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Happy New Year to all our wonderful customers and participants.
Welcome to our first blog for 2024!
What is reasonable and what is necessary when it comes to what NDIS funding can be used for?
This...
Here's a really nice outcome for anyone thinking of setting up their own Sensory Inclusion space.
Jenny says ...
"It’s a place where you can feel grounded, and everyone who goes in there, sort of a...
I feel passionate about assisting teenagers with sensory processing disorder as they move into teenage years. As I remember (ok, yes, it was a fair time ago now), it can be a difficult time for eve...
This week I have had two conversations with customers who were looking to set up home play spaces for their children. One child was vision impaired, with low spatial awareness who needed assistance with the development of their gross motor skills. Her daughter generally lacked confidence, which isn’t at all unusual for a child still adapting to their disability and was fearful playing outdoors and especially in playgrounds where there were other children and unusual surroundings. The other child had no lower limb movement i.e. a form of paraplegia that rendered her son mostly immobile and confiding him to a wheelchair for periods of time. Her son had a similar circumstance when it came to lacking confidence with any attempt to move outdoors and the outdoor equipment unsuitable for her son’s needs.