Who We Help
Parents and carers
Parenting a child affected by trauma can be exhausting and isolating.
We support parents and carers in their own right through therapeutic parenting support, consultation and groups, because helping the adults around a child is one of the most powerful ways to help the child.
Children, young people and their families
We have deep expertise in supporting children who are adopted, fostered or care-experienced, and the families who love and care for them. But we know that developmental trauma doesn't only belong to the care system.
We also support children and families affected by:
Early and birth trauma - including difficult perinatal and postnatal experiences, for both child and parent.
Trauma that can accompany neurodivergence and learning disability - when a child's experience of the world, and the world's response to them, has been repeatedly distressing or misunderstood.
Bullying and painful peer experiences - when the hurt has happened in friendships, school and social life.
Loss, disruption and adversity within family life - for children living with birth parents as much as any other family.
Professionals, schools and organisations
We work with the wider network around children:
Schools and education settings
Residential homes
Fostering and adoption services
Local authorities
Social care teams
Workplaces
We offer training, consultation and clinical supervision to help these systems become places of safety, understanding and connection.
What unites everyone we work with is not a label or a care status, it's the experience of trauma that has touched relationships, safety and connection.