Behavior That Escalates After Success
In this episode of Teaching Autism and Special Education with Nikki, we’re talking about a behavior pattern that can feel incredibly confusing at first. Why do some students seem to fall apart after they’ve done really well? After they’ve achieved something difficult, completed a task, or successfully coped through a challenging situation, behavior can suddenly escalate. We explore why this is usually not defiance, attention seeking, or self sabotage, but instead a nervous system response to the enormous amount of energy success can cost autistic students and other learners with additional needs.
We dive into the hidden effort behind “doing well,” including masking, suppressing sensory needs, managing anxiety, holding eye contact, processing instructions, and pushing through executive functioning challenges. I also talk about performance regulation, decompression after effort, and why success does not automatically mean a child has spare emotional capacity left. Sometimes the behavior you see after success is simply the nervous system releasing pressure after holding everything together for too long.
This episode is packed with gentle mindset shifts and practical strategies to help educators and parents respond differently. We discuss why planning regulation after effort matters just as much as celebrating achievement, how to reduce demand stacking, and simple language shifts that can completely change the trajectory of a student’s nervous system. Instead of asking, “Why would they ruin that moment?” this episode encourages us to ask, “How much did that moment cost them?”