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Your Child's Brain Can Change

The brain can form new connections allowing positive change for your child.

From Survival to Success

Understanding the natural progression of reflex integration helps us identify when intervention may be needed.

Birth to 6 months

Survival Mode

Reflexes help with feeding, protection, and early movement patterns. These automatic responses ensure the baby can survive and begin to interact with their environment.

6 months to 3 years

Integration Phase

Reflexes gradually integrate as voluntary control develops. This is when children learn to crawl, walk, and develop more sophisticated movement patterns.

3+ years

Foundation Complete

Fully integrated reflexes provide the foundation for complex learning, allowing children to focus on academic and social development without interference.

When reflexes don't integrate properly, children may struggle with tasks that should become automatic, requiring extra effort for activities their peers find easy.

The Science Behind Integration

Research shows that retained primitive reflexes can significantly impact a child's development.

Studies have found that children with learning difficulties often have a higher incidence of retained primitive reflexes compared to their typically developing peers.

The good news is that targeted intervention can help integrate these reflexes, leading to improvements in academic performance, coordination, and emotional regulation.

Our evidence-based approach draws from decades of research in neurodevelopment and movement therapy.

What Research Shows

Academic Improvement

Children who complete reflex integration programmes often show significant improvements in reading, writing, and mathematical skills.

Physical Coordination

Better balance, improved fine motor skills, and enhanced gross motor coordination are commonly reported outcomes.

Emotional Regulation

Many children experience improved emotional stability, reduced anxiety, and better social interactions following integration work.

Your Child's Brain Can Change

The most encouraging news: The brain's remarkable ability to form new connections means positive change is always possible.

Hebbian Theory

Cells that fire together, wire together. Repeated movements strengthen neural connections, rewiring the brain for better function.

Myelination

Our exercises promote healthy myelination, creating protective sheaths around nerve fibres for faster, smoother brain communication.

Neuroplasticity

The brain's ability to form new connections means development can improve at any age, making our interventions possible.