Exploring Other Worlds with Children
Safe Inner Spaces Through Music
Some children don’t just listen to music.
They enter it — almost as if the music becomes a place.
They step into it as though it’s a place — somewhere textured, layered, alive. A forest. A sky. A feeling. A story unfolding without words.
For neurodivergent children especially, this isn’t escapism.
It’s navigation.
Music as a Safe Inner Space
For many children, the world can feel:
🌪️ Loud
⚡ Fast
🧩 Overwhelming
Music can offer something different:
🌫️ A soft landing
🎧 A contained environment
🌿 A space where nothing is demanded
When a child “goes somewhere else” through music, they may actually be:
- Regulating their nervous system
- Processing emotion
- Exploring ideas safely
“Other Worlds” Are Not Avoidance
It can be tempting to think:
“They’re just escaping”
But often, what’s happening is far more intelligent.
Children may be:
- Trying out different perspectives
- Exploring possibilities
- Making sense of things they can’t yet articulate
This kind of imaginative immersion is a form of cognitive and emotional play.
🎶 Using Music to Support This
You don’t need to direct or analyse.
Instead:
- Let them choose the music
- Notice what they return to
- Sit alongside them without interrupting
You might gently ask:
- “What does this song feel like?”
- “Where does it take you?”
Or simply:
- “I can see you’re really in that.”
Creating Permission
When children feel safe to explore these inner spaces:
- Their regulation improves
- Their self-understanding deepens
- Their creativity expands
And perhaps most importantly: They learn that their inner world is valid.
A Gentle Invitation
If you’d like to explore this further, I’ve shared a reflection on a song that creates this exact experience for me:
A Forest by The Cure
It’s a piece that doesn’t just play — it transports.
You May Be Interested
If this resonated, you might also like:
- Working Memory and Neurodivergence
Why some children’s minds move quickly between ideas — and how that links to imagination, distraction, and regulation - Gentle Re-Entry for Neurodivergent Minds
Supporting children as they move between rest, play, and structured learning without overwhelm - Building Self-Acceptance and Confidence in Neurodivergent Children
How everyday interactions shape identity, confidence, and a child’s sense of being “enough”
Each of these explores how neurodivergent children process, regulate, and make meaning in ways that are often deeply internal — and often misunderstood.
