


DDP – Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy x12 Sessions
This is a booking for 12 sessions of Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP).
Once you have paid for the bookings, we will contact you to arrange a suitable date and time to attend.
Description
Dyadic’ means ‘something about two people’. This word was used because this therapy helps people with their relationships with other people. DDP is a way of helping children and young people who have been adopted or fostered or live in kinship care, or residential homes. It can also help children who live with their biological parents if the home and parenting provided is now safe and nurturing, both emotionally and physically. Biological parents will also need to be able to understand and accept responsibility for any of their past behaviours that may have harmed their child or left him or her unprotected from harm.
It aims to:
Help your child to have a better relationship with you
Help you to have a better relationship with your child
Help you make more sense of what might be the reasons behind or underneath your child’s more concerning, confusing or worrying behaviour
Help your child, with you alongside, make sense of their current day to day feelings, thoughts and behaviours as well as the things that have happened in the past
Help you, together with your child, make sense of how these may be linked
Help your child to understand how your motives are different form the motives of past caregivers who provided them with inadequate care.
This is a booking for 12 sessions of Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP).
Once you have paid for the bookings, we will contact you to arrange a suitable date and time to attend.
Description
Dyadic’ means ‘something about two people’. This word was used because this therapy helps people with their relationships with other people. DDP is a way of helping children and young people who have been adopted or fostered or live in kinship care, or residential homes. It can also help children who live with their biological parents if the home and parenting provided is now safe and nurturing, both emotionally and physically. Biological parents will also need to be able to understand and accept responsibility for any of their past behaviours that may have harmed their child or left him or her unprotected from harm.
It aims to:
Help your child to have a better relationship with you
Help you to have a better relationship with your child
Help you make more sense of what might be the reasons behind or underneath your child’s more concerning, confusing or worrying behaviour
Help your child, with you alongside, make sense of their current day to day feelings, thoughts and behaviours as well as the things that have happened in the past
Help you, together with your child, make sense of how these may be linked
Help your child to understand how your motives are different form the motives of past caregivers who provided them with inadequate care.
This is a booking for 12 sessions of Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP).
Once you have paid for the bookings, we will contact you to arrange a suitable date and time to attend.
Description
Dyadic’ means ‘something about two people’. This word was used because this therapy helps people with their relationships with other people. DDP is a way of helping children and young people who have been adopted or fostered or live in kinship care, or residential homes. It can also help children who live with their biological parents if the home and parenting provided is now safe and nurturing, both emotionally and physically. Biological parents will also need to be able to understand and accept responsibility for any of their past behaviours that may have harmed their child or left him or her unprotected from harm.
It aims to:
Help your child to have a better relationship with you
Help you to have a better relationship with your child
Help you make more sense of what might be the reasons behind or underneath your child’s more concerning, confusing or worrying behaviour
Help your child, with you alongside, make sense of their current day to day feelings, thoughts and behaviours as well as the things that have happened in the past
Help you, together with your child, make sense of how these may be linked
Help your child to understand how your motives are different form the motives of past caregivers who provided them with inadequate care.