Psychotherapy Services

Interpersonal skills support for friendship and communication.

Interpersonal skills are the skills children use with other people. This support helps children communicate, connect, solve social problems, and feel more confident with peers and adults.

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Support for the social side of life

Children may need help learning how to join a conversation, read social cues, handle teasing or exclusion, recover after conflict, or understand another person's point of view. Sessions focus on practical skills children can use in real situations.

  • Friendship concerns, social anxiety, peer conflict, or loneliness.
  • Difficulty starting conversations, joining groups, or keeping friendships.
  • Challenges reading cues, perspective-taking, or repairing mistakes.
  • Children who need confidence participating with peers.

What we work on

Sessions may focus on conversation, listening, flexible thinking, personal space, body language, joining in, problem-solving, teamwork, and managing conflict without shutting down or escalating.

Practice matters

Children often need more than a verbal explanation. Interpersonal work may use role play, scenarios, games, coaching, and reflection so skills become easier to use outside of session.

Connection to groups

Some children start with individual interpersonal skills work and later move into peer group work or social skills groups when they are ready for more practice.

How to book

Parents can book an intake conversation and describe the social situations that are hardest for their child. Intake can recommend individual, dyadic, or group support.

Ready to ask about this service?

Use intake to book, register, or ask whether this is the best fit before starting. Please include preferred appointment days and time windows; we will confirm whether that time is available.