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Enjoy articles about primitive reflex integration, brain hemispheric balance, sensory processing, and all things neuroplasticity. Reach out with any specific questions or recommendations for future posts.

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  • Yesterday

Focus Isn’t a Trait—It’s a Skill You Can Build

    We tend to talk about focus as if it’s something you’re born with. Some kids are “naturally attentive.” Others are labeled “easily distracted.” And somewhere along the way, we start to believe that focus is fixed. But neuroscience tells a very different story. Focus is not a personality trait—it’s a skill. And like any skill, it develops through experience, practice, and the right kind of support.

    • Mar 22

    Why You Can’t Truly “Fix the Brain” Without Addressing the Gut

      When families start a brain-based program—whether it’s reflex integration, brain balance work, or coordination training—they’re often hoping for faster focus, better emotional regulation, and improved learning. And those things can happen. But there’s a missing piece that often gets overlooked: You can’t fully support the brain if you’re ignoring the gut.

      • Mar 9

      The 3 Brain Areas That Impact Focus, Emotions, and Coordination (And Why They Need to Work Together)

        When parents come to us at Brain Connex Therapy, they often describe challenges that seem unrelated: Trouble focusing Emotional outbursts Clumsiness or poor coordination Sensory sensitivities Difficulty following directions It can feel confusing. Why would focus, emotions, and coordination all be connected? The answer lies in how different parts of the brain work together. Three key areas play a major role in how children regulate attention, movement, and emotions: the cerebellum, prefrontal cortex, and parietal lobe. When these areas communicate efficiently, children can focus, move, and regulate themselves more easily. When communication between them is inefficient, everyday tasks can feel much harder.

        • Mar 3

        After-School Meltdowns: What’s Really Happening in the Brain?

          You pick them up from school. They seem fine. And then — shoes off, backpack dropped, and suddenly everything falls apart. Tears. Yelling. Irritability. Total shutdown. If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. And more importantly — this is not a parenting failure. It’s a nervous system story.

          • Feb 21

          Three Brain Areas That Need Support in Kids with ASD — And How They Connect to Sensory Symptoms

            When we think about supporting children with ASD, we often focus on behaviors — meltdowns, rigidity, distractibility, sensory sensitivities, poor coordination, or emotional regulation challenges. But behaviors are symptoms. Underneath those symptoms are brain systems that may not be communicating efficiently. Three key areas that often need intentional support in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder are: The cerebellum The prefrontal cortex The parietal lobe These areas play powerful roles in movement, sensory processing, attention, and regulation — and they are deeply interconnected. Let’s break this down in a clear, parent-friendly way.

            • Feb 13

            No More Guesswork: A Better Way to Do Reflex Integration at Home

              When parents begin a reflex integration program, they’re often hopeful… and overwhelmed. They understand that retained primitive reflexes can impact attention, emotional regulation, posture, coordination, and learning. But between school, therapies, sports, and everyday life, consistency becomes the hardest part. That’s where an app-based reflex integration program can truly change the game.

              • Feb 4

              After-School Meltdowns Aren’t Bad Behavior — They’re Neurological Fatigue

                If your child seems to unravel the moment they get home from school, you’re not imagining it — and you’re definitely not alone. Tears over the “wrong” snack. Explosions that come out of nowhere. A total refusal to engage after what seemed like a perfectly normal day. Parents often find themselves asking the same question again and again: “Why can they hold it together at school, but not at home?” The answer isn’t a lack of discipline or effort. It isn’t defiance. And it certainly isn’t bad parenting. What you’re seeing is neurological fatigue.

                • Jan 27

                The Brain’s Primary Goal Is Survival—And How Reflex Integration Helps It Move Beyond It

                  The brain’s first and most important job is not learning, listening, or behaving—it is survival. When safety is established at the nervous system level, the brain no longer needs to rely on survival strategies. Energy shifts away from protection and toward connection, learning, emotional regulation, and growth. From the moment we are born, the nervous system is wired to constantly scan for safety. This happens automatically and subconsciously through lower brain centers long before logic, reasoning, or self-control come online. When the brain senses safety, higher-level skills are accessible. When it senses threat—real or perceived—everything shifts toward protection. This is why so many children (and adults) struggle not because they won’t regulate, but because their brains genuinely don’t feel safe enough to do so.

                  • Jan 19

                  The Vestibular System: What It Is, Why It Matters, and How Parents Can Support It at Home

                    When a child struggles with focus, coordination, emotional regulation, or even sitting still, we often look at behavior first. But underneath many of these challenges is something far more foundational: the vestibular system. The vestibular system is one of the very first sensory systems to develop in utero, and it plays a powerful role in how a child’s brain and body work together. When it’s not functioning optimally, children don’t just act different—they feeldifferent in their bodies.

                    • Jan 8

                    When a Child’s Brain Moves Too Fast: ADHD, Friendships, and School Struggles

                      Many children with ADHD are not struggling because they don’t care or aren’t trying hard enough. They are struggling because their brain is moving faster than their nervous system can regulate. Parents often describe it as watching their child’s thoughts race ahead of their body. Words come out quickly, reactions happen instantly, and emotions rise before there is time to pause. This neurological speed can bring creativity, curiosity, and intelligence — but without regulation, it can also create very real challenges at school and in friendships.

                      • Jan 2

                      When Words Aren’t Accessible: How Intentional Movement Builds Control, Communication, and Choice

                        Not all children communicate with words—and a lack of speech is often misunderstood as a lack of understanding, awareness, or intent. For many non-speaking children, the challenge is not thinking or knowing what they want to do, but controlling the body well enough to express it. This distinction matters. Motor control, reflex integration, and nervous system maturity play a critical role in whether a child can access purposeful movement—whether that movement is pointing, typing, signing, using AAC, or simply sitting still long enough to engage. “It Is the Mind Itself Which Shapes the Body”

                        • Dec 18, 2025

                        The Brain Is Not Broken: How Neuroplasticity Allows Real Change to Happen

                          Many parents come to us with the same quiet fear: “What if my child’s brain just can’t change?” The truth is reassuring—and backed by neuroscience: The brain is not broken. It’s adaptable. And that adaptability is called neuroplasticity. Many parents come to us with the same quiet fear: “What if my child’s brain just can’t change?” The truth is reassuring—and backed by neuroscience: The brain is not broken. It’s adaptable. And that adaptability is called neuroplasticity. The brain is designed to change. This ability—called neuroplasticity—is the brain’s capacity to form new neural connections, strengthen existing ones, and reorganize how different regions communicate in response to experience and input. Neuroplasticity is not a theory. It’s a well-documented biological process—and it’s the foundation of meaningful developmental change.