Go to habilitation

#habilitation#therapy#support#day activity#visit

The rooms feel familiar, the questions feel familiar, and the body remembers how last time went. The pictures below help the child meet today's session with a new order instead of old memories.

A happy boy runs towards a building with an open door where two children are waving.

Boy goes to habilitation

A happy boy runs towards a building with an open door where two children are waving.

About this visual support

Habilitation is a neutral-sounding word that rarely feels neutral. The corridor often leads to the same room as a previous assessment, the questions repeat, and the child is expected to answer about themselves in front of adults who write things down. It is a particular kind of work, more than a regular visit.

Lay the pictures in the order you actually move through: check-in, waiting, greeting the therapist, sitting at the table, any exercise or play, conversation with the parent present, end. When the child sees the end of the visit before stepping in, the therapist's words become part of a whole, not an open channel that never closes.

A concrete tip: bring something from home that belongs to ordinary life, like a small pack of cards or a piece of fabric in a pocket. It builds a bridge between the room and everything outside and reminds the body that the habilitation room is not the whole world. In Routined you can save the session and add fixed pause timers between steps. Try it free for 14 days.