As children grow, an important part of the therapeutic process is building a strong, trusting relationship between the child and their clinician. Trust creates the foundation that allows children to feel emotionally safe, understood, and supported.
To help foster that trust, we protect a child’s privacy within the therapy space. When children know that their thoughts and feelings are respected, they are able to be vulnerable and brave enough to:
- Express themselves freely and honestly
- Take emotional risks by sharing difficult thoughts or feelings
- Build confidence and trust in the therapeutic relationship
- Explore important themes through play, creativity, and conversation
Through play, storytelling, art, and imaginative expression, children are able to safely express and process worries, stressful or traumatic experiences, relationships, and big emotions. With parents and caregivers being essential partners in the therapeutic process, your clinician will provide meaningful updates about overall themes during treatment plan reviews. These meetings are time for you to hear what your child’s clinician is noticing, progress toward goals, emotional or behavioral patterns being revealed, and ways to support growth at home. These meetings allow us to keep parents informed and involved in ways that strengthen the child’s support system.
There are some limitations as clinicians typically do not share specific details about exactly what a child says during sessions unless:
● There is a safety concern (such as risk of harm to the child or others)
● The child gives permission for information to be shared
● It is clinically necessary to support the child’s progress
Maintaining this balance allows children to feel safe enough to be open and honest, while also ensuring that parents receive the information they need to support their child’s well-being.
What If Progress Feels Slow
What If Progress Feels Slow?
Play therapy is like planting a garden. At first, it may not look like much is changing. You show up week after week, and the process can feel quiet or slow. But beneath the surface, important work is taking place. Roots are forming and strengthening in ways that are not always immediately visible.
In small, meaningful play moments, your child is learning how to handle big feelings, solve problems, build confidence in themselves, and begin to trust their inner voice. They are practicing new ways of coping, connecting, and making sense of their experiences, all within the safety of the therapeutic relationship.
Even when progress isn’t easy to see right away, growth is unfolding. With time, consistency, and support, those roots become a strong foundation for emotional resilience, self-awareness, and healthy relationships.