Play Therapy

Your Path Begins Inside

What is Play Therapy?

Play Therapy is based on the notion that Play is a child’s natural mode of self-expression. The playroom becomes synonymous with the child’s language and the toys become the child’s words.

Play Therapy is a well-researched, developmental and psycho-therapeutic treatment method used to assist children between the ages of approximately 2-13 years to cope with, feel empowered and overcome difficulties that they are faced with.

The therapist and the child enter a safe, sacred and therapeutic space- the playroom- which is equipped with specific toys to encourage expressing underlying feelings, experiences of their inner and outer world, as well as themes through medium of play.

Children do not have the language ability and cognitive understanding to express what they are experiencing, thus the mode of play becomes a non-threatening safe medium of self-expression and for experiences to be re-played in the play therapy room.

Play Therapy

How can we assist you?

A child is given the opportunity to play out a range of feelings and experiences such as tension, frustration, insecurity, aggression, fear, rage and confusion in a safe and therapeutic environment by using toys symbolically. By free expression and playing out these feelings and experiences, the child brings them to the surface, gets them out in the open, faces them, learns to control them, cope with them, gains symptom-relief, understands them, or lets them go. By expressing themselves symbolically in their play, children have a space to distance themselves from difficult feelings, memories and experiences. They have a space away from caregivers where they can express and come to terms with their feelings without worrying that they may be bad or get into trouble.

 

Through the Play Therapy Process, a child begins to realise the power within to be a separate individual, to think and make decisions independently, to become psychologically more mature, and by so doing, to realise individuation. Significant adults in the child’s life can then feel more empowered to offer appropriate support to encourage healing and coping.

How will Child therapy Benefit my Child?

Play Therapy can help your child and others to:

Develop a more positive self and in return build self-esteem

Develop respect and acceptance of themselves and others

Develop more trust

Develop new and creative solutions to their problems

As they learn to think about different alternatives they start to use this new way of thinking in their world

Learn to experience and express feelings (rather than act in or act out)

to be empathic with respect to the thoughts and feelings of others

Learn new social skills

Take responsibility for their behaviour and replace inappropriate behaviour with more successful behaviour through healthier choices

Research supports the effectiveness of Play Therapy with children experiencing a wide variety of social, emotional, mental, behavioral and learning problems,  including:

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Abuse (physical, emotional, sexual)

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Adjustment difficulties and adapting to new situations

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Aggression (or acting out behaviour)

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Anxiety

(Fear, Separation Anxiety, excessive Worries/General Anxiety; Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, Post Traumatic Disorder, Phobias, Trichotillomania, Panic Disorder, Social Anxiety)

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Attachment difficulties

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Attention Deficit (with or without Hyperactivity) Disorder,

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Bereavement

(Grief or Loss of Parent, sibling, significant other, pets)

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Bipolar Disorder in Childhood

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Bullying

(the bullied and the bully)

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Chronic Illness

(of child or significant others)

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Conduct Disorder

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Defiance

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Disruptive behaviours

(not listening/ lying/ impulsivity/ tantrums/ power struggles)

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Divorce or Separation

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Depression

(sadness, hopelessness, loss of interest in pleasurable activities)

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Elimination Disorders

(Enuresis/Encopresis  – e.g. bedwetting; soiling; refusal to pass stools)

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Grief

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Learning difficulties

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Oppositional Defiant Disorder

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Pervasive Developmental Disorders

(Aspergers, Autism)

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Relocation

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Self-Esteem and Self-Concept

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Sibling Rivalry

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Sleep difficulties

(e.g. nightmares, insomnia)

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Social adjustment difficulties

(inappropriateness or withdrawal; struggling to make friends)

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Somatic complaints without a medical cause

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Stress

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Shyness

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Traumatic events

(victims of crime/hospitalisation/ accidents)

It is vital that your child’s emotional and behavioural difficulties be dealt with at an early stage. Lack of treatment may result in the child becoming more distressed, the problem escalating to family, academic and social life. Note if your child displays a change in behaviour for at least 2 weeks (such as withdrawal, moodiness, aggression) after a stressful life event (such as death, divorce, relocation, new school, birth of a sibling), it would be recommended that your child be referred for either an assessment or Play Therapy. Your child’s behaviour may not be due to a stressor, but lacks skill (such as self-regulation, or self-expression) which may also require assistance.

How often should my chid attend therapy?  

Research and professional experience indicates that it takes about 16-20 sessions to work through the presenting concerns of your child entering the therapeutic treatment process. The Play Therapy duration will depend on the presenting concern, your child’s temperament, learning and integration, as well as your family and larger system working together. The Play Therapy Process is based on consistency and predictability, which builds a sense of safety, trust and builds your child’s inner ego.

Your family is vital in your child’s healing process as your child and family heal faster when you all work together. Your child’s Play Therapist will give feedback to you as caretakers, to assist in resolving your child’s concerns and to monitor your child’s healing progress. Your Therapist will decide with you how and when to include your family in the Play Therapy Process.

Our Play Therapy approach takes place in 4 phases over an average 16-week cycle. In the Exploration Phase, your child explores the therapeutic setting, the process and a therapeutic relationship is established.  The Limit-setting Phase allows your child to develop self-esteem by testing the therapeutic setting as well as testing limits outside of the setting. Your child is taught to make choices with consequences in order to gain inner control, yet never rejected no matter what choice is made. In the Dependency Phase, the therapeutic process intensifies and this is usually the space your child learns to master skills. Approximately 4 sessions are needed to prepare the child to terminate therapy and to integrate the healing process.

Different type of Play Therapy  

Our trained psychologists prefer to draw on different approaches of Play Therapy to assist and meet your child’s needs. Several therapeutic tools are used based on the direction of the child.

The directive approach uses specific techniques used by the trained psychotherapist.

Different Approach

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Art Therapy

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Bibliotherapy (therapeutic stories)

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Board Games (therapeutic games)

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Guided Imagery and Visualisation

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Psychodrama

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Puppets

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Role Plays

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Sand Tray Therapy

Different Approach

This approach offers an opportunity for your child to experience growth and healing through the security of the Play Therapy room where your child is the most important person, and is in command of the situation and of himself, where no one tells him what to do, or pries into his private world, he suddenly feels that here he can unfold his wings; he can look squarely at himself, for he is accepted completely; he can test out his ideas; he can express himself fully; for this is his world, and he no longer has to compete with such other forces as adult authority or rival contemporaries or situations.

He is an individual in his own right. He is treated with dignity and respect. He can say anything that he feels like saying – and he is accepted completely. He can play with the toys in any way that he likes to – and he is accepted completely.

The presence of an accepting, understanding, and friendly therapist in the playroom gives him a sense of security.

The therapist is sensitive to what the child is feeling and expressing through his play and verbalization. The therapist reflects these expressed, emotionalized attitudes back to him in such a way as to help him understand himself a little better.  The therapist also conveys to him the feeling that she understands and accepts him at all times regardless of what he says or does.

Thus the therapist gives him the courage to go deeper into his innermost world and bring out into the open his real self.

It is a challenge and something deep within your child responds to this clearly felt challenge to be – to exercise this power of life within himself, to give it direction, to become more purposeful and decisive and individual. He tries it out – cautiously at first – then as he feels the permissiveness and security in the situation, he sets forth more boldly to explore the possibilities of this arrangement.

The psychological resistance that he used to encounter is gone.

The therapeutic value of this kind of psychotherapy is based upon the child experiencing himself as a capable, responsible person in a relationship that tries to communicate to him 2 basic truths: that no one ever really knows as much about any human being’s inner world as does the individual himself; and that responsible freedom grows and develops from inside the person.

The child must first learn self-respect and a sense of dignity that grows out of his increasing self-understanding before he can learn to respect the personalities and rights and differences of others.

Case Study

A moving story written by Virginia Axline, of an emotionally lost boy named Dibs:

He would not talk. He would not play. Judged mentally defective, he was oblivious both to other children and to his teacher; in reality he was a brilliant, lonely child trapped in a prison of fear and rage, a prison from which only he could release himself. And, through psychotherapy and love, he did.

“What would ultimately help Dibs the most was not the sand mountain, not the powerful, little plastic duck, but the feeling of security and adequacy that they symbolized in the creation he had built last week. Now, faced with the disappearance of the concrete symbols, I hoped that he could experience within himself confidence and adequacy as he coped with his disappointment and with the realization that things outside ourselves change – and many times we have little control over those elements, but if we learn to utilize our inner resources we carry our security around with us.”

It may be recommended that you and/or your child attend supplementary workshops below to work holistically:

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Parenting Wisely: 7 Simple Steps

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Parental Guidance

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Family Therapy

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Couple's Counselling

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