. Many neurodivergent individuals, including autistic people, begin masking from a young age to avoid stigma, rejection, or misunderstanding. People who mask are often using unconscious coping mechanisms to survive in environments that don’t feel safe, especially for autistic traits that challenge conventional norms. This can be particularly true for autistic women and others whose masking behavior often goes unrecognized.
Masking is like being a chameleon—blending in to survive, fit in, or fly under the radar. These masking behaviors can also develop from trauma, including compliance-based approaches, social pressures, or repeated invalidation of a person’s true self. The impact of masking runs deep and often remains hidden beneath the surface.
Over time, the energy required to maintain the mask can become overwhelming. While often praised by compliance lovers as a form of “success,” masking requires immense and ongoing effort. This energy drain can lead to autistic burnout, anxiety, depression, and chronic health issues, especially without safe spaces to unmask.
Masking as a Trauma Response
For many individuals, masking isn’t a choice—it’s a deeply ingrained trauma response. When a person experiences repeated invalidation, stigma, or emotionally unsafe environments, their nervous system may adapt to protect them by suppressing authentic reactions. In this way, masking becomes an automatic survival mechanism rather than a conscious decision.
Masking behaviors can lead to chronic stress, hypervigilance, and difficulty trusting their own emotions and body signals. The constant need to monitor and suppress natural responses can interfere with a person’s ability to notice their internal cues. These sensations signal what their body needs for long-term thriving.
Over time, masking can disconnect individuals from their interoceptive signals, leading to partial or complete dissociation from internal experiences. This practice makes it increasingly difficult to recognize when they are overwhelmed, anxious, or in need of support, and can result in a broader loss of self-awareness, including the ability to identify authentic feelings, needs, and identity.
Understanding masking through the lens of trauma can help us shift how we support, relate, and respond. Masking is not a personal failing—it’s a survival strategy developed to stay safe. Many people learn to mask not because something is wrong with them, but because their environment told them it wasn’t safe to be fully themselves.
Unmasking is not a linear process. It takes time, patience, felt safety, and interoception work. People deserve spaces where they can gradually let their guard down and begin to notice and trust their internal experience. That’s why our focus shouldn’t be on stopping the mask, but on creating the conditions where it’s no longer needed.
How Can Interoception and Felt-Safety Support Unmasking?
We don’t unmask by pushing.
You can’t just tell someone to “be authentic” and expect the mask to fall away. Masking is often a deeply ingrained survival strategy—one developed over time in response to unsafe environments, social rejection, or other trauma. For many people, including autistic individuals, taking down the mask isn’t a moment. It’s a process—one that takes time, trust, and safety.
Unmasking isn’t something we demand—it’s something we earn the honor of witnessing. While trauma, rejection, and social pressure often cause people to mask, it’s felt safety that allows them to begin letting the mask down.
That’s where interoception comes in.
When a person feels safe, their nervous system becomes more receptive to interoception learning—the process of recognizing internal body signals. This connection to inner cues is essential for healing. It allows a person to tune back in to what they feel, what they need to feel comfortable, and who they truly are beneath the mask.
When a person feels unsafe, those internal signals are often overridden in favor of performance in social settings or protection. But in safe, validating spaces, interoception connection can come back online—fostering something deeper than self-regulation. It supports self-discovery and self-trust. How can we do that? Download our FREE guide to find out and learn more!
How Interoception Supports Unmasking & Self-Discovery
As interoceptive awareness becomes more accessible—through felt safety—it can play a powerful role in the unmasking process. Reconnecting with internal body signals can support identity development, emotional clarity, health, and regulation. Strengthening interoception helps lay the foundation for:

Noticing What the Body Knows
Masking often requires disconnecting from body signals to survive—ignoring hunger, hiding discomfort, pushing through anxiety. Rebuilding interoception helps people begin to notice their internal cues again, often for the first time in years. This is the first step toward tuning back in.

Trusting Internal Experience
Many who mask learn to second-guess or override what their body is telling them. Strengthening interoception can help rebuild self-trust—creating space to believe “what I feel is real,” even when others don’t see it. That trust lays the groundwork for emotional agency and boundaries.

Choosing Actions that Honor the Body
As interoceptive awareness develops in people who mask, they can start responding to bodily signals with care—not suppression. Instead of forcing themselves to conform, they can pause, say no, rest, or ask for what they need. That’s not just regulation—it’s liberation.
Dive Deeper: Join Our Course on Masking and Interoception
If this topic resonates with you, our on-demand course, ‘Lost Connections: The Relationship Between Interoception and Masking,’ provides a deeper, research-backed exploration of the intersection between masking behavior and internal body awareness.
Developed and co-taught with Kieran Rose, this course unpacks the impact of masking—especially for autistic individuals—from both lived experience and scientific research. It explores how masking often begins at a young age as a coping mechanism in response to stigma, social expectations, and emotionally unsafe settings, and how this disconnects people from their interoceptive signals.
You’ll learn how felt safety opens the door to interoception learning, making room for authentic self-expression, emotional clarity, and long-term well-being. Whether you’re an OT, SLP, educator, mental health provider, or someone with lived experience of masking, this course offers practical strategies to support the shift from survival mode to embodied self-trust.
If you’re ready to better support yourself or others on the journey of unmasking, identity development, and reconnection with the body—this is the perfect place to start.

Unmasking Is a Journey—Interoception Can Help
Unmasking and reconnecting with one’s inner experience is a gradual process—one that no one should have to navigate alone. With the right support, people can begin to rebuild self-trust, explore interoceptive signals, and feel safer showing up as their full selves.
Explore a range of evidence-based resources designed to support this process—from foundational interoception learning to practical strategies for daily life. Whether you’re working with children, teens, or adults, these tools are designed to meet people where they are and honor their unique life journeys.


