Sensory overload in the modern workplace

Why your brain is exhausted (and what to do about it)

The modern workplace is not just busy, it is sensory-intense.

Every day, our brains are flooded with constant input and information coming at us from every direction. We move rapidly between tasks and environments, expected to stay focused, productive, emotionally regulated, and cognitively sharp at all times.

If you feel mentally exhausted, irritable, distracted, or overwhelmed by the end of the day, you might be experiencing sensory overload.

What is sensory overload?

Sensory overload occurs when the brain receives more sensory information than it can effectively process. This includes visual, auditory, cognitive, and emotional input, not just noise or light.

In the workplace, sensory overload often looks like:

  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Feeling mentally “fried” or foggy
  • Irritability or emotional reactivity
  • Fatigue that doesn’t improve with sleep
  • Reduced decision-making and problem-solving ability

This is a neurobiological response, and has nothing to do with your motivation or capabilities.

The brain hasn’t evolved as fast as the world has

While technology, work demands, and information flow have accelerated rapidly, the human brain has remained largely the same for centuries.

The brain is designed to:

  • Focus on limited streams of information
  • Shift attention with recovery time
  • Regulate emotions through rhythm and rest

What it is not designed for is:

  • Continuous multitasking
  • Constant digital interruption
  • Back-to-back meetings with no cognitive recovery
  • Processing vast amounts of information without pause

When these limits are exceeded, the brain becomes overloaded and performance declines.

Sensory overload leads to cognitive load

Sensory overload is not just uncomfortable; it directly contributes to cognitive load.

Cognitive load refers to the amount of mental effort being used at any one time. When cognitive load is too high, working memory is reduced, processing speed slows, errors increase, and creativity and strategic thinking decline. In other words, when the brain is overloaded, we cannot do our best work, no matter how capable or motivated we are.

Are digital devices helpful tools or hidden stressors?

Digital devices are powerful tools, but unmanaged, they become constant sources of sensory input and distraction. Notifications, emails, messages, and screen switching continuously pull the brain out of focus. Over time, this leads to:

  • Digital fatigue
  • Reduced attention span
  • Emotional dysregulation
  • Chronic mental exhaustion

A simple yet powerful shift is learning to manage devices intentionally, rather than allowing them to manage us. If you don’t manage your distractions, they will manage you.

Self-regulation is a daily skill

Self-regulation is the brain’s ability to move between states of alertness, focus, and calm. It allows us to reset after stimulation and maintain performance across the day. Importantly, self-regulation is not something we do once a week or only when we feel overwhelmed. It must be practiced daily and repeatedly.

Effective self-regulation strategies may include:

  1. Reducing sensory input between tasks
  2. Taking intentional pauses between meetings
  3. Stepping away from screens regularly
  4. Creating moments of quiet or movement
  5. Structuring the day to allow cognitive recovery

These small, consistent actions protect brain energy and prevent overload.

Sensory Intelligence® in the age of AI

As Artificial Intelligence increasingly takes over repetitive and high-volume tasks, human work is shifting toward:

  • Strategic thinking
  • Creativity
  • Complex decision-making
  • Emotional intelligence and connection

These abilities require a well-regulated brain. Protecting brain energy through Sensory Intelligence® and self-regulation is no longer just about wellbeing; it is a performance imperative for the future of work.

Sensory overload is real, and it is affecting how we think, feel, and perform at work

By understanding how sensory input, cognitive load, and self-regulation interact, individuals and organisations can:

  • Reduce fatigue and burnout
  • Improve focus and engagement
  • Enhance decision-making and performance
  • Create healthier, more sustainable workplaces

The ability to self-regulate is already within your capacity. The question is whether your spaces and routines support it.

Explore the Sensory Intelligence® Sensory Wellness Course

This course is a guided sensory journey that helps you identify sensory overload across all 7 senses and teaches you to manage it effectively with easy-to-implement strategies

Learn more about the Sensory Wellness Course here

AI Should Be Making Your Life Easier, Not Harder

 

Why Artificial Intelligence Might Be Fueling Your Stress

When I asked ChatGPT what the purpose of AI is in our lives, it gave me a beautiful answer:
to help humans live better, healthier, safer, and more meaningful lives by extending what we can do.
Magical, right?

And yet… many of us are feeling the exact opposite. Instead of calmer, more balanced lives,
we’re experiencing anxiety, information overload, and good old-fashioned technostress.
In fact, research shows that anxiety symptoms are increasingly tied to how we interact with AI.

Why Our Brains Struggle with AI Overload

Here’s the tricky part: AI is designed to help us. But our brains? They’re still wired the same way they were thousands of years ago.
We need time to process information, make sense of it, and actually remember it.
When we’re bombarded with instant answers, endless content, and faster-than-light data,
it can feel less like support—and more like drowning in noise.

AI Isn’t the Villain—It’s How We Use It

That’s why it’s so important to remember: AI isn’t the villain here.
It’s how we use it that matters. Asking ChatGPT for a quick email draft? Amazing.
Expecting it to solve deeply human dilemmas like which treatment path to take after a diagnosis,
or how to parent your sensitive child? That’s when we need real-life people,
with real experiences and wisdom, by our side.

My Personal SOS Plan for Healthy AI Use

I’ll be honest—I’m one of those people who gets overwhelmed by too much, too fast.
If I don’t step back, the constant flood of information can tip me straight into anxiety and even burnout.
That’s why I’ve created my own little survival plan for using AI in a healthy way.

  • 👉 Stop: Notice the signs—racing heart, irritability, scattered thoughts? Hit pause on AI.
  • 👉 Outside: Physically step away. Get out from behind the screen and into a different environment.
  • 👉 Sense: Ground yourself in the present. What can you see, hear, touch, taste, or smell right now?

Using AI to Build a Calmer Life

The truth is, AI can be a fantastic tool – but only if we stay in the driver’s seat.
Used wisely, it should reduce stress, not pile more on.
At the end of the day, technology should be helping us build lives that simply feel calmer, healthier,
and a whole lot more joyful.