
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
We share practical ways to make worship accessible for people with sensory sensitivities, from simple bags to mobile carts and affordable rooms. The focus stays on dignity, choice, and volunteer training so inclusion becomes a repeatable habit, not a one-off project.
• scale from sensory bags to carts to rooms
• what to stock: headphones, earplugs, sunglasses, fidgets, writing tablets
• visual schedules and low-cost communication bracelets
• creating calm corners with timers and alternative seating
• zoning rooms by input level and adjusting lighting and textures
• training volunteers and setting clear expectations
• focusing on budget-friendly, realistic builds that serve families
• centering gospel accessibility as the goal
If you want to dive deeper on your own, you can check out the Indispensable People blog or my books on Amazon called The Indispensable Kid or Gospel Accessibility and the Indispensable People
By Tracie CorllSend us a text
We share practical ways to make worship accessible for people with sensory sensitivities, from simple bags to mobile carts and affordable rooms. The focus stays on dignity, choice, and volunteer training so inclusion becomes a repeatable habit, not a one-off project.
• scale from sensory bags to carts to rooms
• what to stock: headphones, earplugs, sunglasses, fidgets, writing tablets
• visual schedules and low-cost communication bracelets
• creating calm corners with timers and alternative seating
• zoning rooms by input level and adjusting lighting and textures
• training volunteers and setting clear expectations
• focusing on budget-friendly, realistic builds that serve families
• centering gospel accessibility as the goal
If you want to dive deeper on your own, you can check out the Indispensable People blog or my books on Amazon called The Indispensable Kid or Gospel Accessibility and the Indispensable People