Key Takeaways
- If your child struggles with everyday things — dressing, handwriting, big feelings, certain textures — occupational therapy may help.
- None of these signs mean something is “wrong” with your child. They mean their nervous system is working hard to keep up.
- In Illinois, you do not need a diagnosis to start OT — a parent’s concern is enough.
- You know your child better than anyone. If your gut says something feels harder than it should, trust it.
So if your child is struggling with things that seem to come easily to other kids — and you don’t know why — I want you to know something first: you are not imagining it, and you are not overreacting.
Parents ask me all the time, “Does my child actually need occupational therapy, or am I worrying too much?” Here is my honest answer: if the everyday things are a daily battle, it is worth having a look. Occupational therapy helps children build the skills they need to do the ordinary work of being a kid — getting dressed, holding a pencil, handling a noisy room, calming down after a hard moment. And here in Carbondale, you do not need a diagnosis to begin.
How do I know if my child needs occupational therapy?
There is rarely one single sign. It is usually a pattern — several everyday struggles that keep showing up together. These are the seven we see most often.
1. Everyday self-care is a daily battle
Buttons, zippers, shoelaces, using a fork or spoon, brushing teeth. If your child is well past the age when these usually click and they are still a struggle every single day, that is often a fine-motor and motor-planning signal — not stubbornness.
2. Certain clothes, sounds, foods, or textures cause big reactions
The tag that “hurts.” The seam in the sock that ruins the morning. Covering their ears at the grocery store. Gagging at certain food textures. This is how sensory processing differences show up. Your child’s nervous system is taking in the world more intensely than most — and reacting to protect them.
3. They seem clumsy — or crash into everything on purpose
Tripping, bumping into furniture, spilling constantly. Or the opposite: crashing, jumping, squeezing too hard, always needing to move. Both are about body awareness — how well the brain knows where the body is in space. When that signal is fuzzy, kids either avoid movement or chase it hard to feel grounded.
4. Handwriting, coloring, or holding a pencil is hard — or avoided
If your child grips the pencil in a fist, presses too hard or too soft, tires quickly, or simply refuses to draw and write, that is a fine-motor and visual-motor sign. It is one of the most common reasons a teacher suggests an OT take a look.
5. Big feelings take over — and calming down is hard
Transitions melt down. Small frustrations become huge. And once they are upset, it takes a long time to come back. This is self-regulation, and it is a skill — one that OT actively builds. It is not “bad behavior.” It is a child whose nervous system has not yet learned how to settle itself.
6. They are behind where you would expect on the everyday milestones
Not walking or talking on the usual timeline, yes — but also dressing themselves, feeding themselves, playing with toys the way peers do. When several of these lag together, an evaluation helps you understand the whole picture instead of guessing.
7. Focus, sitting still, and following directions fall apart
Cannot stay seated. Loses the thread of a two-step instruction. Bounces from one thing to the next. Before we call this an attention problem, we look underneath — because very often, a child who cannot sit still is a child whose body is working overtime just to stay regulated.
You don’t need a diagnosis — and you don’t need to figure this out alone
Here is the part I most want parents to hear. You do not need a formal diagnosis, a doctor’s label, or a long waitlist to bring your child in. In Illinois, a parent’s concern is enough. We start where your child is, we find out what is actually going on, and we build from there. If you want to understand the difference between a hard moment and a true sensory response, this helps too: Sensory Meltdown vs. Tantrum: How to Tell the Difference.
And none of these seven signs mean your child is broken. Every one of them is your child’s nervous system doing its absolute best to keep up with a world that asks a lot of small bodies. When we understand what a child is working so hard at, we can finally help in the right place. We see this every day here in Carbondale — and again and again, what a family needs first is simply an answer.
So let me leave you with this. You know your child better than anyone in the world. If your gut has been whispering that something feels harder than it should — trust it. That instinct is usually right.
Talk to us about your child
Not sure if it is “enough” to ask? It is. Chandana Dash, OTR/L, works with children of all ages — with or without a diagnosis — at Synergy Therapeutic Group in Carbondale, IL. Call us at (618) 243-7822 and let’s talk about your child. You do not have to figure this out alone. You can also learn more about pediatric OT from the American Occupational Therapy Association.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my child need a diagnosis to start occupational therapy?
No. In Illinois you can begin OT without a formal diagnosis. A parent’s concern about how your child is developing is reason enough to come in for an evaluation.
How do I know if it is OT they need and not something else?
That is exactly what an evaluation is for. We look at motor skills, sensory processing, and self-regulation together, then tell you honestly what we see — including if another provider is a better fit.
Isn’t my child just being difficult or lazy?
Almost never. When everyday tasks are a battle, it is usually because a skill has not fully developed yet — not a behavior choice. OT builds that missing skill so daily life gets easier for everyone.
At what age can a child start OT?
From very young through the school years. Earlier support is often easier, but it is genuinely never too late to help a child build these skills.
Chandana Dash, OTR/L, is a pediatric occupational therapist and co-founder of Synergy Therapeutic Group, 1110 Cedar Court, Carbondale, IL. She specializes in sensory processing, fine-motor development, and helping families understand their child’s needs.
This article is for general education and is not medical advice. Please consult a licensed provider about your child’s specific situation.


