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Areas of
Focus

It starts with your child and your family — what motivates them, what's hard for them, and what their daily life actually looks like.

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Comprehensive Evaluation

We start by understanding your child's full developmental profile before sessions begin.

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Play-Based Sessions

Play-based, family-involved sessions that are child-led, relationship-centered, and grounded in the DIR/Floortime framework.

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Concierge Service

Regular parent coaching and caregiver guidance so growth extends well beyond the therapy room.

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Our Guiding Belief

Play Is the Language of Children

It's how we connect, reset, recharge, learn, test boundaries, try new moves, make mistakes, get messy, problem solve, collaborate, get strong, be silly, be assertive, and set limits.

Every session involves parents — either directly in the room or in a check-in at the end. What happens here should translate to your home, your child's daycare, and the people who know your child best.

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Social & Emotional

Social Emotional Growth

We begin with self-regulation and interest in the world — the first Functional Developmental Capacity in the DIR framework — and build toward engagement and relating. The capacity to stay connected with another person, to track, respond, initiate, and recover from disconnection, is the second. These two foundational capacities are where all other learning takes root.

  • check Building shared attention and engagement
  • check Co-regulation strategies for caregivers and children
  • check Navigating transitions and unexpected changes
  • check Supporting peer interaction and reciprocal play

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Sensory

Sensory Processing

Sensory processing isn't one thing. A child can be over-responsive to touch but crave vestibular input, or seek out loud environments while struggling with light. We build an individualized sensory profile — informed by the Sensory Processing Measure and direct observation — then develop a plan that accounts for the real environments your child moves through each day.

  • check Sensory modulation and regulation support
  • check Vestibular and proprioceptive processing
  • check Sensory diet planning for home and school
  • check Over- and under-responsivity to sensory input

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Motor Development

Fine Motor Skills

Fine motor skills show up everywhere — writing, scissors, buttons, utensils. Sometimes practicing these things feels like such a chore. My job as the OT is to find the activities that are genuinely exciting, or to naturally build opportunities to grow and develop fine motor skills within our play — so your child is building strength and dexterity without it ever feeling like a drill.

  • check Pencil grasp and pre-writing skills
  • check Hand strength and dexterity
  • check Scissor skills and manipulative tasks
  • check Bilateral hand coordination

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Daily Living

Activities of Daily Living

Getting dressed, brushing teeth, managing a meal — these small routines can feel like such a nightmare to get through. Our goal is to find ways to shift them into something nourishing, connecting, and playful. Is it sensory? Motor planning? Sequencing? Motivation? The answer shapes the approach we take.

  • check Dressing and fastening (buttons, zippers, laces)
  • check Grooming and hygiene routines
  • check Mealtime participation and independence
  • check Transitioning between routines with ease

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Motor Planning

Praxis

Praxis is what happens between "I want to do that" and actually doing it — the brain's ability to conceive, plan, and carry out a new physical action. Sometimes kids with praxis difficulties might hesitate in new situations, maybe because they're afraid, or because they can't visualize what happens next. Their brain isn't quite sequencing the ideas yet.

Praxis is also the foundation for executive functioning skills. Sometimes the challenge with transitions lies in praxis — and sometimes it lands in executive functioning. Knowing which is which changes how we approach it.

  • check Ideation — forming ideas for what to do
  • check Motor sequencing and planning
  • check Dyspraxia support through play-based challenges
  • check Navigating new environments and physical tasks

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Cognition

Executive Function

Executive function — planning ahead, shifting gears, staying on task — tends to get treated as a problem to manage rather than a capacity to build. In occupational therapy, these skills develop through the experience of navigating real problems alongside a trusted adult through co-regulation. That's what sessions look like.

  • check Shared social problem solving
  • check Flexible thinking and adapting to change
  • check Attention and task initiation within meaningful contexts
  • check Self-direction and self-regulation

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Visual Integration

Visual Motor Skills

Visual motor integration is the loop between what the eyes perceive and what the hands execute. When it's off, handwriting looks labored, copying from the board is hard, and scissors feel impossible. We assess this directly and build toward it through activities that actually require the skill.

  • check Hand-eye coordination for functional tasks
  • check Visual perception and spatial reasoning
  • check Copying, tracing, and drawing skills
  • check Integration with motor planning sequences

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Coordination

Motor Coordination

Bilateral coordination, postural stability, and body awareness determine how comfortable a child feels moving through their environment. This shows up in gym class, on the playground, and anywhere their body needs to do two things at once or manage unexpected movement.

  • check Bilateral coordination and crossing midline
  • check Core strength and postural stability
  • check Balance and body awareness
  • check Playground and sports participation

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Primitive Reflexes

Reflex Integration

Primitive reflexes are movement patterns that emerge in infancy and are meant to integrate as the nervous system matures. When they remain active longer than expected, they can interfere with posture, coordination, attention, and learning. Oftentimes these retained reflexes can integrate through opportunities we set up within our play sessions — targeting specific motor patterns and movements in ways that feel natural and fun.

  • check Assessment of retained primitive reflexes
  • check Movement patterns embedded in play
  • check Support for posture, attention, and coordination
  • check Home movement activities for families

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Body Awareness

Interoception

Interoception is the sense that tells us what's happening inside our bodies — hunger, thirst, a racing heart, the feeling of needing to use the bathroom. There is a direct link between interoception and emotional regulation: if it's hard to recognize the internal signals your body is sending, it becomes much harder to manage emotions before they overflow. Supporting a child's body awareness is often the missing piece in regulation work.

  • check Building awareness of internal body signals
  • check Connecting body cues to emotional states
  • check Support for hunger, fatigue, and toileting awareness
  • check Strategies for emotional regulation through body literacy
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Who We Support

Children come to us with a range of diagnoses — and plenty with no diagnosis at all. What they have in common is that something about how they move, process, or relate to the world is making daily life harder than it needs to be.

neurology Autism
psychology ADHD
shield PDA
self_improvement Emotional Regulation
bubble_chart Sensory Processing
favorite Social Emotional
directions_run Praxis / Motor Planning
edit Handwriting
self_care ADLs
school Executive Functioning
brush Fine Motor
visibility Visual Motor
monitor_heart Interoception

Not sure where to start?

Ready to get started? Schedule a call and we'll talk through what you're seeing. No intake forms, no pressure.