Windsorian Occupational Therapy Practice

Windsorian Occupational Therapy Practice Occupational Therapy for children I use standardised assessments that are recognised by medical professionals.

If you have a child where there is something worrying you 'but you just can't put your finger on it...'
If you child has problems with balance, co-ordination, struggling with everyday tasks as their fingers won't allow them, is missing developmental milestones, struggles with cutlery, then an OT may be able to help. I can visit your child in school (CRB checked) or visit them in your home. Early i

ntervention is crucial and currently children can wait a year to see an OT through your local NHS/Social Services. I aim to offer affordable OT that is accessible by all. Please get in touch if you would like a free consultation to discuss the problems being experienced.

If anyone missed this, here is the link to watch.
18/05/2026

If anyone missed this, here is the link to watch.

Autistic Thriving at School and Beyond: Public event 6th May

Last week, we were delighted to welcome around 600 people in person and online to our Autistic Thriving at School and Beyond event. The evening brought together autistic young people, families, professionals, researchers and students to explore autistic wellbeing in school. A particular highlight was a keynote from Andy Smith from @ Spectrum Gaming on prioritising wellbeing when autistic children struggle to attend school. Watch the event recording on the Centre for Autism Wellbeing Hub YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtgVz5JDJxuksHWieeo9geg

Fully booked! We are creating a waiting list so if some families only need a few sessions we can then see your child in ...
09/05/2026

Fully booked!

We are creating a waiting list so if some families only need a few sessions we can then see your child in the not so distant future.

Available all of the summer holidays too

Thank you to so many families who got in touch.

07/05/2026

Amazing evening alert!
(despite being very very late. ADHD at it’s best driving with Rebecca
to the wrong uni when I knew it was at the https://research.reading.ac.uk/autism/support-and-training/wellbeing-hub-2/) DOH!

We got there in time to listen to the awesome Andy from Spectrum Gaming who I have followed for a while now. Amazing work they have done.

He is an absolute joy to listen to.

If nothing else, his message was resoundingly what we all believe - what is at the heart of understanding and supporting…well everyone in life!

“Self-determination theory (Deci & Ryan, 2017) is key to our understanding on how to support young people. This theory outlines how all human beings have an innate motivation to learn, develop and grow but that we are only able to achieve these things when our three psychological needs are met:
⭐️Autonomy: Having choice and control over your actions.
⭐️Competence: Feeling that you are learning and developing skills.
⭐️Relatedness: Feeling connected with and accepted by the people around you.

This philosophy applies to EVERYONE”

Some Amazing resources on here which I could browse all day long.

https://barrierstoeducation.co.uk/what-are-the-aims-of-barriers-to-education/

Fab to hang out with Windsorian and Every Mind Psychology ❤️

And so many other professionals we
Work with and amazing parents who are on this journey with us.

Pure joy for the evening. ❤️

Do check out barriers to education website if you’ve not known about them before today.

To the mum who sent these to me. Thank you. You have brightened beyond belief what has been a truly rubbish week and str...
02/05/2026

To the mum who sent these to me. Thank you.

You have brightened beyond belief what has been a truly rubbish week and stressful week for me.

So thank you.

Your gorgeous girl is now off to an amazing specialist school and will now thrive.

You’ve done nothing more than amaze me given your own challenges in life atm to keep fighting and get what she truly deserves.

Thank you so much 🙂

30/04/2026

Co-regulation is when a more-regulated nervous system helps a less-regulated nervous system find balance. With kids, it usually means a calm, attuned adult using their own regulated state to bring a child back into a regulated state.

The adult’s body and presence does most of the work, through cues like tone of voice, facial expression, breathing rhythm, pace of movement, proximity, predictability, and sometimes touch.

The mechanism is biological, not behavioral.

Human nervous systems are wired to read each other constantly through a process called neuroception (a term from polyvagal theory). When a child’s nervous system reads “this person near me is calm and safe,” their own nervous system gets the signal that it can settle too.

That’s why telling a dysregulated child to “calm down” rarely works, but a slow exhale, a soft voice, and a steady body next to them often does.

Co-regulation is not just for babies and toddlers. Adults co-regulate with each other constantly. Anyone whose nervous system is in a stress response can benefit from being near a regulated nervous system, regardless of age. Co-regulation is a healthy part of human life across the entire lifespan.

Self-regulation, on the other hand, is the ability to notice what’s happening in your body and emotions, interpret what those signals mean, identify what you need, and take action to meet that need. It is not the same as “being calm” or “behaving well.” A regulated state can be calm, alert, energized, focused, or sleepy depending on what the situation calls for. The skill is matching your internal state to what you actually need, and being able to shift it when needed.

It depends on a few underlying capacities working together: interoception (sensing internal body signals), emotional recognition, sensory processing, executive function, and a nervous system that has had enough practice in regulated states to know what regulation feels like in the first place.

Kids do not graduate out of needing co-regulation at a specific age. They build self-regulation capacity over years of repeated co-regulation experiences.

Each time a caregiver helps a child move from dysregulated back to regulated, the child’s brain is laying down the neural pathways that will eventually let them do that for themselves.

Self-regulation is essentially internalized co-regulation.

This progression is not linear. Even kids who can self-regulate in low-demand situations will need more co-regulation when they are tired, hungry, sick, sensory-overloaded, or stressed. This is true for adults too. Capacity moves up and down depending on context.

It's also important to know that neurodivergent kids often need more co-regulation for longer, and that is not a deficit. It can reflect a nervous system that is processing more sensory information, has a different threshold for stress, or has had fewer experiences of attuned co-regulation if their cues were missed or misread.

The shift from co-reg to self-reg happens gradually as kids start to recognize their own internal signals, name what they are feeling, identify what their body needs, and try strategies on their own.

Kids will often try and fail many many many times before the right strategy lands successfully and can be used independently. But the trial-and-error of practicing with different tools is part of the skill-building process.

Last spaces left to have a chat about anything you need info on with regards to physical, motor, hypermobility, speech l...
28/04/2026

Last spaces left to have a chat about anything you need info on with regards to physical, motor, hypermobility, speech language or sensory

Our next 'Ask the Experts' event takes place next week!!
There are just a few spaces left, so please get in touch with [email protected] if you would like to speak to any of our wonderful team.

27/04/2026

Delivering training today to maths and English teachers on how they can feel
more effective in the classroom with ADHD learners.

One proud parent. I literally only heard most of this for the first time in his live chats! Wow. Could have listened to ...
26/04/2026

One proud parent. I literally only heard most of this for the first time in his live chats! Wow. Could have listened to him all night given the chance!

Thanks to everyone who came along. Parents, school staff, health care professionals and of course Harrison.

Parents left full of hope for the future❤❤
Schools left with a useful insight of how to support young AuDHD students❤❤

23/04/2026

Last chance tonight at 8pm to register and join the chat with my on as part of his voluntary work with The Hub.

Wednesday lunch was so amazing for everyone that came along - school staff, parents and for Harrison.

Parents who came said they were filled with hope for their child's future seeing what could be possible.

Do come and join us if you want to just listen or join in.

Link to his pre recorded video is accessible when registering.

Thank you.

20/04/2026

We are offering direct OT locally, as of Now until Christmas, including summer holidays.
PAY WHAT YOU CAN AFFORD
Terms and conditions apply.
[email protected]

Address

Bracknell

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