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When your child doesn't tell you what they need

I ask parents one question in almost every first conversation, and it stops most of them for a moment. Not because it is a hard question. Because they have never been asked it before.

How does your child let you know what they need right now? Not through words necessarily. Just, how do they communicate?

There is usually a pause. Then something shifts. They start listing things they had never thought of as communication. He pulls me to the fridge. She goes quiet and sits close. He lines things up when he is anxious. She hands me the remote when she wants company but cannot ask for it. He covers his ears before he melts down.

That is communication. All of it. It has been there the whole time.

A small shift in how you see it: When we talk about communication, we tend to mean words. But for many autistic children, words are one of the hardest ways to communicate, especially under stress, during transitions, or when something feels big. What your child does instead is not silence. It is a language you are already partly reading, even if you do not realise it yet.

Why asking "what's wrong?" often makes things worse

When a child is distressed, confused, or overwhelmed, our first instinct is to ask. What happened? What do you need? Can you tell me? The problem is that those questions require exactly the skill that is hardest to access when a child is dysregulated: turning an internal experience into words, on request, under pressure, right now.

For many autistic children, that is like asking someone to explain a car accident while they are still in it. The words are not available. And the pressure of being asked makes the window smaller, not bigger. So they pull away, go silent, push you off, or escalate. Not because they do not want to communicate. Because that particular door is closed right now.

The goal is not to get them to use words in those moments. The goal is to learn what they are already doing, so you can meet them there.

What to look for

Every child has their own communication signals. These are some of the most common ones families recognise once they start looking.

Physical signals

What the body says first

Going stiff, pulling away, covering ears or eyes, pressing into you, rocking, pacing, going still and blank, hands over mouth. These are often the first signs that something is building, and they arrive before any behaviour that is easier to see.

Leading and showing

Taking you somewhere

Pulling your hand toward something, standing in front of what they want, bringing you an object, standing at the door, putting something in your lap. This is clear communication. It just does not look like a sentence.

Repeated phrases

Saying the same thing again

A child who repeats a phrase, a line from a show, or a question they already know the answer to is often using that phrase to manage something, not to get information. The words are familiar and regulating. What they are communicating is often in the feeling behind the phrase, not the literal meaning of it.

Changes in behaviour

Something shifted

Suddenly quieter than usual. Louder. More clingy. More avoidant. Refusing food they normally eat. Sleeping differently. These shifts are often a child communicating that something has changed in their world, even when they cannot name what it is.

How to respond when words are not there

1

Name what you see, not what you think they feel

Instead of "are you upset?" try "I can see you're covering your ears." Instead of "are you angry?" try "you moved away from the table." This is lower pressure because it does not require them to agree with an emotional label. It just shows them you are paying attention. That alone is regulating for many children.

2

Reduce language, not connection

When a child is dysregulated, fewer words from you is usually better. Not cold silence. Calm presence with minimal talk. Sit nearby. Lower your voice. Give them something familiar and regulating if you know what that is. You are staying connected without adding to what is already full.

3

Follow their lead in the small moments

Communication builds in calm moments, not crisis ones. When your child brings you something, leads you somewhere, or shows you something, stop what you are doing and follow it. Even for thirty seconds. You are showing them that their way of communicating works, and that you are someone worth communicating with.

4

Build a shared shorthand over time

Most families already have one and do not know it. A word, a gesture, a routine that means something specific between you and your child. Notice what is already working and name it, even just to yourself. That shorthand is the foundation everything else is built on.

You do not need to fix the communication. You need to understand it first. Parents who make the biggest difference are not the ones who taught their child to talk. They are the ones who learned to read what their child was already saying, and responded in a way that made their child want to communicate more.

Try this for one week

Pick one moment each day where your child communicates without words and write down what they did and what you think they were trying to say. Just one moment. You are not looking for patterns yet. You are just starting to notice.

At the end of the week, look at what you wrote. You will probably find more consistency than you expected. The same signals showing up in the same situations. That consistency is the language. Once you can see it, you can respond to it, and when a child feels understood, communication usually grows from there on its own.

This is slow work and it does not always look like progress from the outside. There will be days where your child is harder to read than usual, days where the signals are quieter or louder or different. That is not regression. That is a child whose communication, like everyone's, shifts with how they are feeling, what kind of day they have had, and how safe they feel in the moment.

If you are concerned about significant communication delays or your child has very limited ways to express basic needs, a speech and language therapist is the right professional to assess and support that. What this guide is about is the communication that is already happening, and how to see it more clearly so you can meet your child where they are.

In ten years working with autistic children and families in Malaysia, I have never met a child who was not communicating. I have met many children whose communication was not being understood. The moment a parent starts seeing their child's behaviour as communication, something changes in how they respond, and almost always something changes in the child too. Not because the child changed. Because the conversation finally started.

Want to understand your child's communication patterns?

Every child communicates differently. A short conversation can help you see what your child is already doing and find one practical way to respond that makes the most difference.

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