Before, During, After Map

Masking

Holding it together all day, appearing fine at school, then unravelling at home.

Before the moment
Masking often looks like coping. Underneath, it is usually survival.
What might be happening underneath?
  • Constant self-monitoring to fit in, avoid attention, or stay safe in social environments.
  • High effort emotional control, holding in anxiety, frustration, sadness, or sensory overload.
  • Fear of being judged, rejected, punished, or seen as “too much.”
  • Common in trauma and neurodiversity. Research shows girls in particular often mask heavily at school, copying peers, suppressing distress, and appearing compliant while using enormous internal energy.
Support that helps
  • Create predictable decompression time after school, no demands, no questions, no expectations.
  • Name the pattern gently, “You hold a lot in all day. Home is where it comes out.”
  • Reduce pressure to perform at home, especially after school, contact, or social events.
  • Work with school where possible to reduce the need for constant self-control and social masking.
Gentle prompt
Where are they working hardest to appear okay, and where do they finally feel safe enough to stop?
Write your awesome label here.

Having good routines helps

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