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Questions parents ask at midnight

We’ve heard all of them.

Is this just a phase?

That's the question every parent wrestles with, and there's no shame in asking it. A few things to consider: Is the behavior more intense than you'd expect? Does it persist long after the situation has passed? Is it getting in the way of friendships, school, or sleep? Is your child distressed by it — even if they can't explain why? Any one of those on its own might be a phase. Several together, over several weeks, is worth a conversation.

A free 15-minute call is the easiest way to get a clear answer for your specific child — not a general one from a search engine.

Will my child have to talk the whole time?

No. Play therapy works precisely because it doesn't require words. Toys are to children what language is to adults — a way of expressing things that feel too large or too confusing to say out loud. Your child might spend a session arranging animals in a sandbox, drawing a house, or building something and knocking it down. All of it communicates. None of it requires explanation.

Your child leads the session. Some weeks that means drawing. Some weeks that means silence. Both are progress.

What actually happens in a session?

The playroom is stocked with specific, intentional materials — dollhouses, action figures, sand trays, art supplies, puppets, and musical instruments. Your child is invited to use whatever calls to them. The therapist doesn't direct; they observe, reflect, and gently follow. Over time, themes emerge. Patterns surface. The therapist reads what unfolds the way a careful reader reads a story — with patience, and without rushing to the ending.

Ready to talk through what’s going on?

No intake forms. No insurance questions. Just a conversation.

Book a Free 15-Min Call
Play-Based Therapy

Children speak in play the way adults speak in words.

When a child arranges animals in a sandbox or draws a house with a small figure standing outside it, they are telling you something important. Our role is to listen in that language — and to help you understand what you’re hearing.

Child playing with colorful blocks on a warm wooden floor, sunlight streaming through a window

Evidence-Based Approach

Child-Centered Play Therapy is a recognized, research-backed modality effective for anxiety, big emotions, behavioral challenges, grief, and family transitions.

Parents Stay Informed

Parent consultations every 3–5 sessions keep you in the loop — themes, observations, and strategies you can use at home — without breaking your child’s trust.

“I’ve spent over a decade sitting on the floor of a playroom, watching children find their way back to themselves. This work is slow and quiet and completely worth it.”

What if they refuse to go back after the first session?

Some children arrive anxious. Some arrive resistant. Some walk in curious and walk out overwhelmed. All of that is normal, and none of it means therapy isn't working. The first few sessions are about building the relationship — not achieving outcomes. If your child is hesitant, we slow down. We meet them where they are. The therapeutic bond is the most essential ingredient in this work. Without it, no technique matters. With it, almost anything is possible.

How long will this take?

Honestly? It depends on your child, on what they're carrying, and on how long they've been carrying it. Some parents notice shifts in emotional regulation or behavior within a few months. Deeper patterns often take longer. Typical treatment runs six months to a year. We'll be transparent with you throughout — if progress stalls, we'll say so. If things are moving, you'll feel it at home before we even name it.

We check in with you every 3–5 sessions. You will always know where things stand.

Will I know what's happening in the sessions?

Yes — and also, your child's privacy matters. We won't give you a transcript of what they said or played. What we will do is translate the themes and patterns for you: what they might represent, what we're noticing, and what you can do at home to support the work. You'll hear things like "your child spent a lot of time this week protecting a smaller figure" — and we'll help you understand what that might mean.

Ready to talk through what’s going on?

No intake forms. No insurance questions. Just a conversation.

Book a Free 15-Min Call
How It Works

Three unhurried steps.

Starting therapy for your child doesn’t have to feel like a bureaucratic ordeal. We’ve kept the path as clear as we could.

First, a free call.

You tell us what’s happening. We listen without judgment, ask a few gentle questions, and let you know whether and how we can help. No forms beforehand.

Then, we meet your child.

The first session is about comfort, not assessment. Your child explores the playroom at their own pace. Nothing is expected of them.

Progress, at their speed.

Some weeks mean drawing. Some weeks mean silence. Both are progress. We check in with you regularly so you always know where things stand.

Accepting new families

You’ve already done
the hardest part.

Searching for answers at 2 a.m. means you’re paying attention. That’s what good parents do. The next step is just a 15-minute conversation — no paperwork, no commitment.

Book a Free 15-Minute Parent Call

No insurance questions on the call. We handle that together.

6–12
months, typical treatment
15
min free parent call
3–5
sessions between parent updates