by Sensory Therapy Place
Pediatric OT · Reflex Integration · Brewer, Maine
By Earl Mamaril, MS, OTR/L — rhythmic movement is one of the simplest, most effective home exercises a pediatric OT can teach a family. It's gentle, it's free, it works — and it fits seamlessly into daily routines. Here's why our team recommends it, and how to make it work for your child.
In the home exercise programs we build at our Brewer, Maine clinic, we often recommend rhythmic movement — and for good reason. It's simple for parents to do, highly effective once you get into a rhythm, and easy to weave into your child's day.
The key? Establishing it as a micro-habit. Just like brushing teeth or reading a bedtime story, when rhythmic movements become a small, consistent part of your child's day, they can make a meaningful difference in nervous system regulation.
Rhythmic movement refers to gentle, repetitive rocking and rolling patterns modeled after the spontaneous movements babies naturally make during early development — rocking on hands and knees, rolling side to side, gentle bouncing.
These movements look calming — and they are — but they're also doing serious work behind the scenes. Rhythmic movement helps:
In short: these movements organize the nervous system. And when the nervous system is better organized, kids can move, learn, and regulate more easily. Learn more about primitive reflex integration →
Rhythmic movement doesn't require fancy equipment or long stretches of time. A few minutes a day — done consistently — is often enough to begin seeing positive changes in your child's posture, attention, and self-regulation. Once it becomes part of the routine, it just flows.
Families we work with often go from "my child is fidgety, can't sit still, melts down at homework" to "my child can settle, focus, and recover from upset" — with just a few weeks of consistent practice. The change isn't magic; it's neuroscience meeting parent consistency.
In June 2024, Earl had the privilege of attending the RMTi Levels 1 & 2 Conference in Kalispell, Montana, led by Moira Dempsey herself. Moira's warmth, wisdom, and passion for helping individuals with retained primitive reflexes were evident in every session. Originally from Australia, she travels the world bringing rhythmic movement training to therapists, educators, and parents.
Fun fact: as of 2024, the only U.S. state Moira hasn't taught in is Maine — we're working on changing that.

For most children we evaluate, rhythmic movement becomes a foundational piece of the home program. We tailor the specific patterns to each child's reflex profile and what their nervous system needs most. Typical home patterns include:
These aren't exercises to memorize from a YouTube video — they're patterns that need to be matched to the child. That's what an OT evaluation gives families.
Same-week telehealth available. A pediatric OT evaluation maps your child's reflex profile and gives you the exact patterns to use at home.
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