Oyun Terapisi
Play therapy is a therapeutic approach mainly used with children. It uses play, drawing, stories, toys, role-play and creative activities to help a child express feelings, process experiences and communicate what may be difficult to say directly. For many children, play is not just entertainment. It is a natural way to explore emotions, relationships, fears, wishes and conflict.
This approach may help children dealing with endişe, travma, aile çatışması, school stress, grief, separation, social difficulties, emotional outbursts or major yaşam geçi̇şleri̇. It can also support children who seem withdrawn, angry, fearful, clingy, oppositional or unable to explain what is wrong.
Why play is used in therapy
Children do not always have the language, maturity or confidence to describe their inner world. A child may not say, “I feel scared because things have changed at home.” Instead, this fear may appear in repeated games, drawings, stories, body tension or behaviour. Play therapy gives the therapist a way to understand the child’s experience at the child’s level.
The therapist observes themes, emotions, choices, relationships and repeated patterns in the child’s play. They may also join the play in a careful and respectful way. The goal is not to analyse every toy or force a meaning. The goal is to create a safe space where the child can express, regulate, test, repair and make sense of difficult experiences.
What happens in sessions?
The first step usually involves the parents or caregivers. The therapist may ask about the child’s age, development, family situation, school life, health, sleep, behaviour, recent changes and previous support. They may also ask what the adults are most worried about and what they have already tried.
Play therapy sessions with the child may include toys, art materials, puppets, sand tray, storytelling, games, movement or imaginative play. Some sessions are child-led. Others are more structured, depending on the child’s needs and the therapist’s training. A child-led session allows the child to choose what to play and how to play. A more directive session may focus on a specific skill, fear, event or emotional theme.
The therapist helps the child feel safe, respected and emotionally contained. They may name feelings, reflect what is happening, support problem-solving, model emotional regulation or help the child find new ways to manage difficult moments. The therapist may also meet parents separately to share general themes, offer guidance and support changes at home.
When play therapy may help
Play therapy may be useful when a child has experienced change, loss, conflict, bullying, medical stress, separation, relocation, trauma or a frightening event. It may also help when a child shows behaviour that adults find hard to understand. Behaviour can be a form of communication. Therapy can help adults look beyond the behaviour and understand the need behind it.
This approach can connect well with therapy for children, art therapy, AİLE TERAPİSİ veya Ebeveynlik desteği. For some children, individual play therapy is enough. For others, the family system also needs support, especially when conflict, separation or parenting stress affects the child’s emotional safety.
Parents and caregivers in the process
Parents are often part of the therapeutic process, even when the child attends individual sessions. The therapist may help parents understand emotional signals, respond more calmly, set clearer limits and repair after conflict. This can be especially useful when parents feel blamed, exhausted or unsure how to help.
For younger children, change is often stronger when therapy and home life support each other. Parents may learn how to use simple emotional language, create predictable routines, reduce escalation and help the child feel secure. The therapist should explain what can be shared and what remains private, so the child can trust the space.
Is play therapy right for your child?
Play therapy may be a good fit if a child struggles to explain feelings, shows distress through behaviour, or has been through a difficult experience. It may also help if talking therapy feels too direct or too adult for the child’s developmental stage.
Before starting, parents can ask the therapist about their training in play therapy, child development, trauma, family work and safeguarding. They can also ask how parents are involved, how progress is reviewed, and what happens if risk or safety concerns appear.
Play therapy does not replace emergency care, child protection services, diagnosis or specialist medical treatment. It offers a professional space where children can express themselves, process difficult experiences and build emotional resilience through developmentally appropriate therapeutic play.