A Play Therapy technique: Therapeutic Storytelling. It supports therapeutic play by protecting the child's lead, reflecting action or feeling, and maintaining only the limits needed for safety.
Step-by-step guide
- Notice the play moment where therapeutic storytelling is relevant.
- Follow the child's lead before intervening.
- Use short, concrete language that reflects action, feeling or choice.
- Set a calm limit only when safety or preservation requires it.
- Record the process theme after the session without imposing interpretation on the child.
When to use
- When the child communicates through play more than direct explanation.
- When symbolic material needs safety and respect.
- When a parent or therapist needs to observe without taking over.
Key phrases
You choose what happens here; I will stay with you and keep it safe.
Follow-up questions
What did you notice in the moment?
What would be the smallest useful next step?
Alternative phrasings
We can use Therapeutic Storytelling here without rushing the process.
Let us keep this concrete enough to review next time.
Warnings
- ⚠️ Do not ask why during symbolic play.
- ⚠️ Do not interpret the child's symbols aloud prematurely.
- ⚠️ Do not replace play therapy with adult-directed questioning.
Source: Axline (1947); Landreth (2012); Bratton & Landreth (2006)
Materials are informational and educational and summarize publicly available scientific sources. They are not medical or psychological advice, are not intended for self-diagnosis or self-treatment, and do not replace consultation with a qualified professional.