For me, the experience is very different.
What is perceived as entertainment is processed by my body as threat—immediate, physical, and difficult to regulate, even when I know I am safe.
I’m writing this shortly after experiencing it. Even with time to settle, the physical response lingers longer than the event itself.
The Experience
This response isn’t a matter of preference.
It’s neurological.
And it’s shared by many:
- people with autism
- individuals with trauma sensitivity
- animals, especially dogs
What feels brief to some can have a lasting physiological impact on others.
The Disconnect
Fireworks are often framed as harmless fun.
But that framing doesn’t include everyone.
It leaves out the people who:
- prepare for it
- endure it
- recover from it afterward
A Better Direction
This isn’t about removing celebration.
It’s about evolving it.
Alternatives already exist—drone light shows, coordinated visual displays, and quieter events—that preserve the experience without creating the same level of impact.
🔄 2026 Update
This connects directly to how I think about human-centered systems.
If a system consistently creates distress for part of the population, it’s worth redesigning.
Not to reduce joy—but to make it accessible.
Key Insights
- Sensory experiences are not universal
- “Harmless” activities can have real impact
- Systems should be designed for inclusion, not assumption
- Alternatives can preserve joy while reducing harm
Guardian Application
A Guardian system could:
- help users prepare for known sensory events
- provide real-time calming strategies
- guide communities toward more inclusive alternatives
- support awareness without confrontation
Tags
- Domain: Human Systems
- Function: Story, Advocacy
- Guardian: Emotional Support

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