For many parents raising children with cerebral palsy or additional needs, home therapy starts with good intentions.

You want to help your child progress.
You want to “do everything right.”
You want to see improvement.

But somewhere along the line, many parents become overwhelmed, exhausted, discouraged, or inconsistent — not because they don’t care, but because they are trying to carry too much without the right structure.

The truth is:
Home therapy should support your family life, not completely drain it.

Here are 5 common mistakes many parents make — and what to do instead.


1. Trying To Do Too Much At Once

Many parents feel pressure to:

This often leads to burnout and inconsistency.

What To Do Instead:

Start small.

A simple routine done consistently is more powerful than an intense routine done for only three days.

Focus on:

Remember:
Consistency builds progress.


2. Comparing Their Child’s Progress To Others

Social media can make it seem like every other child is progressing faster.

This comparison creates:

What To Do Instead:

Focus on your child’s unique journey.

Progress may look different for every child:

Small wins matter.

Celebrate them.


3. Turning Therapy Into A Constant Battle

Some parents unintentionally make therapy feel stressful by:

Children often respond with resistance.

What To Do Instead:

Create calm, connection-based therapy moments.

Therapy can happen during:

Your child learns better in a calm and emotionally safe environment.


4. Waiting For “Perfect Conditions” To Start

Many parents delay consistency because:

So they keep postponing.

What To Do Instead:

Start with what you have.

You do not need:

You simply need a realistic structure you can maintain daily.

Progress often begins with simple, repeatable actions.


5. Ignoring Their Own Emotional Health

Parents often pour everything into caregiving while neglecting themselves emotionally.

Over time, this leads to:

What To Do Instead:

Support yourself too.

You deserve:

A calmer parent often creates a calmer therapy environment for the child.

You do not have to carry this journey alone.


Final Thoughts

Home therapy is not about perfection.

It is about creating sustainable routines that support both the child and the parent.

Small steps.
Simple structure.
Consistent follow-through.

That is where real progress begins.

Click here to get a resource that will be helpful for your journey: https://selar.com/s47mqalc24

At Thrive Beyond Cerebral Palsy Academy, we believe parents need support too — because when parents feel equipped, children thrive better.

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