The Mama Bee PT

The Mama Bee PT When Care Comes Home: Empowering Moms, Nurturing Babies, Supporting Development

✨ A Meaningful Gift for the Expecting Mother ✨ For those seeking a gift that goes beyond the ordinary…Give her something...
12/21/2025

✨ A Meaningful Gift for the Expecting Mother ✨

For those seeking a gift that goes beyond the ordinary…
Give her something she truly needs (and something we all needed) — a Mama & Me Consultation 💕

Our in home-concierge service includes a personalized comprehensive physical therapy wellness plan tailored towards your needs:

🤰 Pregnancy
🏃‍♀️ Postpartum recovery
👶 Baby’s movement & development
🍼 🤱 Feeding and Nursing Support
🐄 Navigating Pumping
👩‍💻 Returning Back to Work
🧑‍🧑‍🧒‍🧒🏡 Adding Baby to the Family

This isn’t just a gift — it’s support, confidence, and care during one of life’s biggest transitions.

Also included 24-48 hour return text/call/email support, so you don’t have to wait until your next appointment to have an answer about your journey.

Perfect for baby showers, push presents, or holidays, or “just because” 💝

Contact us today at :
💻 mamabeept.com
📞 313-312-0134

12/21/2025
🌼 We are LISTENING to our families 👂…and we’re BUZZING🐝 …about ➕ adding Occupational Therapy At Mama Bee, our heart has ...
12/19/2025

🌼 We are LISTENING to our families 👂…and we’re BUZZING🐝 …about ➕ adding Occupational Therapy

At Mama Bee, our heart has always been helping mamas and kiddos thrive—through movement, connection, and confidence. Occupational Therapy is a beautiful extension of that mission. 💛

Here’s how OT support can help your little one (and you!) in those day-to-day moments that matter THE MOST:

🐝 Feeding + Oral Motor Skills
supporting latch, bottle feeding, transitioning to solids, and reducing stress around mealtimes

🐝 Sensory Regulation
helping babies process the world around them—touch, sound, movement—so they feel calmer and more connected

🐝 Developmental Play + Fine Motor Skills
supporting grasping, reaching, rolling, sitting, and exploring through purposeful play

🐝 Sleep + Routines
building patterns and environments that support rest and smoother transitions

Because thriving isn’t just about milestones—it’s about making everyday life easier, calmer, and more joyful. ✨

👉Like this post or comment below if you’d love to see OT services added!🌼🐝ent

Hi everyone, I’m Dr. Jess Kowalski, the owner and lead physical therapist at Mama Bee PT. 🐝 ❤️ 💪 Becoming a mother chang...
11/19/2025

Hi everyone, I’m Dr. Jess Kowalski, the owner and lead physical therapist at Mama Bee PT. 🐝 ❤️ 💪

Becoming a mother changed the way I saw my work. I understood firsthand how much support women and their little ones truly need… and how hard it can be to find it.

That’s what inspired me to create a practice where women and children feel seen, supported, and cared for with patience and compassion.

Mama Bee PT supports women and children through every stage of life — from pregnancy and postpartum recovery to pediatric movement, development, and overall wellness so you can continue to do the things in life that YOU love the most. ♥️

My goal is to create a safe, compassionate space where families feel supported, informed, and empowered.

I’m so excited to share tips, education, behind-the-scenes moments, and a little of my heart with this community. And for fun a pic of the 3 that call me mama and my guy… who inspire me everyday to continue to build this wonderful space.

Thanks for being here 🤍

XO, Dr. Jess

https://www.facebook.com/share/1GZyu2v2sk/?mibextid=wwXIfr
11/10/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/1GZyu2v2sk/?mibextid=wwXIfr

In the 1950s, every kindergarten classroom had a daily ritual you could set your watch by—one that's almost disappeared today.
After songs and crayons and circle time, after graham crackers and milk boxes, the teacher would dim the lights.
A record would drop onto the turntable—something soft, something gentle.
And twenty little bodies would stretch out on striped mats or colorful rugs, shoes nudged under small cots, thumb-worn blankets pulled up to chins.
A whole classroom exhaling at once.
Naptime.
For millions of children who grew up in the 1950s, '60s, and early '70s, this was as fundamental to kindergarten as finger paint and learning the alphabet.
It wasn't just babysitting or downtime.
It was part of the lesson plan.
Educators believed that structured quiet helped children grow—making space for feelings to settle, imaginations to wander, and small hearts to reset before the afternoon rush of counting games and building blocks.
The science supported it. Young children's bodies and brains were still developing. Rest wasn't a luxury; it was a developmental necessity.
Teachers became guardians of calm.
Soft voices. Steady footsteps moving between rows of sleeping children. Sometimes a gentle story read in near-whisper. A hand smoothing a blanket. A lighthouse in low light.
For many kids, this was the only stillness in a busy day—a pause between lunchboxes and hopscotch, between learning letters and learning how to share.
Some children actually slept, exhausted from morning play and the overwhelming newness of school.
Others lay quietly, watching dust motes dance in the sliver of sunlight between curtains, lost in the kind of daydreaming that only happens when you're five and the world hasn't taught you to hurry yet.
Even the kids who hated naptime—the fidgeters, the wide-awake ones who stared at the ceiling counting tiles—learned something valuable:
Sometimes you have to be still, even when you don't feel like it. Sometimes rest is part of the work.
But by the 1970s and '80s, something shifted.
Academic pressure increased. Kindergarten stopped being about socialization and play and started being about "kindergarten readiness" and pre-reading skills.
Schedules tightened. Testing began earlier. Parents wanted to make sure their children weren't "falling behind."
Naptime started to feel like wasted time.
One by one, school districts eliminated mandatory rest periods from kindergarten. The mats got rolled up and stored away. The record players were replaced by overhead projectors, then computers, then tablets.
By the 1990s, naptime had largely disappeared from public kindergarten classrooms, surviving mainly in preschools and full-day programs for the very young.
Today, most kindergarteners spend their entire day in structured learning—reading groups, math centers, computer time, recess (if they're lucky), lunch, and more instruction.
No pause. No quiet. No permission to just… breathe.
And we wonder why anxiety in children has skyrocketed.
The memory lingers for those who experienced it:
Rows of striped mats. The scratchy sound of a turntable's needle finding its groove. The smell of that one kid's blanket that went home for washing maybe twice a year. The magic of being told it's okay—expected, even—to close your eyes and rest in the middle of the day.
For those of us who remember, naptime wasn't just about sleep.
It was about learning that rest is valuable. That quiet has purpose. That you don't have to be productive every single moment.
It was a lesson we didn't know we were learning until we grew up into a world that never stops, never slows, and makes us feel guilty for needing to pause.
To every parent who remembers kindergarten naptime: Your kids probably don't have it. And they're being asked to function at full speed all day, every day.
To teachers fighting to keep rest and play in early childhood education: You're not being soft. You're honoring what science has always known—young children need downtime to develop properly.
To anyone who feels guilty for needing rest: We used to teach five-year-olds that pausing was part of learning. Maybe we should remember that lesson.
To those who think childhood is "too easy" these days: Today's kindergarteners have more structured academic time than 1950s third-graders. We've eliminated the pauses.
Maybe that's the lesson worth keeping.
Not that children should sleep away half their school day—but that rest, quiet, and unstructured time aren't indulgent.
They're essential.
Even big kids need a little naptime now and then.
Even adults do.
We used to know that.
We used to build it into the day, right between morning songs and afternoon play.
We dimmed the lights, put on a record, and gave twenty little people permission to stop trying so hard.
Maybe it's time we remembered how.

~Weird Wonders and Facts

👏 ❤️ 🐝 we are so grateful to our amazing clients !
11/04/2025

👏 ❤️ 🐝 we are so grateful to our amazing clients !

Spent the weekend at a course to help support the amazing women in our community! Have you heard about exercises for you...
11/02/2025

Spent the weekend at a course to help support the amazing women in our community! Have you heard about exercises for your pelvic floor?


Special shout out to my hubby for putting the 3 minions to work and on holding down the fort at the house!

Doors are open Maison Parc in Grosse Pointe Park! 🌼
11/01/2025

Doors are open Maison Parc in Grosse Pointe Park! 🌼

Happy Halloween Eve! Please remember to be kind out there! 🎃 👻 🍬
10/30/2025

Happy Halloween Eve! Please remember to be kind out there! 🎃 👻 🍬

🍼 Does your baby always tilt their head to one side? It could be more than just a cute quirk — it might be infant tortic...
10/21/2025

🍼 Does your baby always tilt their head to one side? It could be more than just a cute quirk — it might be infant torticollis (aka “head tilt”).

👶 Left untreated, head tilt can lead to:
• Flat spots on the skull (plagiocephaly)
• Delayed motor milestones 🏃‍♂️
• Trouble with vision and balance 👓
• Preference for one side (can impact crawling & sitting)

💪 The good news? Physical therapy works.
A trained pediatric physical therapist can help by:
✅ Gently stretching tight neck muscles
✅ Strengthening the weaker side
✅ Teaching parents safe, effective exercises at home
✅ Promoting symmetrical movement and development

🎯 Early intervention = better outcomes.
If you notice a consistent tilt, talk to your pediatrician or a physical therapist. A few simple steps can make a big difference in your baby’s growth and comfort!

📧 Send us a DM to hear how we can help! ❤️ 💪 🐝

To the wild card…happy national sons day hanky panky
09/29/2025

To the wild card…happy national sons day hanky panky

🏃‍♀️ Stay Strong. Stay Steady. Stay Safe. 🛡️Join our Physical Therapy Fall Prevention Training Program!Falls are a leadi...
09/23/2025

🏃‍♀️ Stay Strong. Stay Steady. Stay Safe. 🛡️

Join our Physical Therapy Fall Prevention Training Program!

Falls are a leading cause of injury — but they don’t have to be. Our expert physical therapists are here to help you or your loved ones build strength, balance, and confidence to stay on your feet.

🧠 What you’ll learn:
✅ Personalized fall risk assessment
✅ Strength & balance training
✅ Safe movement strategies
✅ Home safety tips & exercises

🗓️ Now Booking for October!
📍 Your home, your gym, or virtual
👩‍⚕️ Led by a licensed physical therapist
📞 Spots are limited — reserve yours now!
🔗 To register email us at
themamabeept@gmail.com
send us a DM

Address

Grosse Pointe, MI

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