Medical Disclaimer
Last updated June 2026
Quick, honest version up front: I'm a mom sharing what works at my table, not a professional treating your child. This page spells out what that means, because you deserve to know exactly who is on the other side of these ideas.
Who I am
I'm Nora. I'm a mom of two and I spent three years as a preschool aide before my own kids came along. That's the whole of my background. I am not an occupational therapist, a speech therapist, a BCBA, a psychologist, or a doctor, and I've never claimed to be. When I use a word like proprioceptive or first-then, it's because I picked it up from my son's OT and from years of doing this, not from a license on my wall.
What this site is, and what it isn't
Everything here, the sensory bins, the printables, the calm-down ideas, is for play and for a little relief on a hard day. That's the job. None of it is medical, therapeutic, or psychological advice.
Nothing on this site diagnoses, treats, or cures anything. Not autism, not ADHD, not SPD, not any condition. I won't tell you a bin of rice fixes a thing, because it doesn't. It buys you a good ten minutes, and on the right day that counts for a lot. Read it as one tired parent passing along what helped, and you've read it right.
Please talk to a professional
If something about your child's development, behavior, feeding, speech, or health is sitting heavy with you, take it to someone qualified to look. A pediatrician, an OT, an SLP, the right person for the question. They can examine your child; I can't, and a blog post can't.
I share what worked at my table. Your child's professional knows your child. When those two ever disagree, follow the professional every time.
Safety and supervision matter here
Sensory and taste-safe play needs you in the room. Active adult supervision, eyes on, the whole time. This part isn't optional, so here's the plain version:
- "Taste-safe" is not "edible." It means I built the activity from food ingredients so a mouthful won't hurt. It is not a meal, and it is not meant to be eaten like one.
- Small parts and loose materials are a choking hazard. Beads, pom-poms, dry rice, little scoops, all of it, for babies and toddlers. If your child still mouths everything, that setup isn't for them yet.
- You know your child's stage, I don't. Supervise, adapt, and swap out anything that isn't a fit. When you're unsure whether something is safe for your kid, skip it.
The short of it
I make this site to be the resource I wish I'd had at 2am, not a stand-in for the people trained to help your family. Use the ideas, keep your hands on the play, and lean on the pros for anything that matters. If you want to know more about me before you trust a word of this, my about page is the honest story, and my editorial promise lays out how every activity here gets written. Thanks for letting me share your table.