Boise, Idaho
Sensory processing sitters in Boise
Sensory-processing differences look different across Boise neighborhoods. North End families often deal with old-house noise (dishwashers, furnaces, that one creaky floorboard) that throws a sensitive kid off. East End families with younger siblings juggle a hyperreactive kid and a chaotic playroom in the same evening. A sitter who notices the room before the kid notices the room is the right sitter.
Sensory differences do not show up the same in every kid. One kid is fine in a busy room but flattened by a single tag in a shirt. Another can wear anything but cannot handle the dishwasher running. A sitter who gets this is one who notices, dials the room down, and does not make it a moment.
In Boise
Why sensory processing families pick our Boise Sidekicks
Sensory-comfortable Sidekicks in Boise tend to come from SpEd-classroom day jobs — special-education teachers and paraeducators who have spent classroom time with the same dynamic. They dial down the room without making a thing of it.
What we do — and what we do not
A typical sensory processing booking in Boise
- Sitters who read your kid's sensory profile before they accept. Lights, sound, textures, foods, transitions — they want to know what works and what does not.
- Comfort with the small fixes. Dimming a lamp. Pausing the dishwasher. Closing the blinds. They do not need a big production to make a room calmer.
- Patience during overwhelm. They follow your written plan if you have one and they do not improvise new techniques.
- Respect for the gear. If your kid has a weighted vest, a chewy necklace, or noise-canceling headphones — the sitter knows what those are for and they do not put them away.
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Common questions about sensory processing sitters in Boise
- Will the sitter follow our sensory diet?
- Yes — write it as a step-by-step in the booking notes. The sitter follows what you wrote. They do not, however, design or modify the plan; that is for your kid's OT or care team.
- What if my kid goes into overwhelm during the booking?
- The sitter follows your written plan if you have one. If there is no plan, the sitter defaults to the basics — dim the room, lower the volume, give your kid space and time. If escalation continues, they text you.
- Can the sitter bring their own sensory tools?
- Some sitters do — a small kit of fidgets, a few quiet activities, a couple of weighted lap pads. Others do not. List in your kid profile whether you want extra tools brought in or whether your own setup is preferred.
- Are your sitters trained in sensory integration?
- Some have studied sensory processing through their professional roles. None hold themselves out as sensory specialists. The credential is the floor; the experience is what matters.
Find a Sidekick in Boise
We will match your kid with a sitter who already gets sensory processing kids.