I have a gut feeling

If something feels off, you're already right.

You don't need a diagnosis to be taken seriously. A parent's instinct is one of the most reliable early signals there is — and noticing early is a strength, not an overreaction. Let's look, gently, together.

Your instinct counts

Noticing early is a superpower.

Most families who come to us with "just a feeling" were right to trust it. The earlier we look, the more a young, plastic brain and body can do with the right input — and if everything is on track, you get peace of mind. Either way, you win by asking. There is no wasted visit here.

Gentle things to watch

Early signs worth a look.

None of these mean something is wrong — they're simply worth a conversation. Tick anything that sounds familiar and bring it to your call.

  • Motor milestones (rolling, sitting, crawling, walking) arriving later than expected.
  • A strong preference for one hand or one side of the body very early on.
  • Muscle tone that feels unusually stiff or unusually floppy.
  • Movements that look asymmetric, or that aren't getting smoother over time.
  • A quiet sense — hard to put into words — that something is just not quite right.

No pressure, ever

A gentle way to keep an eye.

A listening call

We start by hearing you out — no forms, no referral required, no rush to label anything.

Watchful tracking

If it's early days, we offer a low-pressure way to track development together over time — reassurance, not alarm.

Early input, if it helps

Where it's useful, gentle early-intervention activity — the kind that makes the most of these crucial first years.

No referral needed

Let's just talk.

A free, unhurried call. Bring your gut feeling — we'll take it seriously and look with you.