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Sandy Reay Integrative Psychotherapist
Home
About
Psychotherapy
Professional Services
Equine-Assisted Work
Qualifications & Memberships
Contact
Beyond Words (Journal)
Sandy Reay Integrative Psychotherapist
Home
About
Psychotherapy
Professional Services
Equine-Assisted Work
Qualifications & Memberships
Contact
Beyond Words (Journal)
Home
About
Psychotherapy
Professional Services
Equine-Assisted Work
Qualifications & Memberships
Contact
Beyond Words (Journal)
Are We Forgetting the Importance of Simply ‘Being With’?
Sandy Reay 28/05/2019 Sandy Reay 28/05/2019

Are We Forgetting the Importance of Simply ‘Being With’?

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A woman looks up at a horse, which is facing her, in an outdoor setting with trees and a fence in the background.

About

I am an integrative psychotherapist working with children, adolescents and adults. My practice is rooted in the belief that therapeutic change emerges through relationship — through feeling emotionally safe enough to be seen, understood and met with attunement.

I work particularly with neurodivergent children and young people, looked after children, developmental trauma, attachment difficulties and communication beyond words. Alongside private practice, I work within schools, residential settings and multi-agency services, supporting children, families and the wider team around the child.

My approach integrates psychodynamic and attachment-based understanding with creative, experiential and nervous-system-informed ways of working. Depending on the needs of the individual, this may include play, sensory materials, metaphor, emotional regulation work and equine-assisted therapeutic practice.

Before training as a psychotherapist, I spent over two decades within the advertising and film industry, leading creative teams and working closely with narrative, emotion and human communication. I later transitioned into child services and psychotherapy, where my frontline experience within SEND, residential care and school settings deepened my understanding of developmental trauma, neurodiversity and relational work.

I am particularly interested in how we communicate through behaviour, movement, silence, sensory experience and relationship — especially when words feel unavailable, unsafe or insufficient. My work is grounded in curiosity, presence and the belief that meaningful therapeutic change often begins beyond words.

Psychotherapy

Close-up of an adult holding a child's hand, both hands appear to be connected gently.
A close-up black and white photo of a woman making a heart shape with her hands around her face, focusing on her eye and hand gestures.

Psychotherapy offers a relational space where children, adolescents and adults can begin to feel safer, more understood and more connected to themselves and others.

Some people arrive with clear difficulties they would like support with. Others may struggle to put their experience into words. In my work, I recognise that communication can emerge in many different forms, through conversation, play, behaviour, movement, sensory experience, silence and relationship.

My approach is integrative, meaning I draw from different therapeutic approaches depending on the needs of the individual. This may include psychodynamic, neuroscience and attachment-based understanding, creative and experiential work, emotional regulation support and embodied, nervous-system-informed approaches.

I work particularly with:

  • Neurodivergent children and young people

  • Looked after children and those with experiences of developmental trauma or attachment disruption

  • Children and adolescents experiencing emotional, sensory or relational difficulties

  • Adults seeking reflective, relational therapeutic support

  • Families and carers navigating complex emotional and developmental needs

Sessions are tailored to the individual and may include:

  • Talking therapy

  • Play and creative exploration

  • Art, metaphor and storytelling

  • Sensory materials and embodied awareness

  • Emotional regulation work

  • Equine-assisted therapeutic practice

  • Relational and attachment-focused exploration

At the heart of my work is the belief that therapeutic change does not come solely through advice or intervention, but through the experience of feeling emotionally met within a safe and attuned relationship.

Professional Services

Neurodiversity & SEND

I work with neurodivergent children and young people navigating emotional, sensory, social and relational challenges, including those with intellectual disability, autism, ADHD, ODD, epilepsy and other additional needs.

My approach is neurodiversity-affirming and grounded in curiosity, regulation and relational understanding rather than behavioural judgement alone. I recognise that communication, emotional expression and regulation can emerge in many different forms, and support is adapted sensitively to the developmental, cognitive and sensory needs of each individual.

Alongside private psychotherapy practice, I work collaboratively with schools, Alternative Provision, residential settings, fostering and adoption services, and multi-agency teams to support children, young people, families and the wider professional networks around them.

Consultation, Training & Workshops

I provide consultation, training and workshops for schools, SEND services, Alternative Provision, residential care, fostering and adoption services, and wider professional teams.

Grounded in relational, trauma-informed and developmentally attuned practice, my work draws on both clinical expertise and extensive frontline experience supporting children, young people and families across education, care and SEND settings.

Areas of focus may include neurodiversity and SEND, emotional regulation, behaviour as communication, developmental trauma, attachment, communication beyond words, supporting looked after children, and relational approaches within educational and care environments.

Whether through consultation with individual professionals, team discussions or tailored training workshops, my aim is not simply to share knowledge, but to encourage reflective thinking, deepen understanding and strengthen relational approaches around the child. Together, we can develop more attuned, emotionally informed ways of understanding and supporting children and young people within the systems that care for them.

Communication Beyond Words

Some children and young people communicate through behaviour, movement, rhythm, sensory engagement, silence or emotional intensity rather than spoken language alone.

I have a particular interest in supporting non-verbal and minimally verbal children, and in exploring how therapeutic relationship, emotional safety and regulation can foster communication, connection and belonging.

Developmental Trauma, Attachment & Looked After Children

I work with children and young people who have experienced developmental trauma, attachment disruption, loss, neglect or relational instability, including those within fostering, adoption and residential care settings.

These experiences can impact emotional regulation, identity, trust and relationships. Through therapy, consultation and collaborative working, I aim to create safe relational spaces where emotional experiences can begin to be understood, processed and integrated over time.

Reflective Practice

Working within SEND, trauma and care settings can be emotionally demanding and complex.

I offer reflective practice spaces where professionals can explore the emotional impact of the work, deepen relational understanding and think collaboratively about the needs of the children and young people they support.

These sessions aim to strengthen curiosity, attunement and emotional containment while supporting staff wellbeing and reflective capacity.

Team Around the Child

Where appropriate, I work collaboratively with parents, carers, schools, social care professionals and multidisciplinary teams to support a shared understanding of the child's emotional and developmental needs.

My aim is to help create greater consistency, communication and emotional containment around the child, recognising that meaningful change often emerges through attuned relationships and collaborative thinking rather than intervention alone.

At the heart of all my professional work is the belief that growth happens within relationships. By bringing together therapeutic understanding, reflective practice and collaborative working, it becomes possible to create environments where children and young people feel understood, supported and able to thrive.

Equine-Assisted Work

Equine-assisted therapeutic work offers a unique relational space where communication, regulation and emotional awareness can emerge beyond words.

Horses are highly attuned to movement, emotion and nervous system states, often responding not to what is said, but to how a person feels, relates and presents in the moment. This can create powerful opportunities for self-awareness, emotional regulation, confidence-building and relational connection.

My equine-assisted work is grounded in relational and trauma-informed practice and can support children, adolescents and adults who may find traditional therapeutic environments overwhelming, inaccessible or difficult to engage with verbally.

I offer both one-to-one and group-based equine-assisted sessions, alongside therapeutic workshops and collaborative work within alternative provision settings.

Sessions may support:

  • Emotional regulation and nervous system awareness

  • Confidence and self-esteem

  • Relational safety and trust-building

  • Anxiety and emotional overwhelm

  • Neurodivergent and sensory needs

  • Communication and connection beyond words

  • Teamwork, boundaries and social interaction

Depending on the needs of the individual or group, sessions may integrate reflective therapeutic discussion, creative exploration and experiential learning alongside interaction with the horses.

Alongside private therapeutic work, I collaborate with alternative provision and educational settings to provide equine-assisted therapeutic sessions, relational workshops and emotionally supportive group experiences for children and young people who may struggle within traditional educational environments.

At the heart of this work is the belief that healing and connection can emerge through presence, relationship and embodied experience — often beyond words.

A person with their hair tied up wearing a dark jacket stands near a brown and white pinto horse in a green outdoor area with dense trees in the background.
A woman with brown hair, wearing plaid pants and boots, holding a whip, standing next to a brown horse with a black mane, in an outdoor sandy enclosure with a fence and a lamp post, with hills and trees in the background.
A person standing in front of a large black horse in an outdoor arena with mountains and trees in the background.

Qualifications & Memberships

Master’s & Diplomas

Masters - Child & Adolescent Counselling & Psychotherapy - Terapia / Middlesex University

PG Dip - Gestalt Therapy - The Gestalt Centre / London Metropolitan University

PG Dip - Equine Assisted Learning & Development - IFEEL / Pearsons

PG Dip - Autism and Mental Health - National Centre for Autism and Mental Health / The British Psychological Society

Continuing Professional Development

Adoption Support Counselling - Barnardo’s

Working Psychotherapeutically with Eating Disorders

Supporting Bereaved Children - National Counselling Society

Memberships

Logo for UKCP, UK Council for Psychotherapy, featuring a multicolored star shape next to the acronym 'UKCP' and the full name underneath.
A certification badge with the BACB logo, indicating accredited membership, featuring the text "collective mark", "professional standards authority", and "accredited register" in purple and pink colors. It also displays a registration number and credentials for a member.

Contact

If you would like to enquire about therapy, professional consultation, equine-assisted work or collaborative services, please feel free to get in touch.

I welcome enquiries from individuals, parents, carers, schools, Alternative Provision settings and professionals seeking relational and developmentally attuned therapeutic support.

I understand that reaching out for support can sometimes feel difficult, and I aim to offer a thoughtful and welcoming first point of contact.

Beyond Words (Journal)

A psychotherapist's journal exploring what it means to be human, and the stories that unfold beyond words.

Go to Beyond Words Journal

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Sandy Reay Psychotherapy

East Hertfordshire & London

Email: Sandyreaypsychotherapy@gmail.com