Three therapy appointments this week. A home exercise program twice a day. A feeding plan that takes 45 minutes per meal. And somewhere in there, your baby needs to nap, your other children need dinner, and you need to function. If you feel like you are failing at all of it, you are not. You are trying to fit a full-time job into the cracks of an already full life.
Why Routine Matters for Children with CP
Children with cerebral palsy thrive on predictability. Consistent routines help regulate their nervous system, reduce anxiety around transitions, and create natural windows for therapeutic practice. Research shows parents with structured routines report lower stress and better family functioning (Parkes et al., 2011).
But structure is not rigidity. A good routine is a flexible framework that accounts for bad days, cancelled appointments, and the reality that some mornings your child will not tolerate tummy time.
The Building Blocks
Sample Routine: Baby with CP (6-12 Months)
| Time | Activity | Therapy Integration |
|---|---|---|
| 7:00 AM | Wake, diaper change | Gentle stretching |
| 7:30 AM | Feeding | Supported positioning |
| 8:15 AM | Floor play | Tummy time, reaching |
| 9:00 AM | Nap | Rest (protect) |
| 10:30 AM | Formal therapy | PT, OT, or speech |
| 11:30 AM | Feeding | Oral motor practice |
| 12:00 PM | Sensory play | Supported sitting, hands |
| 1:00 PM | Nap | Rest |
| 2:30 PM | Home exercises | Stretching, weight-bearing |
| 3:00 PM | Outing / play | Stroller positioning |
| 5:30 PM | Bath / family | Range of motion |
| 7:00 PM | Sleep | Positioning system |
If CP resulted from a birth injury, compensation can fund therapy, equipment, and respite care.

Integrating Therapy into Daily Life
The most successful programs are ones families do not think of as “therapy” (Novak et al., 2011).
- Diaper changes = stretching. 5-6 changes x 2 min = 10-12 min daily.
- Feeding = positioning practice. Every meal works trunk control.
- Bath = range of motion. Warm water relaxes tone.
- Play = PT goals. Strategic toy placement encourages movement.
- Carrying = therapeutic positioning. How you hold baby affects alignment.
Protecting Sleep
Do not sacrifice naps for extra therapy. Sleep consolidates motor learning. A well-rested child participates more actively and retains more.
Preventing Caregiver Burnout
- Schedule off time. Even 30 minutes daily.
- Accept imperfection. One missed session is not a setback.
- Accept help. Grandparents, friends, respite care exist for a reason.
- Monitor your health. If you are not sleeping or eating, you need support.
If a birth injury caused CP, our team can help identify available resources.




When the Routine Falls Apart
It will. Your child will be sick. Appointments cancel. You will oversleep. This is normal. The routine is a path you can return to after disruption.
Our team works with families across all 38 states. No cost, no commitment. Just answers.