Podrobný sprievodca čoskoro
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The Sensory Budget Calculator quantifies your daily sensory load using the 'spoon theory' framework — counting your available daily capacity ('spoons') against today's sensory exposure across six categories (noise, visual clutter, social interactions, transitions, unexpected changes, major decisions) minus recovery strategies used. Designed for autistic, ADHD, HSP (highly sensitive person), and other neurodivergent users who experience neurological overload from environments and demands that don't affect neurotypical people, the calculator helps identify when you're approaching capacity before you crash, enabling proactive recovery rather than reactive burnout management. Spoon theory was coined by Christine Miserandino in 2003 to explain chronic illness energy limitations to a friend at a diner — she used physical spoons to represent units of energy available for a day. The metaphor was adopted by the chronic illness community ('spoonies'), then expanded to autism, ADHD, and other neurodivergent communities to describe sensory and cognitive capacity limits. The framework's strength is making invisible limitations visible: neurotypical observers cannot see why their neurodivergent friends 'crashed' after a day that seemed normal, but spoons-used-out-of-capacity makes the calculus explicit. The calculator's category weights reflect research and lived experience in the neurodivergent community. Social interactions cost most (1.5 spoons per intensity unit) because they require simultaneous processing of words, tone, facial expressions, social context, and self-monitoring — a high-bandwidth task for neurodivergent brains. Unexpected changes cost most per occurrence (2.0× weight) because they break expected mental models and force re-orientation. Transitions cost 1.2× because context-switching consumes resources beyond the activities themselves. Decisions cost 0.7 because decision fatigue accumulates — even small decisions deplete capacity over a day. This calculator helps you understand your daily sensory budget, plan proactive recovery, and communicate needs to family and coworkers. Enter your baseline capacity today (typically 15-25 spoons; varies by sleep, stress, illness, hormones), rate each sensory category 1-10 for today's exposure, and indicate recovery strategies used. The calculator outputs spoons used vs available, utilization percentage, and status (🟢 Healthy <50%, 🟡 Approaching <75%, 🟠 Overloaded <100%, 🔴 Burnout risk >100%). Use to pace your week, identify which categories drain you most, and communicate sensory needs to neurotypical people in your life.
Spoons Used = (Noise × 1.0 + Visual × 0.8 + Social × 1.5 + Transitions × 1.2 + Unexpected × 2.0 + Decisions × 0.7) − Recovery Strategies; Utilization = Used / Baseline × 100%
- 1Step 1 — Determine Today's Baseline Capacity: Most adults have 15-25 spoons on typical days. Reduce by 1-2 if poorly slept, 2-5 if chronically stressed, 3-5 if recovering from major event/illness, additional reduction during hormonal phases that affect you. Enter the honest number for today, not your aspirational typical capacity. Be especially honest if you've had multiple consecutive high-load days — capacity reduces with cumulative depletion.
- 2Step 2 — Rate Noise Exposure: Today's auditory environment on 1-10. Silent home office: 1-2. Normal home with family: 3-4. Coffee shop: 5-6. Open office: 6-7. Construction nearby or concert venue: 8-9. Multiple sources (TV + dishwasher + family talking): add up to 10. Costs 1.0 spoon per intensity unit.
- 3Step 3 — Rate Visual Clutter: Today's visual environment. Minimalist clean space: 1-2. Lived-in tidy: 3-4. Cluttered desk/home: 5-7. Chaotic visual overload (messy room you spent time in, busy retail store, crowded events): 8-10. Visual environment matters because it provides continuous low-level sensory drain throughout time spent in it.
- 4Step 4 — Rate Social Interactions: Total social engagement today on 1-10. Solitude all day: 1. Minimal interaction (1-2 family check-ins): 2-3. Normal work with meetings: 5-6. Intense social events (family dinner, work party, conference): 7-9. Performance situations (presenting, hosting, large gatherings): 9-10. Costs 1.5 per unit — highest weight.
- 5Step 5 — Count Transitions: Each context switch counts. Home → work (1), work → coffee meeting (2), meeting → office (3), office → home (4), home → grocery store (5), store → home (6). Costs 1.2 spoons each. Transitions are often underestimated — they consume real capacity beyond the activities themselves due to re-orientation cost.
- 6Step 6 — Count Unexpected Changes and Major Decisions: Schedule changes, surprise events, technology failures, sudden requests cost 2.0 spoons each. Major decisions (what to do about ongoing situation, choosing between options with consequences) cost 0.7 each. Cumulative count over the day; even small unexpected changes (printer broke, traffic delayed you 30 min) count.
- 7Step 7 — Count Recovery Strategies and Review Status: Recovery strategies provide ~1 spoon back each. Examples: 20-minute solitude break, headphone music time, walk outside alone, hot bath, meditation, stim toy use. Calculator outputs spoons used minus recovery vs baseline. Status: 🟢 Healthy (<50% used) — comfortable margin. 🟡 Approaching (<75%) — slow down, proactive recovery. 🟠 Overloaded (<100%) — protect remaining capacity, cancel non-essential. 🔴 Burnout risk (>100%) — emergency recovery needed, may take days to restore.
🔴 Burnout risk — exceeded capacity by 38%
Common pattern for engaged office workers: noise from open office, social cost of multiple meetings, transitions between contexts, accumulated decisions, and unexpected interruptions sum to 27.5 spoons against 20 available capacity. The 2 recovery strategies (lunch break alone, brief walk) help but aren't enough. 138% utilization predicts evening crash and possibly tomorrow's reduced capacity. Recovery needed: 1-2 days of low sensory load to restore baseline.
🟢 Healthy capacity — comfortable margin
Remote work day in quiet home environment: low noise, low visual, minimal social, single context, no unexpected changes. The 4 recovery strategies (yoga, lunch outside, meditation, evening alone time) actively replenish during the day. Only 30% capacity used — significant cushion remaining. This represents sustainable neurodivergent work pattern that protects long-term capacity. Many neurodivergent workers find these days enable peak productivity precisely because capacity is preserved for cognitive work rather than spent on sensory overload.
🔴 Severe burnout — recovery will take 2-5 days
Wedding, conference, or major family gathering produces severe sensory overload. Even with strong recovery strategies (single 1-hour quiet break), the social cost (10 × 1.5 = 15 spoons alone) plus noise, visual, transitions, and unexpected events dramatically exceeds capacity. 235% utilization means significant 'spoon debt' that requires 2-5 days of low-load recovery. Many neurodivergent users plan recovery days after major events: blocks 1-2 days post-event with no commitments, expectations, or social demands.
🟠 Just over capacity — cancel non-essential, protect evening
Day's accumulated load slightly exceeds capacity. Calculator surfaces this before evening crash. Actions: cancel non-essential evening commitments, increase recovery (early bedtime, quiet evening, headphones), notify partner of low-capacity status, schedule low-load activities for tomorrow. Early identification (106% rather than 235%) allows recovery before significant overload damage. This is the calculator's most valuable use — surfacing approaching-limit status while there's still time to protect.
Autistic adults pacing their week to prevent burnout from accumulated overstimulation
ADHD users understanding why 'easy' days still leave them exhausted — sensory cost wasn't visible until measured
HSPs (highly sensitive persons) explaining their needs to family and coworkers using concrete framework
Parents of neurodivergent children helping them recognize when to take sensory breaks
Workplace accommodation conversations — quantifying sensory cost of open office, meetings, and demands
| Category | Cost per Unit | High-Cost Example | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Noise | 1.0 spoon | Open office, loud restaurant | Noise-canceling headphones |
| Visual Clutter | 0.8 spoon | Crowded retail, messy room | Minimalist environment |
| Social Interactions | 1.5 spoon | Wedding, conference, family event | Limit interaction time, recovery between |
| Transitions | 1.2 spoon | Multiple meetings with different people | Batch similar activities, minimize switches |
| Unexpected Changes | 2.0 spoon | Schedule disruption, surprise visit | Buffer time in schedule, build flexibility |
| Major Decisions | 0.7 spoon | Job offer, medical choice, big purchase | Decision fatigue tip: decide morning, not evening |
What is spoon theory?
Coined by Christine Miserandino in 2003 to explain lupus energy limitations to a friend, 'spoons' are a metaphor for limited daily energy/capacity units. Each task costs spoons; once you're out, you cannot continue without recovery. The framework has been adopted by autistic, ADHD, chronic illness, and other communities to describe sensory and cognitive capacity limits invisible to neurotypical observers. The metaphor's strength is making invisible limitations visible.
How do I increase my sensory capacity?
You can't fundamentally — baseline capacity is determined by your nervous system. But you can: (1) Reduce baseline drain through better sleep, managing chronic stress, treating anxiety/depression. (2) Use recovery strategies proactively throughout day, not just after exhaustion. (3) Schedule low-load days strategically (after high-load days, before known intense events). (4) Optimize environment: noise-canceling headphones, minimalist visual space, fewer commitments. The goal is matching demand to capacity rather than expanding capacity.
Why are transitions so expensive?
Neurodivergent brains often process changes in context as full cognitive load events. Switching from one task to another, going from quiet home to busy office, having an unexpected schedule change — all require re-orientation, re-engagement, and disposal of previous context. Neurotypical brains do this automatically with minimal cost; neurodivergent brains expend significant resources. Many neurodivergent professionals find their most productive days have minimal transitions (deep work blocks, single context for hours).
What if my baseline keeps decreasing?
Decreasing baseline capacity over weeks/months indicates accumulating burnout or unmanaged stress. Causes: chronic overload (sustained 100%+ utilization), unmanaged stressors (toxic work, unstable housing, relationship issues), undiagnosed condition (autism, ADHD, depression, anxiety, chronic illness), or hormonal/medical changes. If baseline drops more than 5 spoons consistently, consider: medical evaluation, mental health support, autism/ADHD assessment if neurodivergent suspicions, lifestyle restructuring to reduce demands.
How do I explain this to neurotypical people?
Use specific examples: 'For me, that work meeting cost 8 spoons — like running a half-marathon for energy. I need recovery before tonight's plans.' Avoid abstract framing. Avoid apologizing — capacity limits are neurological reality, not laziness or rudeness. Frame as planning: 'I need to leave early to protect tomorrow's energy.' Many neurotypical family members and partners come to understand once they see consistent patterns: high-load days followed by reduced-capacity days regardless of effort.
Should I use recovery strategies preventively?
Yes — proactive recovery beats reactive recovery. Before a known high-load event: 1-2 days of low load to build reserve. During the event: scheduled recovery breaks (20 min alone every 2 hours). After the event: 1-3 days of low load. This pattern produces better outcomes than running at 100%+ and crashing into multi-day recovery. Treat sensory budget like financial budget — protect tomorrow by managing today within capacity rather than constantly overdrafting.
Are these category weights accurate for everyone?
The weights (noise 1.0, visual 0.8, social 1.5, transitions 1.2, unexpected 2.0, decisions 0.7) reflect average neurodivergent experience based on community input and research. Individual variation exists: some autistic users find visual clutter most expensive, some find noise dominant, ADHD users often find transitions hardest, HSPs may find decisions most depleting. Adjust mental weights based on your personal experience. The framework still helps even if exact weights differ — surfacing categories and quantifying load is the value.
Pro Tip
Front-load recovery strategies, don't wait until you're depleted. Use 20-minute quiet time before meetings, not after exhaustion. Schedule 'recharge days' after high-social events (weddings, conferences, family visits). Treat sensory recovery like budgeting — protect tomorrow by managing today within capacity rather than constantly overdrafting. The calculator's status indicators (🟢🟡🟠🔴) tell you when to act before crash, not after.
Did you know?
Christine Miserandino's original 2003 spoon theory essay 'The Spoon Theory' has been translated into 30+ languages and is one of the most-shared pieces of disability writing online. She wrote it after a friend at a diner asked what it was like having lupus — Christine grabbed all the spoons from nearby tables to demonstrate energy as a finite physical resource. The metaphor's power is its concreteness: rather than abstractly explaining 'I get tired,' physical spoons make the calculus visible. The framework now has academic recognition in disability studies and is used in autism, ADHD, chronic illness, and many other neurodivergent communities worldwide.